Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua live updates, results, how to watch

Jake Paul, Anthony Joshua GET SERIOUS in final faceoff
Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua face off at the ceremonial weigh-ins ahead of their heavyweight boxing match this Friday at Kaseya Center in Miami, Fla.
The boxers have been weighed, they have chirped and bloviated. Now the only thing left is to see what Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua give us in the ring.
What has been a long and winding road to Miami culminates in Paul’s greatest test to date. The polarizing pugilist who has pecked away at over-the-hill boxers and also-rans will step into the ring against a boxer who comes in taller, heavier and with respectable accolades on his resume.
Anthony Joshua is a two-time heavyweight champion who stands 6-6 and, for this fight, will weigh north of the 243.4 pounds he posted Thursday. He also owns a 28-4 record, including 25 wins by knockout.
By comparison, the sheet is not as favorable for Paul (12-1, 7 KOs), who stands 6-1 and tipped the scales Thursday at 216 pounds, lighter than he was vs. Mike Tyson (227.2). But, perhaps, size and age and wisdom don’t matter in this bout. We will know very soon.
USA TODAY Sports has you covered with updates, analysis and highlights from the Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua card here:
In his locker room before the fight, Jake Paul was wearing a red T-shirt emblazoned with yellow letters spelling out “American Made.’’
It appears Paul will try to get American fans behind him when he fights Anthony Joshua, the British heavyweight.
That would mark a shift for Paul, who is almost always treated by the crowd as the villain.
Baumgardner outpunched and outclassed Beaudoin while defending her unified super featherweight world title in a 12-round fight.
Baumgardner knocked down Beaudoin at the end of the seventh round. But Beaudoin refused to give in.
In fact, she landed hard shots in the 11th round. But her fight only revealed Baumgardner’s elite skills.
With a variety of punches, Baumgardner pummeled Beaudoin and left significant swelling on her face.
The judges scored the fight 117-110, 117-110 and 118-109 for Baumgardner, the 31-year-old American who improved to 16-1.
Beaudoin, a 29-year-old Canadian, fell to 13-2.
- Round 1: Leila Beaudoin comes out firing her jab. Alycia Baumgardner in no hurry to attack but she throws the left jab. Baumgardner scores with an overhand right and she connects with a body shot. Perhaps the three-minute rounds in this bout will slow the action. So much for the pugilistic sprint. Baumgardner 10, Beaudoin 9
- Round 2: Both fighters come out still looking hesitant. There’s no prolonged engagement. But Baumgardner is striking more regularly and revving up. Beaudoin’s reddened face is evidence of that. Baumgardner 20, Beaudoin 18.
- Round 3: Baumgardner comes out with more aggression as the hesitance appears to have waned, although she’s exhibiting defensive awareness. Beaudoin is showing some swelling under her left eye. Those punches from Baumgardner appear to be no joke. Baumgardner 30, Beaudoin 27.
- Round 4: Baumgardner looking elite with precision punches. Baumgardner looks fresh. Beaudoin, not so much. And the swelling on her face has worsened. Baumgardner continues to fend off Beaudoin’s punches and land her own. Baumgardner 40, Beaudoin 36.
- Round 5: Is Baumgardner willing to open up and go the knockdown? We’ll see. Beaudoin lands a nice right, then lands a left. She’s showing life. But now she has swelling on the top of her head. Beaudoin bulls forward and Baumgardner whales away and she appeared to be stunned getting caught by a hard Baumgardner punch. Baumgardner 50, Beaudoin 45.
- Round 6: Pop-pop-pop, Baumgardner firing jabs again. The fighters get tangled up, and Beaudoin surely would prefer a little wrestling. Or a lot. Baumgardner attacks the body and she’s unfurling right uppercuts. Baumgardner 60, Beaudoin 54.
- Round 7: Beaudoin still has life. The question is can she get close enough and be accurate enough to hurt Baumgardner. Baumgardner keeps scoring and Beaudoin’s face keeps swelling. Baumgardner lands a HARD right and drops Beaudoin at 2:59 of the round! But she’s up on her feet and the fight will continue. Baumgardner 70, Beaudoin 62.
