Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney Spark 144 Catchweight Talks on X
Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney exchange directly on X and signal openness to a 144-pound catchweight fight, heating up one of boxing's most anticipated potential matchups after months of public weight disputes.
Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney exchange directly on X and signal openness to a 144-pound catchweight fight, heating up one of boxing's most anticipated potential matchups after months of public weight disputes.
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Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney have turned their potential superfight into one of boxing's longest-running social media dramas, with each side trading barbs and demands across different weight classes for what feels like forever. Shakur has built his case around fighting at or near 140 pounds where he currently holds the WBO junior welterweight title, while Haney has insisted on terms that keep the bout at the full 147-pound welterweight limit after his move up from lightweight. Their camps have amplified the back and forth, especially around rehydration clauses and catchweight proposals that could level the playing field for the smaller man.
Today the conversation took a public turn toward compromise when Shakur jumped on X to lay out why 144 pounds works as common ground for two undefeated champions operating in separate divisions. He highlighted how historic fights like Floyd Mayweather versus Canelo Alvarez succeeded at catchweight and noted that Haney himself had stepped on the scale at 144 pounds for his matchup against Jose Ramirez just a couple fights back. The message landed with real impact, pulling in hundreds of thousands of views and sparking immediate debate among fans who have grown tired of the endless negotiation talk.
144 is fair for 2 champions in 2 separate weight classes, Floyd and Canelo made one of the biggest fights ever happen at a catch weight.. If yall seriously wanted the fight it would be easy to make , Yall fought Jose Ramirez at that weight 2 fights ago
— Shakur Stevenson (@ShakurStevenson) June 9, 2026
Posted by @ShakurStevenson on X. Embedded under X platform terms. All rights remain with the original poster.
Devin Haney wasted no time jumping into the replies by quoting Shakur directly and putting a clear question on the table. He asked whether locking in at 144 would finally mean they have a fight, a response that rocketed past a million views and drew cheers from supporters eager to see two elite technicians finally settle things in the ring. This exchange stands out because it moves past the usual camp-to-camp sniping and shows both fighters engaging each other head on about the specific number that could make the bout happen.
If I come to 144.. we have a fight? https://t.co/Vym2pVAxSo
— Devin Haney (@Realdevinhaney) June 9, 2026
Posted by @Realdevinhaney on X. Embedded under X platform terms. All rights remain with the original poster.
— Shakur Stevenson (@ShakurStevenson) June 9, 2026
Posted by @ShakurStevenson on X. Embedded under X platform terms. All rights remain with the original poster.
The history behind this moment runs deeper than just today's posts. Earlier this week Keyshawn Davis, who trains and shares a tight circle with Shakur, floated the idea that a Davis versus Haney fight could be the biggest one available right now. Haney shut that down fast by stating that his matchup with Shakur would top it and carry more significance in the current pound-for-pound landscape. Those layered exchanges only made today's direct dialogue between the two main names feel like a genuine step forward after months of stalled progress and public rejections of catchweight terms from the Haney side.
What makes this potential fight so compelling is the contrast in their paths and the high-level skill each brings. Shakur enters at 25-0 with his slick defensive game and fast hands that have carried him through tough tests at 130 and 135 before settling at 140. Haney sits at 33-0 after cleaning out lightweight as undisputed champion and now testing himself at 147, bringing experience against top competition and a sharp jab that controls distance. A 144-pound clash would strip away some of the size advantage Haney enjoys while forcing Shakur to prove he can handle a naturally bigger opponent without the full welterweight drain.
If the teams can turn this X agreement into official contracts, the winner would stake a serious claim as the top pound-for-pound fighter in the sport. Both guys have avoided the kind of risks that could derail their perfect records, so this one carries extra weight as a true 50-50 proposition between two defensive masters. The viral nature of today's back and forth proves the interest is there from the fans, and now the pressure shifts to making the fight a reality before another round of weight disputes drags it out again.
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