Weekend Review: Devin Haney reached new level of excellence

Weekend Review: Devin Haney reached a new level of excellence in his shutout victory over Regis Prograis on Saturday.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Devin Haney

You have to consider the facts going into Haneyā€™s victory over Regis Prograis to appreciate what he did on Saturday in San Francisco. He was moving up in weight (from 135 pounds to 140) to face one of the most respected fighters in the division, which shouldā€™ve been a significant challenge. It wasnā€™t. Haney gave the performance of his career, picking Prograis apart from a distance, dropping him and taking almost nothing in return in what amounted to a boxing clinic. Prograis landed a record-low 36 punches overall (compared to 129 for Haney), according to CompuBox. Thatā€™s how Haney was able to win every round on all three cards, giving him a major title in a second division and bolstering the case that heā€™s one of the best fighters in the world pound-for-pound. And remember: Heā€™s only 25, an age when most elite fighters are only beginning to make an impact on the biggest stages. He probably hasnā€™t reached his peak, which might not be good news for the other top 140-pounders. Of course, not every fight will look like the one we saw on Saturday. Rivals like Teofimo Lopez, Gervonta Davis and Subriel Matias are tougher matchups for Haney than Prograis was. At the same time, it has never been more clear that the new champ is a genuine threat to anyone.

BIGGEST LOSER
Regis Prograis

Regis Prograis (left) gave Devin Haney credit after his victory. Ezra Shaw / Getty Images

How do you bounce back from that? Prograis (29-2, 24 KOs) was outclassed to the point of embarrassment, a fate that wouldā€™ve been unthinkable for a two-time titleholder whose only loss was a close decision against Josh Taylor in 2019l. He simply couldnā€™t get anything done against a far superior fighter. Haney controlled the fight by controlling the distance with his jab, hard right hands and footwork, creating a defensive wall that Prograis was unable to penetrate. Thatā€™s why the fight wasnā€™t competitive. The native of New Orleans was never a great technician but he was a solid one who excelled because of his fighting spirit and punching power. However, Haney laid bare Prograisā€™ limitations for all the world to see, which will have changed the way the now-former champion is perceived by pundits and fans. Heā€™s a good fighter, not one of the best. And, at 34, he might not get many (any?) more opportunities to take part in big events. We probably have seen the best of Regis Prograis. If so, he has nothing to be ashamed of. Two-time titleholder is a nice legacy.

BIGGEST WINNER II
Rafael Espinoza

Rafael who? Now we know. The 6-foot-1, 126-pound Mexican delivered a massive upset on Saturday night in Pembroke Pines, Florida, where he survived a brutal knockdown in the fifth round and other harrowing moments to defeat two-time Olympic champion Robeisy Ramirez and win his first major title by a well-earned majority decision. And Espinoza (24-0, 20 KOs) punctuated the performance in dramatic fashion, forcing Ramirez to the canvas with a barrage of hard, accurate power shots to seal his victory in an entertaining fight. Espinozaā€™s physical dimensions, work rate and all-around ability ā€“ including punching power ā€“ will make him a handful for any opponent, but his grit stood out most in his break-through victory on Saturday. He refused to lose, a quality that could take him a long way. He now has one thing working against him, though: Heā€™s not going to take anyone by surprise again.

RABBIT PUNCHES

Liam Paro (24-0, 15 KOs) has become the latest Australian to emerge as a major player in the sport. The native of Brisbane put capable Montana Love (18-2-2, 9 KOs) down twice and stopped him in six rounds on the Haney-Prograis card. Paro looked like he belongs among the Top 10 junior welterweights. ā€¦ 2020 Olympic champion Andy Cruz (2-0, 1 KO) of Cuba stopped Jovanni Straffon (26-6-1, 19 KOs) in three rounds on the Haney-Prograis card. The 135-pounder, who beat Keyshawn Davis to win his gold medal, appears to have the kind of skill that will allow him to fight for a major title within a handful of fights. Heā€™s special. ā€¦ Chris Billiam-Smith (19-1, 13 KOs) retained his cruiserweight title against veteran Mateusz Masternak on Sunday in Bournemouth, England, forcing the Pole to quit on his stool with a rib injury after seven rounds of a brutal fight. The beltholder deserves credit for causing the damage with steady body work. However, the Bournemouth native took a great deal of punishment himself. He’s a capable, tough guy but he’s easy to hit, which could portend a short stint at the pinnacle of the sport. …

