The BBC’s decided boxing deserves a seat back at the Saturday night table, teaming up with BOXXER to stream fights on BBC iPlayer and air them on good old free-to-air TV. That’s right – you won’t need to pay £20 on PPV to watch a prospect batter some overmatched Latvian. For now.
It’s not just the main fights, either. They’ll chuck in a few undercard bouts, behind-the-scenes bits, and some filler features across the BBC Sport site and app. Sounds nice, but most of us just want decent fights without three hours of preamble and half-time montages that look like they were made for the Six Nations.
BBC Says Boxing’s Back – But Will Anyone Care?
Alex Kay-Jelski from BBC Sport is already patting himself on the back, talking about bringing boxing to “younger audiences” and giving them “the next generation” of fighters. The “next generation” is great and all, but if the matchmaking’s garbage, no one’s going to stick around past round three. This sport needs blood, drama, and real competition – not just a shiny set and a pre-fight panel.
Shalom Promises the “Biggest Possible Audience” – Yeah, We’ve Heard That Before
BOXXER boss Ben Shalom calls it “historic” and says they’ll bring the most “entertaining” fighters to the biggest audience. Translation: they’ll try to make stars without risking them too soon. Hopefully that means real 50/50 fights instead of another unbeaten kid against a cab driver with six losses in a row.
This could be a win for fans… if they don’t fill it with safe matchmaking and padded records. BBC’s got the platform, BOXXER’s got the fighters – now let’s see if they’ve got the guts to put on fights worth watching. Or will it be another overproduced Saturday night snoozefest?
Last Updated on 08/08/2025
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