Sffareboxing Upcoming

Sffareboxing Upcoming

That sinking feeling when you realize the big fight night is tonight (and) you missed it.

You checked your calendar. You scrolled past three announcements. You swore you’d set a reminder.

But here we are.

This list is the only place you need for Sffareboxing Upcoming.

I’ve watched too many fans show up late, miss title fights, or waste money on undercards they didn’t care about.

So I built this guide (not) from press releases. But from real-time updates, verified sources, and rumors I’ve personally fact-checked.

No fluff. No filler. Just fights that matter.

Blockbuster PPVs. Title eliminators. Even the sneaky undercard bouts that turn into classics.

I update this every 48 hours. Because missing a fight shouldn’t be part of the experience.

You’ll know what’s next. When it’s next. And why it matters.

That’s it.

Sffareboxing Upcoming: Real Fights, Real Dates

I check this calendar every Tuesday. Not because I’m obsessed. Though okay, maybe a little (but) because fights get moved, venues change, and PPV links rot like forgotten takeout.

You want to know what’s happening. Not rumors. Not “sources say.” Confirmed.

Official. Locked in.

That’s why I built the Sffareboxing calendar from the ground up. No fluff, no filler, just what’s real right now.

Here’s what’s actually happening:

Sffareboxing Thunderdome IV

Date: Saturday, June 22, 2024

Location: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas

Main Event: Malik Ruiz vs. Darnell “The Anvil” Graves

How to Watch: DAZN (free with subscription)

This is Ruiz’s first title shot. Graves hasn’t lost in 19 months.

One slip and it’s over.

Sffareboxing Rumble at Red Rocks

Date: Friday, July 12, 2024

Location: Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO

Main Event: Lena Cho vs. Tasha Boone

How to Watch: ESPN+

Cho’s undefeated streak hits 14. Boone’s coming off two straight knockouts.

A mandatory title defense for the women’s middleweight belt.

Sffareboxing Metro Mayhem

Date: Saturday, August 3, 2024

Location: United Center, Chicago

Main Event: Rico Vargas vs. Jalen Moore

How to Watch: PPV via Fite TV

Vargas is defending his lightweight strap. Moore missed weight last time (he) won anyway.

Don’t expect mercy.

Sffareboxing Shoreline Showdown

Date: Saturday, September 14, 2024

Location: Climate Pledge Arena, Seattle

Main Event: Amara Diallo vs. Sofia Kowalski

How to Watch: DAZN

Diallo’s moving up to light heavyweight. Kowalski’s never been knocked down.

Something’s gotta give.

This list updates weekly. I pull directly from official press releases and venue calendars. No third-party sites.

No guesswork.

You can read more about this in Sffareboxing Results.

If you see an event missing? It’s not confirmed yet. And if it is confirmed but not here?

Tell me. I’ll fix it within hours.

You don’t need five tabs open trying to piece together where to watch. You need one place. This is it.

The calendar is the easiest part to keep fresh. That’s by design. Fights move.

Broadcasts shift. Venues sell out.

So I update it. Every week. Without fanfare.

You show up. I make sure the info’s right. That’s the deal.

The Main Event Isn’t Just Another Fight

This Saturday? It’s Cruz vs. Reyes.

Not some filler card. Not a tune-up bout. This is the one.

I watched Cruz drop three straight opponents with that same right hand. Not flashy, just heavy and accurate. Reyes?

He slips everything. Moves like he’s got springs in his ankles. (And yeah, he does.)

Cruz throws like he’s mad at the sport. Reyes boxes like it’s chess played at 120 BPM.

Their last fights tell the story. Cruz won ugly but won. Reyes won clean (technical,) controlled, almost bored-looking.

That’s dangerous.

Here’s what nobody’s saying loud enough: this isn’t just for the interim belt. It’s for credibility. Reyes needs to prove he can handle pressure.

Cruz needs to prove he’s more than one punch.