- Round 8: Swollen and battered, Beaudoin comes out for Round 8. The referee rushes in when Beaudoin appears to try to pick up Baumgardner and…dump her on the canvas. Baumgardner was too quick and agile for that, and now the fighters are mixing it up. The Baumgardner beating is relentless. Baumgardner 80, Beaudoin 71.
- Round 9: The pace slows, before Beaudoin charges forward and Baumgardner starts firing her punches. Beaudoin lands a right and suddenly is under attack again. Baumgardner displays sharp defense and relishes it. Baumgardner 90, Beaudoin 80.
- Round 10: Beaudoin refusing to give in – against better judgement? Maybe fatigue is setting in for both boxers with the three-minute rounds. Beaudoin lands and pays the price. Baumgardner answers with crisp combinations. Baumgardner 100, Beaudoin 89.
- Round 11: Beaudoin throwing punches, and that keeps Baumgardner in attack mode. She digs shots into Beaudoin’s body. Yet more body shots. Beaudoin lands two hard shots and then digs into the body. Wow. Hard shots. Baumgardner 109, Beaudoin 99.
- Round 12: Beaudoin needs a knockout. Can she channel her Round 11 power? Beaudoin pushes Baumgardner into the ropes. Roughing her up? Baumgardner still throwing hard shots, but clearly aware of Beaudoin’s power too. Baumgardner lands the wicked left jab again, and boy does Beaudoin’s face look swollen. Beaudoin whaling away and connects with her right. The fists are flying as the fight comes to a close. Baumgardner 119, Beaudoin 108.
When Jake Paul was asked by Ariel Helwani before the fight what the key to victory over Anthony Joshua was, Paul replied, “I think it’s frustrating him, boxing on the outside and exposing the fact that he has a bad defense. And landing my big power shots that I’ve hurt people with. Gotta hurt him. Gotta put him down. Got to put him to sleep.’’
Jake Paul suffered his only defeat as a pro boxer against Tommy Fury in 2023. Though Paul knocked him down in the eighth and final round of the fight, he lost by split decision. The judges scored it 76-73, 74-75, 76-73 in favor of Tommy Fury, younger brother of former world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury.
Jake Paul appeared to be listening to something on AirPods before the fight, and inquiring minds wanted to know what.
The inquiring mind of Ariel Helwani on Netflix’s livestream, that is.
“I’m listening to meditation music,’’ Paul said. “Just staying calm, keeping the heart rate low. And when the bell rings I’ll be ready to turn it up.’’
Jake Paul takes on Anthony Joshua in a card that starts at 8 p.m. ET. The main event will start at about 10:30 p.m. ET.
Silva, among the greatest mixed martial artists of all time, deepened his legend.
The 50-year-old Silva beat the 43-year-old Woodley, former UFC champion. The victory came by TKO when he knocked him down with one minute and 33 seconds into the second round of their cruiserweight fight.
Silva landed a righthanded uppercut and followed it with two right hands before Woodley collapsed to the canvas.
Though Wooley got back on his feet, he looked woozy and the referee quickly stopped the bout that was scheduled for six rounds.
- Round 1: Boxers look a tad tentative here. Maybe they need to limber up considering Anderson Silva is 50 and Tyron Woodley is 43. Lots of standing. Ah, here come the boos. Woodley throws three overhand rights, but nothing lands. Silva works Woodley into a corner and throws a left. Now he might need an IV to recover. Woodley 10, Silva 9.
- Round 2: Woodley comes out throwing rights and jabs and Silva looks alive, too. Silva backing Woodley into a corner again. He fails to capitalize. Silva looking for one big punch? There it is! Silva drops Woodley! The knockout was a right hand uppercut followed by two more rights to the head. He’s up and looks ready to continue. Not sure Woodley knows where he is. And the referee halts the fight! It’s over. Silva by TKO!
Silva turned 50 years old on April 14. He will take on Tyron Woodley, who is 43 years old.
Silva is highly regarded as a mixed martial artist, boasting a 34-11-0 (1 no contest) record from 2000 to 2020.
He lost his last three MMA fights, including one to Israel Adesanya, before making the move back to boxing in 2021. — James Williams
The boxers have arrived at the Kaseya Center.
Paul came in all black, Joshua in camouflage.
Paul also had what appeared to be a black walking stick and iced-out chains.
Somehow, Harvey failed to medal at the 2024 Olympics. It’s harder to know why after his second pro fight.
Harvey, the 23-year-old American, put in a gold-medal worthy performance with a dominating victory in a six-round super featherweight bout.
Harvey scored a knockdown in the first round, and the only suspense after that was whether he could score a knockout. Despite an impressive combination of offense and defense, the answer was no.
All three judges scored the fight 60-53 as Harvey improved to 2-0. Cervantes suffered his first loss and fell to 5-1.
- Round 1: Jahmal Harvey comes out firing his jab, and he scores multiple times. Then he connects with another flurry. No sign of Kevin Cervantes’ KO power yet. Harvey dominating, connects with a left and down goes Cervantes! Quickly up on his feet and he looks fine. Harvey increasing the pressure. Harvey looks speedy, accurate and assertive. Cervantes offering little in return. Harvey 10, Cervantes 8
- Round 2: Harvey lands a left uppercut and his punches look potent. Harvey pouring it on. Cervantes looks befuddled, or maybe just overmatched. Harvey now attacking the body, too. Harvey 20, Cervantes 17.
- Round 3: Cervantes finally throwing punches, and with some authority, But Harvey responds quickly, with a combination and jabs. Harvey revving up and Cervantes hit the canvas. It’s a slip, but it’d be no surprise if he ends up there again. Harvey looks determined to finish this fight. Harvey 30, Cervantes 26.
- Round 4: Harvey tattooing Cervantes, stalking. About the only thing that’s eluded Harvey is the big shot, the KO punch. Otherwise, he continues an exceptional performance. Incredible footwork. Harvey 40, Cervantes 35.
- Round 5: How did Harvey not medal at the 2024 Olympics? He’s feinting and firing and looks gold-medal worthy to me. Connecting with powerful shots to Cervantes’ body. Cervantes throws a wicked right and misses. Is that a sign of danger for Harvey? Harvey 50, Cervantes 44.
- Round 6: Time for Cervantes to swing for the fences. That could be difficult with Harvey demonstrating impressive offense and defense. Harvey keeps the pressure on. Cervantes fires big shots, off the mark. Harvey not playing it safe. Turns out there was no need to. Harvey 60, Cervantes 53.
On Jake Paul’s X account earlier this day, up went this post:
To my supporters – thank you.
To my haters – thank you.
To my team – thank you.
To all the fighters – thank you.
To Netflix – thank you.
To boxing – thank you.
To GOD – THANK YOU
TONIGHT WE SHOCK THE WORLD
The boxing community is expecting and demanding a knockout from Anthony Joshua in the first or second round, according to David Haye, the former cruiserweight world champion.
“Anything other than that, people are going to start asking questions of Anthony Joshua,’’ Haye said on the Netflix livestream.
Laila Ali pulled no punches when asked about Jake Paul fighting Anthony Joshua.
“I don’t see how he has any business being in the ring with Anthony Joshua,’’ Ali said on the Netflix livestream.
But she also said she considers Paul “a real boxer.’’
“But honey, not with Anthony Joshua now,’’ Ali said with a smile.
Galle was a worthy contender. Johnson was a fierce champion. And through a blood bath, the champion prevailed.
With blood covering both fighters as a result of headbutts, Johnson defended her undisputed bantamweight title.
The judges scored it 99-91, 98-92, 97-93 for Johnson, the 30-year-old Australian who improved to 19-2. Galle, a 36-year-old from Canada, suffered her first loss and fell to 12-0-1.
Round 1: Chereka Johnson looks powerful. Amanda Galle hangs in there, but she looks a little overmatched. Too much so to win that opening round. Johnson having to contend with a cut resulting from a headbutt. Johnson 10, Galle 9.
Round 2: Galle cut now too and it’s ugly. Johnson attacking Galle hard. Johnson 20, Galle 18.
Round 3: Referee calls for ringside doctor to check Galle’s cut. The bout continues. Both boxers bleeding and Johnson getting the best of this brawl. Johnson scores repeatedly while blood streams down the left side of Galle’s face. Johnson 30, Galle 27.
