Boxing tonight: Live updates for Abdullah Mason fight card
Only without Keyshawn Davis, who weighed in Friday 4.3 pounds over the 135-pound limit for his bout scheduled for Saturday. That led to the cancelation of his WBO lightweight title fight against Edwin De Los Santos – and an adjustment to the lineup for Saturday.
Advertisement
The new main event: Abdullah Mason vs. Jeremia Nakathila in a 10-round lightweight bout.
There will be no major championship belt at stake. What will be on the line: Mason's perfect record.
Mason, a 21-year-old from Ohio, is 18-0 with 16 KOs. In his last fight, he knocked down Carlos Ornelas three times before the referee stopped the fight after the sixth round.
There could be more knockdowns Saturday considering Nakathila (26-4, 21 KOs) suffered back-to-back KO defeats in 2023 before winning his past three fights.
Abdullah Mason fight time
Abdullah Mason vs. Jeremia Nakathila fight date: Saturday, June 7
Advertisement
Time: Main card starts at 10 p.m. ET. Prelims start at 6 p.m. ET
Where to watch Abdullah Mason vs. Jeremia Nakathila: ESPN+ (Main card also available on ESPN)
When is Keyshawn Davis' next fight?
Keyshawn Davis, an Olympic silver medalist at the Tokyo Games in 2021, won the WBO title in February with a fourth-round TKO of Denys Berinchyk. He said he plans to move up in weight and fight at 140 pounds. There is no set date for his next fight after the cancelation.
Abdullah Mason stands on a scale during Top Rank weigh-ins at the American Bank Center on April 12, 2024, in Corpus Christi, Texas.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Keyshawn Davis undercard goes on; Abdullah Mason to fight
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Canada Names National Development Team Roster For Summer Series
For the second straight summer, Hockey Canada will lean on youth at the August 13-16 Summer Series against USA with their national development team roster. Canada named a 23-player roster for the three-game series against USA's Collegiate Select roster including 12 members of their national development team roster from last season that won silver at the 2024 Women's Euro Hockey Tour's Six Nations tournament. 'We are excited to return to the international stage with a strong group of athletes who bring both experience and fresh energy to our development team,' said national development team head coach Alison Domenico. 'It is an honour to be back behind the bench, and our staff is eager to continue guiding our talented athletes as they take the next steps in their growth within our program.' Among the returnees to their roster are captain Jocelyn Amos, Tova Henderson, Jordan Baxter, Avi Adam, Claire Murdoch, Hailey MacLeod, Ava Murphy, Ashley Messier, Emma Pais, Madeline Palumbo, Sarah Paul, Sara Swiderski, and Emma Venusio. Adding to their national team experience are a large group of U-18 national team players including Mackenze Alexander, Eloise Caron, Hannah Clark, Piper Grober, Makayla Watson, and Alyssa Regalado, who all played in the NCAA last season. Canada also named five players who will make their NCAA debuts this season including goaltender Rhyah Stewart, and forwards Maxine Cimeroni, Sienna D'Alessandro, Sara Manness, and Stryker Zablocki. Notably absent from their 2025 roster is standout Caitlin Kraemer. The omission likely means Kraemer is either recovering from injury, or will be part of Canada's senior national team centralizations. Eve Gascon was also not named to their roster again as she'll be with the senior national team. Alex Law was the only other player not returning, but she struggled last season with Boston University. From last year's national development team that played in the Women's Euro Hockey Tour, seven players were selected in the 2025 PWHL Draft, including first-round picks Nicole Gosling, Kendall Cooper, and Jenna Buglioni, and second-round picks Anne Cherkowski and Hannah Murphy. Other PWHL picks from Canada's national development team were Sarah Wozniewicz and Maya Labad. USA Hockey Unveils National Festival Roster Providing Sneak Peek At Olympic Hopefuls USA Hockey is bringing together 76 professional and college players for their 2025 National Festival slated for August 3-9 in Lake Placid.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Connor Stalions counters Jack Sawyer's accusations, proves Michigan's 2022 win was legit
