
Cruiserweight Jake Paul and lightweight Gervonta Davis announce they will fight on Nov. 14
Paul's promotional company, Most Valuable Promotions, and Netflix announced the highly unusual matchup Wednesday. Netflix will stream the fight worldwide to its more than 300 million subscribers.
The 30-year-old Davis (30-0-1, 28 KOs), a three-division world champion, would be the first star near his ostensible prime to face Paul (12-1, 7 KOs), the online celebrity who has become one of the world's highest-paid combat sports athletes despite never fighting an elite boxer.
Netflix and Nakisa Bidarian, Paul's business partner, did not refer to the fight as an exhibition, but it's unclear how Georgia officials would allow the matchup to be held as a competitive bout, given the fighters' dramatic difference in size and experience.
Paul typically weighs more than 200 pounds in the ring, while Davis is a 135-pound champion who has never fought above 140 pounds. The fighters did not announce a contracted weight or the number of rounds in their planned bout.
The fight would mark a return to Netflix for the 28-year-old Paul, whose victory last November over the then-58-year-old Mike Tyson drew an estimated 108 million viewers globally.
After Paul beat a tepid Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. by decision earlier this summer, he entered the World Boxing Association's cruiserweight rankings at No. 14, making him eligible to fight for world titles.
Instead of pursuing a cruiserweight belt, Paul recently discussed a fight with two-time heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua — a more logical opponent in terms of size and strength — but shifted his focus to the popular Davis. who has jousted with Paul on social media for years.
Perhaps Paul can look inside his own family for a plan: His older brother, Logan, weighed 189 pounds before fighting Floyd Mayweather at 155 pounds in an eight-round exhibition bout in 2021. Promoters said the spectacle sold more than 1 million pay-per-view buys and made more than $80 million.
Davis has been billed by his promoters as 'the modern day Mike Tyson" because of the frequency with which he has won by knockout, but his career and life have been rocky in 2025. He struggled to a shocking draw against Lamont Roach Jr. in his most recent ring outing in March, and he was arrested on a domestic violence charge in Florida last month before the misdemeanor battery case was dropped last week.
Bidarian said Paul and Davis are 'favorites of the Gen Z and Gen Alpha audiences,' and that their bout will 'determine the true face of boxing's next generation.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
12 minutes ago
- NBC News
Errani and Vavassori win revamped U.S. Open mixed doubles to defend their title
NEW YORK (AP) — Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori weren't even sure they would get to defend their U.S. Open mixed doubles title. Organizers revamped the tournament because they wanted singles superstars, not doubles specialists. They not only made it back to New York, they made it back to the top. The Italians beat No. 3 seeds Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud 6-3, 5-7 (10-6) on Wednesday night, winning four matches over two days to earn $1 million— a huge raise over their earnings in New York last year in a format that looked nothing like this one. Errani and Vavassori were among the many critics of the changes to the event that shut out every other traditional doubles pairing, but had nothing but smiles — and plenty of hugs — after building a quick lead in the match tiebreaker and holding on in front of a large crowd inside Arthur Ashe Stadium. 'I think it was important for us to play,' Vavassori said. 'Like, I have to say the initiative was also important because it was really a statement that doubles can become something better. The stadium was packed. The people were enjoying it. If something doesn't work — like, we showed today that it's working. Like, the people were going crazy.' It was a setting rarely enjoyed by doubles players and what U.S. Open organizers sought when they overhauled their tournament, moving it to well before singles play starts Sunday in hopes that tennis' best-known players would play. Many of them did. But in the end, the event belonged to the doubles duo. Eight teams in the 16-team field qualified by their players' combined singles rankings, with the remaining teams given wild cards. Errani doubted the Italians were going to get one. They eventually did and became the first repeat mixed doubles champions in Flushing Meadows since Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Jamie Murray in 2018-19. Both repeatedly said they were representing the many doubles players who never had the chance to come to New York with them this year. 'I think this one is also for them,' Errani said. The event drew past U.S. Open singles champions Carlos Alcaraz, Emma Raducanu, Novak Djokovic, Naomi Osaka and Daniil Medvedev, all of whom lost on the first day. Even without them, almost all the seats were full for the three matches Wednesday night in Arthur Ashe Stadium, with the roof closed after it rained most of the afternoon. Ruud acknowledged that the U.S. Tennis Association took a bold risk with its changes, with critics saying it turned the championship, with shortened sets to 4 games in the first three rounds, into a glorified exhibition, rather than the two-week, 32-event of the past. But even players who specialize in doubles agreed that the event got way more attention than they are accustomed to. 'Any time you get a full crowd like this, how can we keep that going?' Christian Harrison said after he and Danielle Collins lost 4-2, 4-2 to Errani and Vavassori in the semis. 'I mean, unreal night. I won't forget this night.' Swiatek and Ruud edged the top-seeded team of Jessica Pegula and Jack Draper 3-5, 5-3 (10-8) in the other semifinal, battling back from an 8-4 deficit in the match tiebreaker. The No. 2-ranked Swiatek, a six-time Grand Slam singles champion, and Ruud, who has reached three major singles finals, then played well in the final. But they couldn't match the doubles prowess of the Italians, who won a second major title together at this year's French Open. Vavassori, with his height and constant movement around the net, was a hard target to pass even for Swiatek and Ruud, two accurate ball strikers from the baseline. 'I think in doubles we showed it's very important know how to play doubles,' Errani said. 'In doubles it's not just serving good, hitting good, returning good. There are many other things that are not easy.' Errani is one of the most accomplished women's doubles players ever, having won a career Grand Slam with former partner Roberta Vinci, along with the 2024 Olympic gold medal with Jasmine Paolini — who was in the crowd cheering after pulling out of this event after losing to Swiatek on Monday night in the Cincinnati final.


