Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix reports junior welterweight champion and pound-for-pound contender Shakur Stevenson is “finalizing” a deal with Dana White’s Zuffa Boxing. If this is true, White will have secured one of the pound-for-pound best fighters in the world to his growing stable of fighters, and he’ll also have an obvious premier matchup at 147 pounds between Stevenson and new-signee Conor Benn.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Reporter: Chris Mannix, Sports Illustrated
- Status: “Working towards finalizing” per Mannix — not yet officially signed
- Stevenson’s Record: 25-0 (11 KOs)
- Current Titles: WBO and Ring Magazine junior welterweight (140 lbs)
- Last Fight: Defeated Teofimo Lopez 119-109 at MSG, January 31, 2026
- Previously Reported Offer: $60 million for three fights (Stevenson dismissed in March)
- Zuffa Boxing Run By: Nick Khan, fronted by Dana White, bankrolled by Saudi Arabia
- Other Recent Zuffa Signings: Conor Benn ($15M one-fight), Jai Opetaia, Richardson Hitchins
What Did Chris Mannix Report About Shakur Stevenson?
Mannix’s reporting frames Stevenson as “working towards finalizing a deal” with Zuffa Boxing, with multiple sources telling SI that Zuffa’s guaranteed money proved too significant for Stevenson to ignore despite competing offers.
The reporting represents a meaningful shift from March, when Stevenson publicly dismissed a rumored $60 million three-fight offer on the Night Cap podcast.
The reporting also notes Zuffa is willing to work with boxing’s sanctioning bodies for top stars even as the promotion publicly positions itself against the WBO/IBF/WBA/WBC sanctioning structure. That carve-out matters for Stevenson, whose WBO and Ring Magazine titles are currently the most marketable assets attached to his name.
Why Is This Deal Significant?
If finalized, Stevenson would become Zuffa Boxing’s first true pound-for-pound, prime-age signing. White has spent 2025 and early 2026 stocking the roster with a mix of over 90 fighters, but most signings have been midlevel talent or veterans like Jai Opetaia.
Stevenson is a different category entirely — a 28-year-old four-division world champion who just delivered a 119-109 masterclass over Teofimo Lopez at Madison Square Garden.
That signing would also fundamentally shift negotiation leverage across the sport. Top names approaching free agency would suddenly have a credible third pole — not just Matchroom, PBC, or Top Rank, but a Zuffa option backed by Saudi capital and Paramount+ distribution. Devin Haney has been rumored as the next domino.
What Does This Mean For Stevenson?
A Zuffa-backed Stevenson run is going to be event-driven, not stay-busy work. Mannix’s earlier reporting and EssentiallySports both pointed to a potential late-2026 Las Vegas stadium card headlined by Stevenson vs. Conor Benn, assuming Benn rebounds from his recent fight against Regis Prograis.
Beyond the purse, the appeal is Dana White’s track record building megastars rather than just fighters. Boxing promoters have historically struggled with cross-platform marketing; White’s UFC infrastructure plus Paramount+ distribution gives Zuffa a different reach. Stevenson reportedly earned $8-10 million for the Lopez fight — even at the lower end of new Zuffa numbers, the per-fight purse jumps significantly.
What’s The Obvious First Fight?
Stevenson vs. Benn at welterweight is the matchup Zuffa would build around. Benn is already signed, just put his unbeaten record on the line at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on April 11, and is exactly the kind of marketable name needed to anchor a stadium card.
The fight makes commercial sense, fits Zuffa’s stadium-first event strategy, and lets White open the Stevenson era with a bout casual fans actually recognize. If the deal closes the way Mannix is reporting, expect that fight to be announced as Zuffa’s first major U.S. stadium show — likely late 2026 in Las Vegas, with Paramount+ distribution attached.
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