Dana White’s boxing venture just made its most significant move yet.
Zuffa Boxing has signed four-division world champion Shakur Stevenson to a multifight deal, the promotion confirmed with ESPN on Friday—a landmark acquisition that instantly elevates the fledgling outfit’s credibility and gives it its most decorated fighter by a considerable margin.
Stevenson is 25-0 with 11 knockouts, 29 years old, and has already won world championships at featherweight, junior lightweight, lightweight, and junior welterweight. He comes in off a one-sided dismantling of Teofimo Lopez for the WBO 140-pound title in January and is ranked No. 5 on ESPN’s pound-for-pound list. He is also, by almost any statistical measure, the most difficult boxer on the planet to hit cleanly.
The CompuBox numbers paint the picture: Stevenson leads all championship-level boxers in plus/minus at 23, total connect percentage at 40.9%, and jab connect percentage at 32.3%. Opponents have managed to land their power punches at a 20.4% clip against him—the lowest of any active boxer at his level. He is a defensive wizard with the kind of ring intelligence that makes opponents look confused before they even throw a punch.
Shakur Stevenson Is Biggest Fish in Zuffa Pond
White did not undersell the moment.
“Shakur is one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world. He’s 29 years old, undefeated and already a four-division world champion,” White said in a statement to ESPN. “This is a massive signing for Zuffa Boxing, and I’m looking forward to promoting this next fight.”
Shakur Stevenson, born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, was a 2016 United States Olympic silver medalist before turning professional and steadily building one of boxing’s most complete resumes. Rumours of a Zuffa signing had been circulating for months—Thursday’s announcement made it official.
He joins a Zuffa Boxing roster that already includes Conor Benn, Jai Opetaia, Richardson Hitchins, and Edgar Berlanga. It also has under its banner Filipino talents Mark Magsayo and Jerwin Ancajas. Out of all these fighers, though, Shakur Stevenson is clearly the highest-profile and most accomplished addition to date. His arrival gives White’s promotion something it has lacked: a genuine pound-for-pound contender capable of generating major fights and serious commercial interest.
Stevenson, for his part, was unambiguous about his intentions.
“Line them up, one by one, and I’ll beat all the top guys once I get them in front of me,” he said. “With Zuffa Boxing, I’m going to go after the biggest fights in the sport and I will become the No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter in the world.”
Zuffa Pivot Brings Complications to Shakur Stevenson’s Career
The path to that stated goal carries some complications. Zuffa Boxing does not have a 140-pound division, meaning Stevenson’s WBO junior welterweight title is expected to be vacated given the promotion’s notoriously cold relationship with the sanctioning bodies. His next weight class is yet to be confirmed. The promotion also currently lacks the depth of high-level opponents to match him against internally, raising questions about whether Zuffa will need to work with other promoters to build his debut fight.
Those details will be resolved in the coming weeks, with Zuffa Boxing indicating Stevenson’s promotional debut will be announced shortly. He has been linked to potential matchups with welterweight champions Devin Haney and Ryan Garcia—fights that would deliver on his promise to chase the biggest names in the sport.
Zuffa Boxing is still building. With Shakur Stevenson in its corner, the foundation just got considerably stronger.



