logo
Shields to defend heavyweight titles against Daniels

Shields to defend heavyweight titles against Daniels

Yahoo08-05-2025

Claressa Shields has won all 16 of her professional fights [Getty Images]
Undisputed world heavyweight champion Claressa Shields will defend her belts against IBF light heavyweight champion Lani Daniels on 26 July in Detroit.
Shields, 30, became the first undisputed women's heavyweight champion with a unanimous points win over fellow American Danielle Perkins in February.
Advertisement
The two-time Olympic champion added the IBF, WBO and WBA heavyweight titles to her WBC belt with her 16th professional win.
Shields added to her undisputed titles in middleweight and light-middleweight to become boxing's first undisputed world champion in three weight classes.
Shields was suspended by the Michigan commission in February after she tested positive for marijuana following her defeat of Perkins.
The suspension was dissolved after evidence showed procedural errors occurred during the collection of Shields' samples.
New Zealand's Daniels, 36, is a former IBF heavyweight champion.
Advertisement
She is unbeaten in her past nine bouts, including two draws.
The fight will be held at Little Caesars Arena.
More boxing from the BBC

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Texas Tech shows value of investing in softball, plus colleges can begin paying athletes
Texas Tech shows value of investing in softball, plus colleges can begin paying athletes

New York Times

time18 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Texas Tech shows value of investing in softball, plus colleges can begin paying athletes