Round 4: Galle landed a few jabs and then Johnson gave chase. She caught up, too, and connected with several shots. Johnson 40, Galle 36.
Round 5: Galle showing spirit and connecting to Johnson’s body. But Johnson remains the aggressor and digs in with shots. Johnson throwing more shots and with some authority too. Johnson 50, Galle 45.
Round 6: Johnson comes out firing jabs and then unloads heavier shots. Galle stands her ground. Repeated exchanges ensue, and Johnson scores to the body. Galle holding her own, thanks in part to her jab. Galle showing no fear. Johnson 59, Galle 55.
Round 7: Galle comes out firing with both fists. She’s on the move at times, but willing to stand in the line of fire too. Galle lands three left hooks in a room. Then she looks effective with inside fighting, too. Johnson 68, Galle 65.
Round 8: Now Johnson comes out the aggressor. Galle fights back and lands hard shots to the body. Two bloody boxers fighting it out. Johnson picks up the pace. Johnson 78, Galle 74.
Round 9: Galle looks sharp as her left hand lands. Followed by an uppercut. Little reprieve here as they slug away. Johnson scores with a combination and bulls into Galle. Galle swings away and lands shots of her own. Johnson 88, Galle 83.
Round 10: The boxers might be exhausted, but it’s hard to tell by their punching output and energy. Galle unleashing hard shots. But Johnson powers her way to a strong finish. Johnson 98, Galle 92.
Dubois, the talented Brit, made her U.S. debut and looked right at home. Panatta, by contrast, looked badly overmatched.
Armed with a lightning-quick left and crisp punches, Dubois knocked down Panatta in the sixth round. Dubois continued to batter Panatta while defending her WBC world lightweight title.
All three judges scored it 99-90 for Dubois, the 24-year-old from London who improved to 11-0-1.
Panatta, a 34-year-old Italian, fell to 8-3-1.
Round 1: Carolina Dubois and Camila Panatta clash and hit the canvas. No knockdown. A pulldown. Dubois is landing the harder punches and is making good use of that left. Dubois 10, Panatta 9.
Round 2: Dubois, a southpaw, throwing a wicked left. And she’s throwing it a lot, along with a right to the body there. Dubois has lined up Panatta and throwing her punches with power. Dubois eats a shot, but one of the few. Dubois 20, Panatta 18.
Round 3: Panatta comes out hard and lands shots. But Dubois calmly waits for an opportunity. He strikes with a hard left, followed by a right hook. That left followed by a right hook is serving Dubois well. Panatta throwing lots of punches but landing few. Dubois 30, Panatta 27.
Round 4: Panatta stalking but often to her own detriment – walking into shots from Dubois. Again, throwing lots of punches but landing far too few. They get tied up, as Panatta appears to be trying to get rough with her opponent as Dubois relies on precision. Dubois 40, Panatta 36.
Round 5: Dubois remains composed and contained. Panatta lands a hard right. Dubois answers with two lightning quick body shots. Dubois 50, Panatta 45.
Round 6: Dubois’ speed is impressive, although she might be getting a little predictable. Delivers a right to the body, followed by a right. Now showing her versatility. Dubois clubs Panatta with a right hook and down she goes. She beats the count and there’s the bell – the round ending just in tine for Panatta. Dubois 60, Panatta 53.
Round 7: Panatta stays aggressive despite the knockdown in Round 6. Dubois has tattooed Panatta in the face repeatedly, and the damage looks like a giant welt. Dubois 70, Panatta 62.
Round 8: Dubois still punishing Panatta with the left and right. Panatta charging ahead, then absorbs a hard right. Absorbing a lot, in fact. Dubois 80, Panatta 71.
Round 9: Panatta tumbles to the canvas – and it’s her own fault. She’s trying to rough things up. Getting frustrated by her ability to reach Dubois while Dubois lands crisp shots. For every punch she lands, she eats about three. Dubois 90, Panatta 80.
Round 10: Wow. A closer look at Panatta reveals plenty of damage as a result of Dubois’ hard and accurate punches. Panatta scores for a left and she moves forward. Dubois backing away rather than brawling. Dubois 100, Panatta 89.
Valle and Bustillos combined to throw an astonishing 1,045 punches during their 10-round fight. But Valle landed the harder shots while defending her WBC strawweight world title by majority decision.
Struggling to see out of her right with blood gushing down the side of her head after a headbutt, Valle explained she simply used her left eye. While using her right and left fists.
The judges scored it 95-95, 98-92, 96-94 for Valle, a 33-year-old Costa Rican who improved to 34-3.
Bustillos, a 25-year-old American, fell to 11-3.
Round 1: Yadira Bustillos is whooping rights early, and Yokasta Valle answers with hard lefts. Hard exchanges as the round reaches the midpoint. And the punches continue to fly and Valle’s taking over. Valle 10, Bustillos 9.
Round 2: Fists flying again as soon as the round begins. Bustillos starting to exploit her height advantage. Valle responds with a hard right, but Bustillos keep up the pressure during frenetic bout. Bustillos appealing to the referee after getting hit in the ear and Valle takes advantage and slugs her opponent. Valle 20, Bustillos 18.
Round 3: Bustillos comes out energized again. But she swings wildly while Valle is doing a better job of hitting her target. Suddenly Bustillos is on the attack, and Valle is cut badly on the upper right side of her head. Blood gushing. Accidental headbutt. Valle 29, Bustillos 28.
Round 4: The fighters bump heads again and now Valle’s blood is smeared on Bustillos’ face. Ugly. Bustillos has asserted herself again, and Valle fires in punches and reasserts her control. Now it’s Bustillos bleeding from above her right eye. Valle 39, Bustillos 37.
Round 5: There’s no let up in this bout. Both women connecting with head shots, including a very hard left from Valle. But the blood is gushing again on the right side of Valle’s head. And perhaps Bustillos smells, well, blood, as she increases her punch output. Valle 48, Bustillos 47.
Round 6: More rock ‘em sock ‘em action. Brawling. Hard to keep track of the connecting punches, and Bustillos is landing in punches – to the head and the body. Valle 57, Bustillos 57.
Round 7: Valle opens with hard shots. Very hard. Neither fighter backing down. Bustillos scores with a series of uppercuts, and Valle answers with a left hook. Valle misses more than earlier, and Bustillos showing more precision. Bustillos 67, Valle 66.
Round 8: Anybody interested in defense? For these fighters, not so much. Valle tattoos Bustillos with two lefts, and Valle heating up. Bustillos 76, Valle 76.
Round 9: Valle connects with a punishing right seconds into the round as the brawl resumes. What a fight. They’re leaning into each other as inside fighting gets underway. Bustillos uses a jab while Valle uses what looks to be a howitzer. Valle 86, Bustillos 85.
Round 10: What did you expect? What we’re getting – the ongoing brawl. Valle leaning into her power. She scores with a hard left and tags Bustillos again with a short right. Whaling away as the round ends, of course. Valle 96, Bustillos 94.
After two bouts on the preliminary card, Netflix played a taped interview with Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua.
Final predictions, gentlemen?
“He going to be looking for the right and I’m going to hit him with the left,’’ Joshua said with a smile.
Said Paul, “I’m going to knock him out, fifth or sixth round.’’
Get-ins for the fight are listed for $31 by Ticketmaster, the primary ticket distributor for the fight. Only days ago the tickets were priced at a relatively modest $62. And on Monday Ticketmaster offered a 2-for-1 offer, highly unusual for a high-profile spectacle like this heavyweight fight.
Coming off a knockout loss in June, Griffin avenged himself in fitting fashion – with a knockout.
Cardona came out the aggressor – and ultimately he ran into a buzzsaw. Griffin dropped him with a combination and Cardona was counted out with one second left in the first round.
Griffin, 32, improved to 18-1, 17 KOs. Cardona, 26, dropped to 10-2.
Round 1: Avious Griffin is noticeably bigger, but Justin Cardona comes out stalking. And there’s an impressive exchange of punches, Griffin firing and Cardona answering with a flurry. Despite Griffin’s power, he looks oddly passive. Cardona closes the gap and lands big before Griffin responds and floors Cardona with a wicked combination. Griffin wins by knockout! As the round was coming to a close!
