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Home»Boxing»Ryan Garcia rejects Shakur Stevenson’s belt argument, demands 147 with no rehydration clause
Boxing

Ryan Garcia rejects Shakur Stevenson’s belt argument, demands 147 with no rehydration clause

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 22, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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Ryan Garcia rejects Shakur Stevenson’s belt argument, demands 147 with no rehydration clause

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The change came through a direct exchange today with the Newark, New Jersey native. Shakur pointed to his record of winning titles across multiple divisions as proof of the difference between them, placing the argument on achievement. Ryan dismissed that point and answered with a challenge, saying both fighters began at lower weights and that Shakur should be able to move up without conditions if he expects the fight.

“There’s no difference,” Garcia posted on X, rejecting the idea that a resume should decide the terms and instead putting the emphasis on whether Stevenson would accept a fight without built-in limits.

The conversation had already moved through several versions before this turn. Ryan had previously floated a 144-pound catchweight, while Shakur later said he would fight at 140 without a rehydration clause. That progression suggested a middle ground was forming. It also placed Garcia back in a position that mirrors the structure of his loss to Gervonta Davis.

That fight was held at a catchweight with a rehydration limit, restricting how much Ryan could regain before the opening bell. The terms were part of securing the bout, but they also defined the conditions he fought under. It remains the clearest example of Ryan agreeing to a structure that favored the other side.

The current stance removes those elements. By moving the target to 147 with no rehydration clause, Garcia is taking away the mechanisms that control size on fight night. The demand does not meet Stevenson in the middle. It asks him to give up the protections that are usually part of moving up in weight.

Shakur’s position still rests on achievement. He has collected titles in multiple divisions and has presented himself as the more proven fighter at higher levels. That argument carries weight in most negotiations. Ryan’s reply does not engage with it. He has redirected the discussion to terms and to whether Stevenson is willing to accept a fight without limits attached.

There is also a business element underneath the exchange. Ryan brings a larger audience and wider reach, particularly on social media, while Shakur’s case is built more on results in the ring. Accepting reduced weight or added restrictions would mean giving up both competitive ground and negotiating leverage to the less commercially established fighter, which makes the earlier proposals harder to justify from Garcia’s side.

The discussion has not ended, but it has changed direction. Earlier versions of the fight were built on meeting somewhere in the middle. This version is built on resistance from Ryan. He is no longer offering ways to land on Shakur’s preferred numbers. He is asking whether Shakur will move to a number that removes those preferences entirely.

The fight is still there, but the terms are now the fight. Garcia has made that clear, and until Stevenson answers on those terms, the discussion does not move.

Ken Woods has been a senior writer at Boxing News 24 since 2013, covering the sport from every angle. With years of ringside reporting, he delivers fight news, results, and analysis that cut through the noise. Ken’s work consistently spotlights champions, contenders, and rising prospects, giving fans a sharp, knowledgeable view of the global boxing scene. 

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