I’m happy with the recently announced International Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2024. Michael Moorer was a dominating 175-pound champion who went on to become a three-time heavyweight titleholder, with a signature victory over Evander Holyfield. The late Diego Corrales is known for his epic come-from-behind knockout of Jose Luis Castillo but he was a two-division beltholder with a series of impressive victories, including back-to-back-to-back wins over Joel Casamayor, Acelino Freitas and Castillo. Ivan Calderon was a boxing wizard who ruled a division for most of a decade. And while Ricky Hatton might be best remembered for his knockout losses to Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, he had a number of impressive victories. That included a knockout that retired the greatĀ Kostya Tszyu. Also, it’s always gratifying to see an old-timer get recognition. Argentine heavyweight Luis Angel Firpo is a boxing legend. He deserved to have a plaque bearing his name at the Hall. Watch his epic clash with Jack Dempsey. You won’t regret it.

[lawrence-related id=40037,40032]

Weekend Review: Devin Haney reached new level of excellence

Weekend Review: Devin Haney reached a new level of excellence in his shutout victory over Regis Prograis on Saturday.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Devin Haney

You have to consider the facts going into Haneyā€™s victory over Regis Prograis to appreciate what he did on Saturday in San Francisco. He was moving up in weight (from 135 pounds to 140) to face one of the most respected fighters in the division, which shouldā€™ve been a significant challenge. It wasnā€™t. Haney gave the performance of his career, picking Prograis apart from a distance, dropping him and taking almost nothing in return in what amounted to a boxing clinic. Prograis landed a record-low 36 punches overall (compared to 129 for Haney), according to CompuBox. Thatā€™s how Haney was able to win every round on all three cards, giving him a major title in a second division and bolstering the case that heā€™s one of the best fighters in the world pound-for-pound. And remember: Heā€™s only 25, an age when most elite fighters are only beginning to make an impact on the biggest stages. He probably hasnā€™t reached his peak, which might not be good news for the other top 140-pounders. Of course, not every fight will look like the one we saw on Saturday. Rivals like Teofimo Lopez, Gervonta Davis and Subriel Matias are tougher matchups for Haney than Prograis was. At the same time, it has never been more clear that the new champ is a genuine threat to anyone.

BIGGEST LOSER
Regis Prograis

Regis Prograis (left) gave Devin Haney credit after his victory. Ezra Shaw / Getty Images

How do you bounce back from that? Prograis (29-2, 24 KOs) was outclassed to the point of embarrassment, a fate that wouldā€™ve been unthinkable for a two-time titleholder whose only loss was a close decision against Josh Taylor in 2019l. He simply couldnā€™t get anything done against a far superior fighter. Haney controlled the fight by controlling the distance with his jab, hard right hands and footwork, creating a defensive wall that Prograis was unable to penetrate. Thatā€™s why the fight wasnā€™t competitive. The native of New Orleans was never a great technician but he was a solid one who excelled because of his fighting spirit and punching power. However, Haney laid bare Prograisā€™ limitations for all the world to see, which will have changed the way the now-former champion is perceived by pundits and fans. Heā€™s a good fighter, not one of the best. And, at 34, he might not get many (any?) more opportunities to take part in big events. We probably have seen the best of Regis Prograis. If so, he has nothing to be ashamed of. Two-time titleholder is a nice legacy.

BIGGEST WINNER II
Rafael Espinoza

Rafael who? Now we know. The 6-foot-1, 126-pound Mexican delivered a massive upset on Saturday night in Pembroke Pines, Florida, where he survived a brutal knockdown in the fifth round and other harrowing moments to defeat two-time Olympic champion Robeisy Ramirez and win his first major title by a well-earned majority decision. And Espinoza (24-0, 20 KOs) punctuated the performance in dramatic fashion, forcing Ramirez to the canvas with a barrage of hard, accurate power shots to seal his victory in an entertaining fight. Espinozaā€™s physical dimensions, work rate and all-around ability ā€“ including punching power ā€“ will make him a handful for any opponent, but his grit stood out most in his break-through victory on Saturday. He refused to lose, a quality that could take him a long way. He now has one thing working against him, though: Heā€™s not going to take anyone by surprise again.

RABBIT PUNCHES

Liam Paro (24-0, 15 KOs) has become the latest Australian to emerge as a major player in the sport. The native of Brisbane put capable Montana Love (18-2-2, 9 KOs) down twice and stopped him in six rounds on the Haney-Prograis card. Paro looked like he belongs among the Top 10 junior welterweights. ā€¦ 2020 Olympic champion Andy Cruz (2-0, 1 KO) of Cuba stopped Jovanni Straffon (26-6-1, 19 KOs) in three rounds on the Haney-Prograis card. The 135-pounder, who beat Keyshawn Davis to win his gold medal, appears to have the kind of skill that will allow him to fight for a major title within a handful of fights. Heā€™s special. ā€¦ Chris Billiam-Smith (19-1, 13 KOs) retained his cruiserweight title against veteran Mateusz Masternak on Sunday in Bournemouth, England, forcing the Pole to quit on his stool with a rib injury after seven rounds of a brutal fight. The beltholder deserves credit for causing the damage with steady body work. However, the Bournemouth native took a great deal of punishment himself. He’s a capable, tough guy but he’s easy to hit, which could portend a short stint at the pinnacle of the sport. …

I’m happy with the recently announced International Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2024. Michael Moorer was a dominating 175-pound champion who went on to become a three-time heavyweight titleholder, with a signature victory over Evander Holyfield. The late Diego Corrales is known for his epic come-from-behind knockout of Jose Luis Castillo but he was a two-division beltholder with a series of impressive victories, including back-to-back-to-back wins over Joel Casamayor, Acelino Freitas and Castillo. Ivan Calderon was a boxing wizard who ruled a division for most of a decade. And while Ricky Hatton might be best remembered for his knockout losses to Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, he had a number of impressive victories. That included a knockout that retired the greatĀ Kostya Tszyu. Also, it’s always gratifying to see an old-timer get recognition. Argentine heavyweight Luis Angel Firpo is a boxing legend. He deserved to have a plaque bearing his name at the Hall. Watch his epic clash with Jack Dempsey. You won’t regret it.

[lawrence-related id=40037,40032]

Devin Haney gives brilliant performance in shutout of Regis Prograis

Devin Haney put Regis Prograis down and defeated him by a shutout decision to become a two-division titleholder Saturday in San Francisco.

New division, same success.

Devin Haney gave a masterclass performance Saturday night at Chase Center in San Francisco, dropping Regis Prograis and defeating him by a shutout decision to take Prograisā€™ 140-pound title.

All three judges had the same score, 120-107, 12 rounds to none. Boxing Junkie had the same score.

Haney (31-0, 15 KOs) didnā€™t get the knockout he predicted. Otherwise, he couldnā€™t have been more dominating.

ā€œI did everything I said I was going to do,ā€ Prograis said. ā€œI went in there and I handicapped him. We knew he was going to come in with a great left hand. My dad came up with a tremendous game plan, as well as my team.

ā€œI did what I said I was going to do.ā€

Haney controlled the fight by controlling the distance. He used jab and footwork to keep Prograis at a distance advantageous to him, from where he picked Prograis apart.

The San Francisco nativeā€™s best punch was his right, one of which put Prograis down in Round 3 and more than hurt him along the way.

Prograis (29-2, 24 KOs) never gave up but couldnā€™t get close enough to his taller opponent with any consistency, which made it impossible for him to land enough punches to win rounds.

The now-former two-division titleholder landed only 36 punches overall, the lowest total in a 12-round fight in the history of CompuBox.

Prograis stated the obvious after the fight.

ā€œThat motherf—– is good, better than I thought. Iā€™m not going to lie,ā€ Prograis said.

Haney performed much better in this fight than his last bout at 135, a close decision over Vasiliy Lomachenko on May 20.

He said the fact he didnā€™t have to struggle to make weight helped him a great deal on Saturday.

ā€œMan, it made a tremendous difference,ā€ he said. ā€œYou saw the difference in my performances in the Lomachenko fight and this fight. Tremendous difference. I felt so strong. In this camp I was able to recover, relax more, take some days off.

ā€œI feel great. 140 got a new king.ā€

Haney, who now holds the WBC title, said going into the fight that he wants to take part only in major events. He has many options in one of the sportā€™s deepest divisions.

There are his fellow titleholders, Subriel Matias (IBF), Rolando Romero (WBA) and Teofimo Lopez (WBO). His promoter, Eddie Hearn, said popular contender Ryan Garcia is a possible opponent. And Gervonta Davis always lurks.

ā€œWeā€™ve got a guy on the same platform on DAZN. His name is Ryan Garcia,ā€ Hearn said. ā€œFor me thatā€™s a huge fight, Ryan Garcia against Devin Haney. Gervonta Davis against Devin Haney. Huge fight. Teofimo Lopez against Devin Haney.

ā€œThis is a guy I think will probably beat them all, and heā€™s going to be around for a long time.ā€

No one who saw Haney fight on Saturday will be surprised by anything he does.

Devin Haney gives brilliant performance in shutout of Regis Prograis

Devin Haney put Regis Prograis down and defeated him by a shutout decision to become a two-division titleholder Saturday in San Francisco.

New division, same success.

Devin Haney gave a masterclass performance Saturday night at Chase Center in San Francisco, dropping Regis Prograis and defeating him by a shutout decision to take Prograisā€™ 140-pound title.

All three judges had the same score, 120-107, 12 rounds to none. Boxing Junkie had the same score.

Haney (31-0, 15 KOs) didnā€™t get the knockout he predicted. Otherwise, he couldnā€™t have been more dominating.

ā€œI did everything I said I was going to do,ā€ Prograis said. ā€œI went in there and I handicapped him. We knew he was going to come in with a great left hand. My dad came up with a tremendous game plan, as well as my team.

ā€œI did what I said I was going to do.ā€

Haney controlled the fight by controlling the distance. He used jab and footwork to keep Prograis at a distance advantageous to him, from where he picked Prograis apart.

The San Francisco nativeā€™s best punch was his right, one of which put Prograis down in Round 3 and more than hurt him along the way.

Prograis (29-2, 24 KOs) never gave up but couldnā€™t get close enough to his taller opponent with any consistency, which made it impossible for him to land enough punches to win rounds.

The now-former two-division titleholder landed only 36 punches overall, the lowest total in a 12-round fight in the history of CompuBox.

Prograis stated the obvious after the fight.

ā€œThat motherf—– is good, better than I thought. Iā€™m not going to lie,ā€ Prograis said.

Haney performed much better in this fight than his last bout at 135, a close decision over Vasiliy Lomachenko on May 20.

He said the fact he didnā€™t have to struggle to make weight helped him a great deal on Saturday.

ā€œMan, it made a tremendous difference,ā€ he said. ā€œYou saw the difference in my performances in the Lomachenko fight and this fight. Tremendous difference. I felt so strong. In this camp I was able to recover, relax more, take some days off.

ā€œI feel great. 140 got a new king.ā€

Haney, who now holds the WBC title, said going into the fight that he wants to take part only in major events. He has many options in one of the sportā€™s deepest divisions.

There are his fellow titleholders, Subriel Matias (IBF), Rolando Romero (WBA) and Teofimo Lopez (WBO). His promoter, Eddie Hearn, said popular contender Ryan Garcia is a possible opponent. And Gervonta Davis always lurks.

ā€œWeā€™ve got a guy on the same platform on DAZN. His name is Ryan Garcia,ā€ Hearn said. ā€œFor me thatā€™s a huge fight, Ryan Garcia against Devin Haney. Gervonta Davis against Devin Haney. Huge fight. Teofimo Lopez against Devin Haney.

ā€œThis is a guy I think will probably beat them all, and heā€™s going to be around for a long time.ā€

No one who saw Haney fight on Saturday will be surprised by anything he does.

Regis Prograis vs. Devin Haney: LIVE updates, official results, full coverage

Regis Prograis vs. Devin Haney: LIVE updates, official results and full coverage.

Devin Haney dropped and defeated Regis Prograis by a shutout decision to take Prograis’ 140-pound title Saturday at Chase Center in San Francisco.

All three judges scored it 120-107, 12 rounds to none. Boxing Junkie had the same score.

Haney (31-0, 15 KOs) controlled the fight by controlling the distance, keeping Prograis at the end of his jab and and picking him apart with power shots.

A straight right hand to the head put Prograis down in the third round.

Prograis (29-2, 24 KOs) never stopped trying but simply couldn’t get close enough to Haney to hit him with any consistency, which resulted in a one-sided fight.

Haney, the former undisputed 135-pound champion, is now a two-division titleholder.

Prograis has lost a major belt for a second time.

You can read a full report here.

***

Regis Prograis is scheduled to defend his 140-pound title against former 135-pound champ Devin Haney on pay-per-view tonight (Saturday) from Chase Center in San Francisco.

The featured portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT.

