David Benavidez pulverizes Anthony Yarde in Riyadh and immediately sets his sights on Zurdo Ramirez
An electric night in Riyadh ended with David “The Monster” Benavidez reminding the boxing world why he’s one of the sport’s most dangerous punchers — and why his plans don’t stop at light heavyweight. In a seventh-round TKO, Benavidez dismantled Anthony Yarde to retain the WBC light-heavyweight crown, then announced a blockbuster move up to cruiserweight to challenge Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez. The result was clinical, the post-fight declaration bold, and boxing’s landscape just tilted again.
Quick hits from the night
- Location: ANB Arena, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
- Result: David Benavidez defeated Anthony Yarde by TKO (7th round).
- Stakes: Benavidez retained the WBC light-heavyweight title.
- Immediate announcement: Benavidez said he’ll move up to cruiserweight to face Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez on May 2 (reported as being aimed for Las Vegas).
- Why it matters: Benavidez not only defended his belt but telegraphed ambitions to be a three-division titlist — a storyline that reshapes match-making at 175 and 200+ pounds.
How the fight played out
Benavidez paced himself early, using range and feints to measure Yarde. Once he turned the pressure up, the bout became a textbook display of his strengths: tireless forward momentum, volume punching, and sudden, brutal bursts that left Yarde on the back foot. As the rounds progressed, Benavidez moved from probing jabs to waves of combinations that tested Yarde’s chin and resolve.
The referee stepped in late in round seven after Benavidez had Yarde trapped and unloading. There was controversy in the round — Benavidez landed while Yarde took a knee and was penalized a point — but that did little to change the trajectory. When the stoppage came it felt inevitable: Benavidez had broken the British challenger down with relentless work rate and accuracy.
Why this matters beyond one result
- Benavidez cemented his status as a top light-heavyweight and a genuine threat to the division’s elite — especially Dmitry Bivol, who holds multiple titles at 175. Benavidez’s size, speed and finishing ability make him a stylistic problem for most top light-heavyweights.
- The announced jump to fight Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez at cruiserweight changes the narrative. If that matchup happens, Benavidez would be testing his power and frame against bigger men, pursuing multi-division legacy. That’s an attention-grabbing, high-reward — and high-risk — career move.
- For Anthony Yarde, the loss raises questions about taking another elite-level step. He showed heart and moments of effectiveness, but again came undone against sustained pressure from a volume puncher. Yarde’s future at the top level may hinge on how he adjusts to that style or whether he chooses different matchups.
- Promoters and networks will now juggle bigger picture options: Benavidez vs. Bivol, Benavidez vs. Artur Beterbiev, or Benavidez moving up to Ramirez. Each path has different commercial and sporting implications.
What the numbers and performances suggest
- Benavidez is undefeated and now has multiple stoppages at light-heavyweight since moving up. His work rate and punch output stood out: not just landing power shots, but chaining combinations that accumulated damage.
- Yarde remained dangerous in spots — single big shots and flashes of countering ability — but he struggled to consistently create separation or sustain offense against Benavidez’s pressure.
- The immediate claim that May 2 would host Benavidez vs. Ramirez is significant but still needs contracts and confirmation from both camps and sanctioning bodies. Announcements from a fighter or promoter are one thing; finalized, signed purses and dates are another. The likely stage (Las Vegas) and the involvement of Golden Boy (Ramirez’s promoter) were reported in the aftermath.
Three main takeaways
- Benavidez is not just a big light-heavy — he’s a relentless pressure fighter with finishing instincts who has arrived as a marquee champion at 175.
- The proposed move to fight Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez could vault Benavidez into a rarefied legacy conversation — if he succeeds against bigger opposition.
- Matchmaking and title unification at light-heavy could pivot depending on Benavidez’s next move: stay and chase Bivol/Beterbiev, or chase history by moving up.
My take
There’s something unapologetically cinematic about Benavidez’s trajectory: a powerful, aggressive fighter who keeps stepping into progressively bigger rooms. The Yarde win was both a statement and an audition — it said: I’m the kind of champion who doesn’t just keep belts, he seeks harder enemies. Moving to challenge Ramirez at cruiserweight is risky and smart at the same time; risk because size and style differences at 200+ pounds are real, smart because the reward — multi-division status and mainstream buzz — can be enormous.
If Benavidez wants to be remembered as one of the era’s true threats, he has to keep choosing the hardest questions. Tonight he answered one decisively. The next one — against Ramirez or another big name — will tell us whether he’s a two-weight terror or a generational force.
Sources
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David Benavidez batters Anthony Yarde to retain WBC title – Yahoo Sports
https://sports.yahoo.com/article/david-benavidez-batters-anthony-yarde-031023117.html -
Benavidez stops Yarde in 7th round to retain WBC light-heavyweight title – FOX Sports / Associated Press
https://www.foxsports.com/articles/boxing/benavidez-stops-yarde-in-7th-round-to-retain-wbc-lightheavyweight-title -
Benavidez dominates Yarde, Saudi stars shine bright at Ring IV – Arab News (Reuters)
https://www.arabnews.com/node/2623629/sport -
Photos: David Benavidez stops Anthony Yarde, announces fight with Zurdo Ramirez – FIGHTMAG
https://www.fightmag.com/photos-david-benavidez-stops-anthony-yarde-announces-fight-with-zurdo-ramirez/
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.