“I believe in the man,” Dirrell said to Fighthype about White. “I just don’t know how ugly it’s going to be in him trying to make it happen.”
Dirrell pointed to recent experiences around events run under that structure, where fighters are moved through quickly once their bout is over. There’s no return to the locker room, no time to sit with the result, or gather belongings at their own pace. Win or lose, the night ends abruptly.
He described fighters being directed out immediately after leaving the dressing room, with their equipment packed separately and waiting for them on the way out. Even those in the main events weren’t treated differently. Once the fight ended, the process was the same. You leave, collect your things, and go.
That approach, in his view, reflects a level of efficiency that could clash with how boxing has traditionally operated. The sport has long allowed space for fighters to recover, speak with trainers, and absorb the outcome before stepping back into the public flow. Removing that part entirely would change more than just logistics.
Dirrell isn’t dismissing the attempt to reshape the sport. He expects changes to come and accepts that not all of boxing’s existing habits need to stay in place. At the same time, he believes some parts of the structure still serve a purpose and shouldn’t be stripped away in the push to modernize.
“There’s a lot of ways in boxing that’s going to have to persist,” Dirrell said, while acknowledging that adjustments are inevitable as new ideas are tested.
The balance, as he sees it, will come down to how far those changes go and how quickly they’re applied. A system built on control and pace can work, but boxing isn’t starting from scratch. It’s a sport with routines fighters are used to, especially in the moments right after a fight when the physical and emotional toll is still fresh.
Dirrell expects White to keep pushing regardless of early setbacks, describing him as someone unlikely to step back once he commits to a direction. That persistence could eventually produce results. It could also mean a stretch where the process looks uncomfortable before it settles.
Dirrell isn’t questioning the intent. He’s watching how it plays out, knowing that in boxing, even necessary change can come at a cost that shows up first behind the scenes.
Read the full article here

