O’Shaquie Foster Reflects on Sparring Stevenson, Hungry For a Big Fight

Boxing Scene

O’Shaquie Foster has described sparring sessions with Shakur Stevenson as like an “intense game of chess” that made the gym crowd fall silent.

Foster is ranked as the number one super featherweight contender with the WBC and is next in line for a shot at fellow American Stevenson. 

The pair are friends, have shared countless rounds in the gym and Foster took Stevenson’s recent comments about him as being the second best 130-pound fighter in the world, as a mark of “respect”. 

Stevenson, who also holds the WBO belt, said: “I think he would beat the rest of these guys; I just don’t think he would beat me.” 

“Shakur and I are cool, we’ve got a past, we were really close at one point in time, so I expect him to say stuff like that, we’ve got a lot of respect for each other,” Foster told Probellum.com. 

“In 2015-2016, we were staying in Virginia together, before he turned pro, and we did some great sparring together and we’ve sparred in the last year or two also.  

“It was great work. It’s like an intense game of chess. It’s fun. We had a lot of people just coming back every day to watch.  

“There was a lot of people watching but it was kind of silent, it was so tactical, everybody was trying to see who can get the ups on who.” 

Foster is waiting on his next fight date after March’s career-best win over Muhammadkhuja Yaqubov at Probellum Evolution secured his place as the number one contender under the WBC. 

A fight with Eduardo Ramirez was ordered by the WBC as a final eliminator, but the Mexican fighter has moved up to lightweight.

The 28-year-old, from Texas, is on a nine-fight winning streak and now wants the platform and opportunity to prove why he believes he can become a “great” of the sport. 

“Desperate is an understatement – I’m super desperate,” said Foster.

“I just know I can bring something to the table, and I just want the world to be able to see that because I can go down as one of the most talented fighters to ever come through boxing if I’m able to prove it. 

“Yaqubov was the highest ranked opponent I’ve fought and because of the ring rust, it made me adjust and confirmed another aspect of myself that I’m able to address. I’m able to just have fun and adjust on the fly and that let me know that I can be great.” 

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Are the enormous viewing figures for Netflix an indicator of future success for DAZN?
Boxing Insider Promtions’ Card: Donte Layne demolishes Shaquille Cameron; Bruce Seldon Jr dominates Julio Mendoza
Kevin Lerena offers Jake Paul a shot at his WBC bridgerweight belt
Hamzah Sheeraz withdrawn from IBF purse bid and now could be set for Carlos Adames
Charles Martin back in the heavyweight mix with one-round victory

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *