“May 30th, I’mma punish you. You doing all this talking, y’all going to be hurt,” said O’Shaquie.
Ford refused to back down and answered with confidence of his own, insisting the champion has no answer for him.
“Whatever I want. Whatever I want. And he can’t [mess] with me,” said Ford.
The bad blood appeared to come from more than standard pre-fight selling. Ford accused Foster of delaying the fight and claimed he had chased this chance for years.
“You think I’m going to be calling you out for two years?” said Ford.
O’Shaquie rejected that version of events and instead questioned Ford’s standing in the sport, dismissing his accomplishments while praising his own résumé.
“You ain’t done [anything] in the sport,: said O’Shaquie.
Later in the exchange, O’Shaquie also said Ford lacked belief in himself, while Ford claimed the titleholder would struggle once real pressure was applied. Neither side showed any sign of respect by the end of the session.
The fight itself is one of the better matchups on the upcoming schedule. O’Shaquie enters as the defending WBC 130-lb champion and one of the slickest boxers in the division. Ford is trying to become a two-division titleholder and believes this is the moment he takes over at 130 pounds.
The fight will headline a May 30 card on DAZN from the Fertitta Center in Houston, giving Foster a hometown stage as he defends his title against Camden, New Jersey challenger Raymond Ford.
Press conferences can be forgettable and empty. This one felt different because both men seemed eager to keep arguing long after the cameras started rolling.

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