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Home»Boxing»Lamont Roach Still Has a Lane at 135 — Shakur Stevenson Doesn’t
Boxing

Lamont Roach Still Has a Lane at 135 — Shakur Stevenson Doesn’t

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 6, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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Lamont Roach Still Has a Lane at 135 — Shakur Stevenson Doesn’t

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Before Roach’s second consecutive draw, the matchup lived in a plausible competitive lane. Both fighters operated around lightweight, both leaned heavily on defensive control, and neither carried the kind of momentum that forced a different conversation. That shared positioning allowed the fight to be sold as a technical measuring stick rather than a concession by either side.

That lane closed the moment Stevenson defeated Teofimo Lopez and claimed the WBO title at 140 pounds. A fighter who has just taken a belt in a higher division does not benefit from stepping backward into a style heavy bout that offers little commercial upside. For Stevenson, the Roach fight now represents risk without reward, a return to a type of contest he has been trying to move beyond rather than repeat.

Roach’s insistence has remained visible on social media, presented as respect rather than agitation. His exchange with Stevenson earlier this week was friendly, even deferential. Stevenson replied warmly, praising Roach for staying authentic and expressing confidence that the fight could happen.

“Yesssir bro… Respect for not moving like a goofy for clout,” Stevenson wrote. “We gone make it happen for sure.”

Roach responded in kind, calling it the best fight at 135 and saluting Stevenson’s ability. The tone suggested mutual regard, not tension. Public goodwill, however, does not create leverage or dictate divisional movement.

The problem is structural, not personal. Roach enters this stretch without a win in his last two outings, but neither draw materially lowered his standing at lightweight, particularly given how the first was received, and movement at the title level has created openings rather than clarity. Stevenson enters as a newly crowned champion in a higher division with broader options and greater leverage. Those realities pull in opposite directions.

A defensive, low output fight against Roach does nothing to advance Stevenson’s standing at 140 pounds. It does not open new doors. It does not expand his profile. It simply revisits old debates about safety first styles that he has been trying to leave behind.

Roach’s persistence is understandable. Opportunities narrow quickly at this level, and familiar names feel safer than waiting for a division to turn. Still, the longer Stevenson stays positioned above lightweight, the harder it becomes to justify a fight that now reads as a step back rather than a challenge forward.

The public respect remains real. At lightweight, opportunity has not disappeared. Stevenson simply no longer represents it.

Robert Segal has been a key voice at Boxing News 24 for more than a decade, delivering fight news, previews, and analysis with a direct, insider edge. His work highlights champions, contenders, and rising talent from around the world, offering readers a clear understanding of where each fighter stands in the sport’s shifting landscape. Known for his sharp ringside perspective and straightforward reporting style, Robert consistently brings fans closer to the action with knowledgeable, no-nonsense coverage.

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