San Francisco Chronicle
12 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Ilona Maher wants America to fall in love with rugby during Women's World Cup
SUNDERLAND, England (AP) — Ilona Maher's mission at the Women's Rugby World Cup is about more than just winning games. Heading into the United States' tournament opener on Friday, the world's most followed rugby player on social media wants to get more eyeballs on the sport as it ramps up attempts to crack the market in America. 'Not many people know that there's a Women's Rugby World Cup going on, so we try to get as many people as we can to spread that knowledge,' Maher said ahead of the match against host England in the World Cup curtain-raiser in Sunderland. 'We want the fans in America to see us play here because we've got a World Cup there in eight years and we need to start building for that.' Rugby authorities see America as a vital new market for the sport. The United States will stage the men's Rugby World Cup in 2031 and the women's tournament in 2033. The presence of Maher is key to attracting attention on rugby in the U.S., given she has 5.2 million followers on Instagram and 3.6 million on TikTok — platforms on which she promotes body positivity. The 29-year-old Vermont native believes she and her teammates are 'changing the game on and off the field a lot.' 'This is a time where women's rugby is in a state where it could grow massively,' she said, 'and I do believe this team is at the forefront with how we present ourselves and people's perception of us.' Maher certainly stands out, having been named as the best breakthrough athlete at the ESPYs last month. In an interview with the BBC ahead of the World Cup, she said she has been approached by the WWE — joking that her ring name would be 'Maher-vellous' if she ever became a wrestler — and that she'd love to get into acting. First, though, she wants to deliver at the World Cup, starting with the match in front of 40,000 spectators against England, the tournament favorite, in the north of the country. A star in rugby sevens, in which she won a bronze medal with the U.S. team at the Paris Olympics last year, Maher also had a three-month stint at English club Bristol in the 15 players-a-team format at the start of 2025. 'I think it's so cool,' Maher said, 'that we're up here, so far away from maybe where rugby union is big, and yet we're getting 40,000 people out to a game.'


News24
40 minutes ago
- News24
From Gqeberha to Netflix: Meet SA star Luyanda Lewis-Nyawo breaking out on Wednesday S2
South Africa has another reason to beam with pride on the international entertainment stage. Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo, born and raised in Gqeberha, is currently starring in one of Netflix's biggest shows as the formidable Sheriff Ritchie Santiago in Wednesday Season 2. After studying at Johannesburg's prestigious National School of the Arts — the same institution that nurtured Charlize Theron — they took a detour through film and advertising studies, searching for direction but finding few satisfying answers. The turning point came through community theatre sessions with veteran South African director Dorothy Ann Gould in Westdene. Lewis-Nyawo was later accepted at London's Royal Central School of Speech and Drama for three years. From there, Lewis-Nyawo built their career through British television staples like Top Boy and Doctor Who, plus streaming features including the star-studded Back in Action. Each role was a stepping stone toward their Wednesday breakthrough. Speaking to The Medium about stepping into the shoes of Sheriff Santiago, Lewis-Nyawo reveals the parallels and differences between themselves and their character: 'Santiago is really capable and quick on her feet. In that way, we're similar. We both go after something and commit to it fully, seeing it through to the end.' However, they acknowledge a key difference: 'Santiago has to navigate a male-dominated world and present herself from a position of strength. She doesn't always have the privilege of softness, which is a shame. I, on the other hand, seek that softness out as often as I can.' Jonathan Hession/Netflix The most meaningful review came from home. Speaking to Pink News, Lewis-Nyawo beamed about their mother's reaction: 'My mum is very proud. Her exact words this morning were, 'How was it received by the public? I, for one, was impressed and entertained.' The actor joins Emmy-nominated star Jenna Ortega, who previously told News24 about the pressure of maintaining Wednesday's legacy: 'I don't think anything will be as stressful as the first season, just because I so desperately wanted her to resonate with people.'