1. Jack is saying Ohio St never ran a Slot YY formation all year (pull up any of their games on YouTube and you'll see them run that look).2. Their signal for this play was:- The letter 'Y' (TE in 99% of offenses)- The Delay of Game signSo 'Y Delay.' 🤔 Wonder what this… Former Ohio State edge rusher Jack Sawyer is talking about Michigan football again, and he cannot fathom how or why the Buckeyes lost in 2022. As the national (although becoming more Ohio-based) narrative that the only reason why the Wolverines have beaten OSU the past four years is because of 'cheating' with the Connor Stalions advanced scouting allegations, Sawyer and self-proclaimed Buckeye Nation keep putting out their side of the story, thinking it proves the point. However, as you'll soon see, it does nothing of the sort. "I'll tell you this: I think they beat us straight up last year, obviously, and the year before," Sawyer said on a podcast. "But my sophomore year, we left the field like, 'This feels weird.' We lost by double digits and I felt like we beat the (expletive deleted) all game. We ran a screen pass that we had never put in. Not the formation, not the look. Anything. And then like, you see him (Stalions) on the sideline, they're doing it. And we changed it, we audible to it, whatever. We run it. All the D-linemen, as soon as the ball is snapped, the linebackers, everybody, they sniffed it out. "We ran a tight end screen from the 25-yard line going in, and they snuff it out." This came to light on Monday, but last fall, Stalions appeared on the Bussin' with the Boys podcast and explained how he knew the exact play that OSU was running without even knowing the play itself. Because football is still football, and if your sign is easy to decipher -- as this was -- then it will be deciphered. "Here's the bottom line of how can you be so good in-game," Stalions said. "Slot YY. So I think they motion into slot YY. Their signal for the slot YY formation, and then the guy who was live the entire season signaled (visibly) Y-delay. Am I supposed to see that and be like, 'Oh, I don't know what this is!' I think this has got to be a Y-delay screen." Stalions had more to say about this exact clip, refuting Sawyer's version of events on X (formerly Twitter). Priceless. Of course, note that Sawyer plays on defense, so he doesn't exactly have a solid grasp of the offensive playbook for his team week in, week out. While we cannot confirm or deny Stalions' account, that OSU ran this play before, as a former analyst for Michigan football, he would know. What's more, if Ohio State had never run the play before, then how would Stalions have illegally stolen the signal as Sawyer insinuates? If his scheme was so pervasive, and his mom being in the crowd at a Purdue-Ohio State game with her phone was somehow responsible for a play and formation that Sawyer insists was never run before, how did Stalions actually decipher it, if not in-game? Make it make sense. Logic is not strong with this one. But it's another season, and though Sawyer is no longer in Columbus, he will live the rest of his life having never beaten Michigan. Thus, this certainly comes across as some kind of coping mechanism, if not outright denial.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sean Payton: Dre Greenlaw plays like Mike Tyson
Linebacker Dre Greenlaw made the most of the first day in pads at Broncos training camp. Greenlaw filled gaps and delivered hits throughout team drills in Denver and head coach Sean Payton said you didn't even have to be watching to know that Greenlaw was the one landing blows. Payton said "you can hear it" when Greenlaw makes a hit and then went on to compare his style to another knockout artist from a different sport. "He plays like Mike Tyson," Payton said, via the team's website. "He's tough, he's physical. He's built that way. There's not a lot of leaky yardage. Some guys [allow that]. He's a knock-back tackler. They stop where he hits them. There's an intensity to how he plays. He's one of those players that if you put the film on and didn't say anything, at some point early, you'd ask, 'Who is this guy?'" Greenlaw was limited to two games for the 49ers last year because of injuries and a quad injury interrupted his first offseason in Denver, so one key for the Broncos will be making sure Greenlaw's healthy enough to deploy that physicality on a regular basis. If he is, facing an already tough Broncos defense will be even less enjoyable for opposing offenses in 2025.