NEW YORK, N.Y. — Shakur Stevenson was still in his glittery black trunks at close to 2 a.m. Sunday morning in the bowels of Madison Square Garden looking like the freshest man in the room after a 12-round title fight.

Stevenson was so energized, he could have gone another 12 rounds after he had just vanquished the best 140-pounder in the world, Teofimo Lopez Jr., to become the new — and best — super lightweight in boxing, having won almost every second of every round in a 119-109 unanimous decision to claim the WBO super lightweight world championship.

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Stevenson (25-0, 11 KOs) put on a masterclass performance — the signature victory of his career so far —that entertained an MSG record sold-out crowd of 21,324 fans.

The operative word being “entertained.”

Stevenson has not always entertained in the ring. He’s had a reputation for hitting and running, not really engaging, not walking down opponents behind what may arguably be the greatest jab in boxing today. But what was unique about Saturday’s victory over Lopez (22-2, 13 KOs) is that Stevenson walked down someone who was believed to be the heavier puncher. Stevenson, the 2016 Olympic silver medalist, was the challenger coming up in weight as the current WBC lightweight world champion.

He just beat a world champion who had a pristine 6-0 record in super lightweight bouts prior to fighting him.

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The perfunctory question of “what’s next,” which always surfaces in big victories after a title fight, quickly surfaced.

Conor Benn, who split his two fights with Chris Eubank Jr. in 2025, was in attendance for the Stevenson-Lopez fight and would certainly be an entertaining option before 90,000 at Wembley Stadium in England sometime in the summer of 2026.

There is also a possible unification title fight with IBF champion Richardson Hitchins down the line — that is, if Hitchins can first get by Mexico’s rugged Oscar Duarte on the undercard of the Feb. 21 Mario Barrios vs. Ryan Garcia WBC welterweight title bout in Las Vegas. The other option is WBA titleholder Gary Antuanne Russell, or British WBC titlist Dalton Smith.

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“I’m into big fights, I’m into big-money fights. I like proving that I’m the best and I like doing things that people say that I can’t do,” Stevenson said post-fight. “There are a lot of people who will say that I am too little for Conor Benn, and I can’t do it, which would make for a tremendous fight.

“If he doesn’t agree [to a rehydration clause], then that fight will be dead.”

When asked if he sees himself as the new face of boxing, Stevenson said, “For sure, I stay steady and have been calling people out my whole career. I told everyone that my moment was going to come. Teo took the bait. Finally, someone took the bait. I’ve been begging for this moment, and we finally got it.”

Brad Goodman, Top Rank’s Hall of Fame matchmaker, goes way back with Stevenson. Goodman was there Saturday in support of Top Rank fighters Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington and Keyshawn Davis, who were on the Stevenson-Lopez undercard.

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After beating Lopez in dominating fashion, the demand will be open to greater possibilities for Stevenson, Goodman said. He should know. Goodman was very instrumental in building Stevenson, now a pound-for-pound entrant, who in one night transformed from being on the periphery of stardom to now ready to step through.

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