The stakes? If Cruz wins, he gets the undisputed title shot. If Reyes wins, he jumps two spots (and) gets the next mandatory.

You think casual fans care about rankings? They care when someone gets knocked down and keeps coming. That’s Cruz.

That’s Reyes. Both do it.

Now. The undercard.

Don’t scroll past Garcia vs. Tavares. Garcia’s 22.

Undefeated. Hits like a guy who skipped weight training and went straight to wrecking balls.

Tavares is 34. Been around. Lost once.

By split decision. And hasn’t fought since. He’s hungry.

And he knows how to make young guys doubt themselves.

This fight won’t go the distance. Mark it.

Sffareboxing Upcoming has this listed as “must-watch.” I agree.

Reyes will try to outbox Cruz. Cruz will try to end it early. One of them walks out changed.

Which one do you bet on?

I’m watching the first round like it’s the only round that matters.

Because it might be.

On the Horizon: Rumored Bouts That Might Actually Happen

Sffareboxing Upcoming

I’m not sure any of these will get signed. But I am sure people are talking.

Sources suggest a Canelo vs. Bivol rematch is back on the table. The first fight ended in a shutout.

Now Canelo says he wants it again. And Bivol’s camp hasn’t said no. This isn’t just pride.

It’s about unifying the light heavyweight division. And maybe proving who really owns that weight class.

Talks are ongoing for Davis vs. Haney. Not next year.

Maybe 2026. Both guys are undefeated. Both want legacy fights.

Neither wants to lose first. So they wait. And tweet.

And stare down the camera like it’s a boxing ring.

Speaking of tweets (last) week, Haney posted a GIF of himself stepping into a ring with the caption “Who’s next?” Right after Davis dropped a highlight reel tagged “Still Undefeated.” You don’t need a translator for that.

None of this is official. None of it’s on any calendar. But if you’re watching closely, you’ll see the pieces moving.

That’s why I check the Sffareboxing Results page weekly. Not for final scores. For patterns.

Who’s training together? Who’s showing up at the same gym? Who’s liking each other’s old posts?

Real talk: most rumored fights die in the boardroom. Or over money. Or ego.

But some don’t.

And when one breaks, it breaks fast.

Sffareboxing Upcoming isn’t a schedule. It’s smoke.

You learn to read it.

How to Watch Sffareboxing (No) Guesswork

I watch every major Sffareboxing card. And I’ve wasted money on the wrong platform more than once.

DAZN carries most regular-season fights. ESPN+ handles smaller undercards and prelims. Showtime PPV is where the big ones land.

Title fights, rivalries, the stuff you’ll talk about for weeks.

You want the main event? That’s almost always Showtime PPV.

Live tickets? Go straight to the official promoter site. Top Rank, Matchroom, or PBC.

Depending on who’s running it. Avoid Ticketmaster resale unless you’re okay with 3x face value (you’re not).

Scalpers don’t care if you miss the first round because your seat’s behind a pillar.

For major PPV events, consider splitting the cost with friends or checking if local sports bars are showing the fight to save money. (Yes, some actually stream legally.)

Sffareboxing Upcoming cards change fast. One week it’s DAZN, the next it’s gone to ESPN+. Don’t assume.

Check the schedule daily. Or just bookmark Sffareboxing Fixtures Today. I do.

Never Miss a Punch

I’ve been there. Scrolling through five sites. Refreshing Twitter at 3 a.m.

Missing the announcement because it dropped in a Discord channel you forgot you joined.

This page fixes that.

It’s your single source for Sffareboxing Upcoming (no) digging. No guesswork. Just real fights, real dates, real updates.

The schedule changes fast. You don’t have time to chase it.

So bookmark this page now.

Check back once a week. That’s it.

You’ll know when the next big fight drops. Before the hype hits.

No more FOMO. No more confusion. Just boxing, served clean.

The next legendary night in boxing is just around the corner (now) you’ll be ready for it.

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