Boxing Junkie will post the result and a brief summary immediately after the fight ends. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage ā€“ a detailed fight story, analysis and more ā€“ will follow on separate posts the night of the card and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=40025,40011,40028]

Regis Prograis vs. Devin Haney: LIVE updates, official results, full coverage

Regis Prograis vs. Devin Haney: LIVE updates, official results and full coverage.

Devin Haney dropped and defeated Regis Prograis by a shutout decision to take Prograis’ 140-pound title Saturday at Chase Center in San Francisco.

All three judges scored it 120-107, 12 rounds to none. Boxing Junkie had the same score.

Haney (31-0, 15 KOs) controlled the fight by controlling the distance, keeping Prograis at the end of his jab and and picking him apart with power shots.

A straight right hand to the head put Prograis down in the third round.

Prograis (29-2, 24 KOs) never stopped trying but simply couldn’t get close enough to Haney to hit him with any consistency, which resulted in a one-sided fight.

Haney, the former undisputed 135-pound champion, is now a two-division titleholder.

Prograis has lost a major belt for a second time.

You can read a full report here.

***

Regis Prograis is scheduled to defend his 140-pound title against former 135-pound champ Devin Haney on pay-per-view tonight (Saturday) from Chase Center in San Francisco.

The featured portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT.

Boxing Junkie will post the result and a brief summary immediately after the fight ends. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage ā€“ a detailed fight story, analysis and more ā€“ will follow on separate posts the night of the card and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=40025,40011,40028]

Regis Prograis believes he’s a better fighter after suffering loss

Two-time 140-pound champ Regis Prograis believes he’s a better fighter after suffering a loss to Josh Taylor in 2019.

Regis Prograis has a chance to be a bigger star than ever.

The talented native of New Orleans was a hot commodity when he stepped into the ring to face Josh Taylor in a 140-pound title-unification bout but walked out with his first loss ā€“ by a majority decision — and a damaged reputation in 2019.

However, he bounced back by winning three consecutive fights to earn a meeting with Jose Zepeda for a vacant belt and won by 11th-round knockout to become a two-time champ last November.

And now comes arguably the biggest fight of his career: He is scheduled to defend his title against former undisputed 135-pound champ Devin Haney on pay-per-view Saturday at Chase Center in San Francisco.

He says the setback against Taylor made him a better fighter.

ā€œIā€™ve tasted defeat and frustration,ā€ Prograis told The Guardian. ā€œIā€™ve been in a locker room after I lost and never want to go back there again. When you taste failure, it makes you much stronger. Devinā€™s never had failure so itā€™s hard to know how he will react.

ā€œSo far heā€™s been winning but when it gets really hard on Saturday he could potentially fold.ā€

Yes, Prograis is confident even though heā€™s about a 3Ā½-1 underdog to Haney (30-0, 15 KOs). He went so far as to predict a knockout when he spoke to members of the media at a work out in Los Angeles.

Then, the 34-year-old figures, heā€™ll finally realize the potential he seemed to have before the Taylor fight. He expects to replace Haney on pound-for-pound lists after he has his hand raised in victory Saturday night in Haney’s hometown.

ā€œI’m going to whoop Devin Haney’s ass. And I’m going to be pound-for-pound at the top,ā€ Prograis said.

Then he wants only big fights.

He would love a rematch with Taylor to avenge the loss but the Scot has moved up to 147 pounds. That means heā€™ll target the best remaining in a deep division, guys like Teofimo Lopez, Subriel Matias, Rolando Romero, Ryan Garcia and the rest.

ā€œAll I want now at this stage of my career is the big pay per view fights. That’s it,ā€ Prograis said. He went on: ā€œI want big fights. There are bigger fights than a Josh Taylor rematch. Personally, I want it. But business wise, there are bigger fights.ā€

First he must win the big fight on Saturday.

[lawrence-related id=40025,40011]

Regis Prograis believes he’s a better fighter after suffering loss

Two-time 140-pound champ Regis Prograis believes he’s a better fighter after suffering a loss to Josh Taylor in 2019.

Regis Prograis has a chance to be a bigger star than ever.

The talented native of New Orleans was a hot commodity when he stepped into the ring to face Josh Taylor in a 140-pound title-unification bout but walked out with his first loss ā€“ by a majority decision — and a damaged reputation in 2019.

However, he bounced back by winning three consecutive fights to earn a meeting with Jose Zepeda for a vacant belt and won by 11th-round knockout to become a two-time champ last November.