The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic's daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox. Good morning! Share some revenue today. The Women's College World Series was great theater. Texas beat Texas Tech, 10-4, last night in a decisive third game of the championship series. It was the Longhorns' first title. Nearly as big a highlight came in the semifinals, when Texas Tech ended Oklahoma's four-year championship streak. As this captivating tournament ends, the runners-up raise a compelling point about what should happen next. Advertisement The Red Raiders were onto something this year. Just as Tech boosters have plowed money into football players the past few years, they have rallied around softball of late. The key to Tech's run was NiJaree Canady, the pitcher who came close to throwing every single pitch of the team's postseason run. She started her career at Stanford and was a star there, winning USA Softball Player of the Year in 2024. Tech's people offered her $1 million to leave Palo Alto for Lubbock, and after an intense recruitment (chronicled in detail by The Athletic), she took them up on it. It was a savvy investment, so much so that she has just agreed to another seven figures to stay for next year. Canady has become the face of the sport, even a potential softball version of Caitlin Clark. Tech hadn't made the NCAA tournament since 2019 and was the worst team in the Big 12 as recently as two years ago. With Canady leading the way, Tech went supernova. She got hit around on Friday, allowing five runs in her only inning of work, which raised her season era to … 1.11. That's the kind of pitcher she was this year. There's a roadmap here for athletic directors and donors with the eyes to see it. Softball looks like a sport on the rise, with trendlines going up in WCWS attendance and viewership. Major League Baseball sees enough upside to back a new professional league. Other college athletic departments and their boosters might learn a thing or two from Texas Tech. A million NIL bucks wouldn't even get you a good quarterback in the Big 12, but it got Tech the best player in the country and a College World Series run. Plus, very soon, schools themselves will be able to openly invest in athletes in a new way. Last night (more below), a federal judge approved a settlement that allows schools to share up to $20.5 million next year with their athletes. Big-time athletic departments will spend most of it on football. But seeing how much a softball team can get for so little, why shouldn't an enterprising AD try a different tack? There's a market inefficiency here. Exploit it. Colleges can begin paying athletes Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval of the House v. NCAA settlement last night, paving the way for schools to pay athletes directly for the first time. The settlement establishes a 10-year revenue sharing model that allows each school to distribute up to roughly $20.5 million in revenue to athletes this season — in addition to any NIL money from boosters. Here's a comprehensive explainer on the widespread ramifications of the settlement, but we'll have much more this week. Advertisement Marchand the hero in Game 2 This Stanley Cup Final is setting up to be an all-timer. The Panthers led 4-3 in the third period last night until 40-year-old Corey Perry sent Game 2 to overtime with 17.8 seconds to play. Florida had chance after chance to bury the Oilers once more in overtime. No dice. Eight minutes into double overtime, with both teams running on fumes, deadline acquisition Brad Marchand scored his second of the night to finally bury Edmonton. We have a 1-1 series heading to Florida. Incredible drama. Alcaraz, Sinner advance to French Open final Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner are simply levels better than everyone else at the moment. Alcaraz dropped the first set in his semifinal yesterday, then hit another level and looked well on his way to an easy four-set win before Lorenzo Musetti retired with a leg injury. All Sinner had to do to meet Alcaraz in the final was take down 24-time Grand Slam champ Novak Djokovic. The GOAT played his best tennis of the year and still couldn't take a set off Sinner. Alcaraz and Sinner will meet in a Grand Slam final for the first time tomorrow. Get used to this. More news: The Stars fired coach Pete DeBoer, who led Dallas to the Western Conference final in all three of his seasons at the helm. He dug his own grave. Canada soccer coach Jesse Marsch claimed Vancouver Whitecaps players were 'poisoned' after a significant number of players and staff fell ill in Mexico. An opposing team's spokesperson called Marsch's allegations 'damage control' after Vancouver lost 5-0 in the Concacaf Champions Cup final. Diamondbacks right-hander Corbin Burnes will undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery. A brutal blow. 📺 Tennis: French Open women's singles final 9 a.m. ET on TNT/truTV/Max No. 2 seed Coco Gauff against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka. This'll be good. Gauff would be the first American singles winner at Roland Garros since 2015. With Madison Keys taking the Australian Open, she'd make the U.S. two-for-two in grand slams this year. Sabalenka is the favorite, however. 📺 MLB: Cubs at Tigers 1:10 p.m. ET, MLB Network More on the Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong in tomorrow's Pulse, but for now, here's a nice matinee between the two first-place clubs in the Central divisions. 📺 Horse racing: Belmont Stakes 7:04 p.m. ET on Fox That's the post time, with Fox's main coverage starting three hours earlier. Your field guide is here, with Journalism favored over Sovereignty after they split the first two Triple Crown races. Brian Hamilton relayed the scene from Oklahoma City, where the NBA Finals and Women's College World Series created a sports vortex this week. Our excellent golf writer Brody Miller wrote a book on the Tiger Slam. It's a perfect summer sports read. You should buy it. — Chris Branch Mike Birbiglia's latest stand-up 'The Good Life' has an irreverence for human folly that sharpens its reverence for human existence. (And if you haven't watched 'The Old Man & the Pool,' start with that!) — Hannah Vanbiber The Athletic's weekly sports news quiz. 'Friendship' — A fantastically absurd and fun movie, which is wholly unsurprising when you consider it stars Tim Robinson and Paul Rudd. I saw it last week and certain scenes have been on loop in my head ever since. — Alex Iniguez Cleaning out my freezer (just do it!), then embracing its ability to help reduce food waste and save a little money. — Torrey Hart Two great Weird & Wild pieces from Jayson Stark this week: more mind-blowing Paul Skenes stats, and 10 ways the Rockies are making the wrong kind of history. There's a two-part documentary on Pee-wee Herman/Paul Reubens, called 'Pee-wee as Himself' and it is absolutely brilliant. It's on HBO/Max/whatever they're calling it these days. Highly recommend. — Levi Weaver Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Our newser on Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson's injury. Most-read on the website yesterday: The Djokovic-Sinner live blog. Ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

Dallas Wings on a 4-game losing streak after being defeated by Los Angeles Sparks, 93-79
Dallas Wings on a 4-game losing streak after being defeated by Los Angeles Sparks, 93-79

CBS News

time27 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Dallas Wings on a 4-game losing streak after being defeated by Los Angeles Sparks, 93-79