And now comes arguably the biggest fight of his career: He is scheduled to defend his title against former undisputed 135-pound champ Devin Haney on pay-per-view Saturday at Chase Center in San Francisco.

He says the setback against Taylor made him a better fighter.

ā€œIā€™ve tasted defeat and frustration,ā€ Prograis told The Guardian. ā€œIā€™ve been in a locker room after I lost and never want to go back there again. When you taste failure, it makes you much stronger. Devinā€™s never had failure so itā€™s hard to know how he will react.

ā€œSo far heā€™s been winning but when it gets really hard on Saturday he could potentially fold.ā€

Yes, Prograis is confident even though heā€™s about a 3Ā½-1 underdog to Haney (30-0, 15 KOs). He went so far as to predict a knockout when he spoke to members of the media at a work out in Los Angeles.

Then, the 34-year-old figures, heā€™ll finally realize the potential he seemed to have before the Taylor fight. He expects to replace Haney on pound-for-pound lists after he has his hand raised in victory Saturday night in Haney’s hometown.

ā€œI’m going to whoop Devin Haney’s ass. And I’m going to be pound-for-pound at the top,ā€ Prograis said.

Then he wants only big fights.

He would love a rematch with Taylor to avenge the loss but the Scot has moved up to 147 pounds. That means heā€™ll target the best remaining in a deep division, guys like Teofimo Lopez, Subriel Matias, Rolando Romero, Ryan Garcia and the rest.

ā€œAll I want now at this stage of my career is the big pay per view fights. That’s it,ā€ Prograis said. He went on: ā€œI want big fights. There are bigger fights than a Josh Taylor rematch. Personally, I want it. But business wise, there are bigger fights.ā€

First he must win the big fight on Saturday.

[lawrence-related id=40025,40011]

Photos: Devin Haney vs. Regis Prograis weigh-in and fighter faceoff

Check out these photos from the weigh-ins and fighter faceoff for Devin Haney vs. Regis Prograis in San Francisco.

Check out these photos from the weigh-ins and final faceoff for the WBC super lightweight championship boxing match between [autotag]Devin Haney[/autotag] and [autotag]Regis Prograis[/autotag], which takes place at Chase Center in San Francisco.

Can Devin Haney maintain momentum in his new weight class?

Can Devin Haney maintain his momentum when he faces Regis Prograis in a new weight class on Saturday?

Devin Haney conquered one division, becoming the undisputed 135-pound champion at the age of 23. Can he take over another?

Haney (30-0, 15 KOs) hopes to take the first step in that process when he challenges WBC 140-pound Regis Prograis on pay-per-view Saturday night at Chase Center in San Francisco.

The challenger certainly isnā€™t lacking for confidence.

ā€œIā€™m going to beat the s— out of him,ā€ he said at a news conference to promote the event.

Will he?

No one doubts his skill set. He boxed his way to the pinnacle of the lightweight division, outpointing George Kambosos Jr. to claim all four major belts, repeating his victory in the rematch and then defeating Vasiliy Lomachenko in a close fight.

However, he did it while demonstrating little punching power. He has gone seven fights without a knockout, a stretch that goes back to his fourth-round stoppage of Zaur Abdullaev in 2019.

And now heā€™s moving up in weight to take on a talented two-time 140-pound titleholder in Prograis (29-1, 24 KOs).

How will Haney adjust to the new weight? Does he have enough oomph in his punches to keep Prograis honest? Can he take a punch from a junior welterweight? These are legitimate questions going into the fight.

Haney suggested that his fans have nothing to worry about. He said heā€™ll be stronger at 140 than he was at 135, in part because he doesnā€™t have to battle to make weight.

ā€œI want to see how Regis takes my punch,ā€ Haney told ESPN. ā€œ… I think Regis will be shocked [by my power]. I think the world will be shocked.ā€

Haneyā€™s certainly isnā€™t afraid to take risks.

He hasnā€™t faced an easy touch in years. His last six opponents were Yuriorkis Gamboa, Jorge Linares, Joseph Diaz Jr., Kambosos (twice) and Lomachenko, all of whom have held major world titles.

He couldā€™ve faced a marginal opponent to ease his way into his new division. Instead, he didnā€™t hesitate to challenge a respected champion.

ā€œI want to fight the best fighters in the world,” Haney told ESPN. “I’m 25 years old now and I’m only getting better, I’m only getting stronger, I’m only getting more comfortable in the ring. So why go backwards?ā€

We’ll see which direction Haney goes on Saturday.