The Dallas Wings and the Los Angeles Sparks were both trying to snap their three-game losing streaks Friday night, and the Sparks came out on top. The Wings are now 1-8 on the season after losing to the Sparks 93-79 behind LA's Azura Stevens' career-high five 3-pointers. Former Wings guard turned Sparks guard, Odyssey Sims, who was coming off a 32-point performance in an 85-80 loss to Phoenix on Sunday, added 19 points and three 3-pointers for Los Angeles. The Wings trailed by five at halftime after Sims converted a three-point play with 2.2 seconds left. Sims finished the half with nine points, Stevens added 13 and Dearica Hamby had 11. The Sparks started the third quarter on a 6-0 run and added a 9-0 run to begin the fourth for a 76-55 lead. The Wings had three turnovers and two missed shots in the opening three minutes of the fourth. Stevens reached her career high on 3-pointers with 4:45 left in the fourth on a wide-open shot from the corner off a nice drive and pass by Kelsey Plum. DiJonai Carrington scored 16 points and JJ Quinerly had a career-high 14 for Dallas. Luisa Geiselsoder had 11 points and 10 rebounds for her first double-double. Kaila Charles had 10 points. The Wings were without both of their point guards -- rookie Paige Bueckers, who missed her third consecutive game with a concussion, and Ty Harris. Dallas has allowed 90-plus points three times during its four-game losing streak. Dallas looks to break home skid Dallas is looking to end its 4-game home skid with a victory against Minnesota on Sunday, June 8. Sunday's meeting will be the third of the season between the two teams. Dallas is 0- at home, and Minnesota is 4- on the road. Tipoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. CT.

Cristiano Ronaldo says he won't be at Club World Cup, despite receiving ‘plenty of offers'
Cristiano Ronaldo says he won't be at Club World Cup, despite receiving ‘plenty of offers'

New York Times

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Cristiano Ronaldo says he won't be at Club World Cup, despite receiving ‘plenty of offers'

Cristiano Ronaldo says he will almost certainly not play at this summer's Club World Cup, despite receiving multiple offers to do so. Ronaldo is contracted to Saudi Pro League (SPL) side Al Nassr, but his deal with the Public Investment Fund-owned club expires at the end of June. Al Nassr did not qualify for the Club World Cup, which begins on June 14, with Al Hilal the SPL's sole representative. Advertisement The 40-year-old could have moved to a team competing at the tournament in the United States, after FIFA gave nations the option of introducing an extra transfer window from June 1-10. There is also a mid-tournament registration window around the turn of the month. Given his expiring contract with Al Nassr, it had been speculated that one of the 32 clubs taking part in the first expanded edition of the Club World Cup may look to sign Ronaldo ahead of the competition. FIFA president Gianni Infantino added to the speculation when he said there were 'discussions' and Ronaldo 'might play' for a team at the tournament in an interview with YouTuber IShowSpeed last month. Discussing Lionel Messi competing in the event with his MLS club Inter Miami, Infantino then added: 'And Ronaldo might play for one of the teams as well at the Club World Cup. There are discussions with some clubs, so if any club is watching and is interested in hiring Ronaldo for the Club World Cup… who knows, who knows.' 'There have been a lot of conversations, but there are certain things that I see as making sense and not making sense,' Ronaldo said at a news conference on Saturday ahead of Portugal's Nations League final against Spain, via Record. 'You can't go to everything, you have to think short, medium and long term. I've pretty much made up my mind not to go to the Club World Cup, but I've had plenty of offers.' Ronaldo's fellow multiple Ballon d'Or winner and former La Liga rival Messi will be at the Club World Cup, after his Inter Miami side qualified in the spot awarded to the host nation by winning the 2024 MLS Supporters' Shield. Asked about potentially playing with Messi, 37, at the end of their careers, Ronaldo said: 'You never know. You know I have a lot of affection for Argentina, my wife is Argentinian. Advertisement 'You can never say, 'I won't drink from this water', but it's difficult. I want to go to Argentina, I have a lot of affection for the Argentinians and for Messi. We were rivals for many years, for 15 years. I used to translate for him at the galas, I'm very fond of him, he's always respected me and I him.' Ronaldo's 137th goal for Portugal was the winner in last Wednesday's 2-1 Nations League semi-final victory against Germany, while Spain beat France 5-4 in their semi-final on Thursday. Sunday's final takes place at Bayern Munich's Allianz Arena at 8pm BST/3pm ET. Ronaldo moved to Al Nassr from Manchester United in December 2022 and has scored 99 goals in 111 matches for the Saudi Arabian side. ()

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store