Marley, a two-time Olympian from Brazil, made an impressive pro debut in a four-round cruiserweight fight.
About 30 seconds into the bout, Marley knocked down Davis with a powerful right. Davis got back on his feet and stayed there. But the 25-year-old Marley dominated the rest of the fight with that potent right and combinations.
All three judges scored the fight 40-35 for Marley, who improves to 1-0.
Diarra, 35, fell to 2-2.
Round 1: Just before the bell rings, Diarra Davis opens his mouth and flashes his mouthpiece as he stands across the way from Keno Marley Maybe a bad idea, because… down goes Davis! Marley, making his pro debut, floors him with a right hand. Davis is up, but for how long? Marley attacking effectively with the right hand. Davis fights back, but without force. Marley 10, Davis 8.
Round 2: Davis not backing down, and he lands a combo in the corner. Maybe Marley was luring him in, but Marley unloads with punches. Connects with a hard left and now stalking his opponent. Again, Davis fights back but with pillows compared to Marley’s bricks. Marley 20, Davis 17.
Round 3: Davis keeps punching, and it opens him up to shots from Marley. Effective high guard from Marley, and suddenly Davis is on the run. Marley works Davis into the corner and scores. Throwing effective jabs and now getting the best of Davis with combinations. A dominant performance. Marley 30, Davis 26.
Round 4: Gotta give Davis credit — at least a modicum He marches out and unloads combinations. Marley responds with heavier shots, and landing with both hands. Davis fights back with a flurry of punches, but Marley shows no concern. Marley showboating a bit as the fight comes to a close. Marley 40, Davis 35.
Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua: Time, PPV, streaming for fight
Jake Paul will face Anthony Joshua on Friday, Dec. 19, at Kaseya Center in Miami.
- Date: Friday, Dec. 19
- Time: 8 p.m. ET
- Paul vs. Joshua main event ringwalks: 10:30 p.m. ET (estimate)
- Stream: Netflix
Paul flexes a solid 12-1 record with seven knockouts. Paul’s only loss came in February 2023 against Tommy Fury.
Since turning pro in 2013, Joshua boasts an impressive 28-4 record, with 25 of those wins coming via knockout. He also won Olympic gold for Great Britain at the 2012 Summer Games in London.
Jake Paul says he’s prepared to pull off “the biggest upset in the sport of boxing” when he meets Anthony Joshua, the former two-time unified heavyweight boxing champion, on Friday night in Miami.
But how he’s going to do it may be the most surprising part. The former YouTube influencer and actor says he plans to use superior boxing skills and strategy to defeat the 2012 Olympic gold medalist, whom the sportsbooks have installed as a massive favorite.
“On paper, the cards are stacked against me. But really in terms of boxing, I’m a better boxer than AJ, which is hilarious to say, but he’s got two left feet,” Paul told reporters on Tuesday, Dec. 16. — Steve Gardner
The fight is a sanctioned heavyweight fight, consisting of eight three-minute rounds. Each boxer will wear ten-ounce gloves, which is the typical size for official heavyweight fights.
Hasim Rahman: Anthony Joshua wins quick
“I don’t believe it should be a competitive fight. It should not,” the former heavyweight champion told USA TODAY Sports. “I feel like if Anthony Joshua don’t go in there and manhandle (Paul) and maul him and get him out of there in one or two rounds, then we got some questions to be asked.”Watch it here: Stream your favorite shows, the biggest blockbusters and more.
Nate Diaz: Jake Paul wins
“I got my money on Paul,” the former UFC fighter and Paul opponent said. “He might get … knocked out, but if he don’t Paul is gonna win.”
Deontay Wilder: If it’s not scripted, Joshua wins
“In my opinion, it’s scripted a little bit because of the weight difference and Joshua’s a former champion and also he’s current, he’s active,” the former heavyweight champion said. “This is going to be the first time we see Paul fighting an active fighter. We’ve seen the Mike Tyson (fight). That was all fun. That was cute. It was fun and games, but now you’re dealing with a real professional.”
Sportsbook Review: Anthony Joshua by decision
“Jake Paul fights have been held for the masses. His fight last year against Mike Tyson went the distance to the judges, despite both fighters seemingly having several chances to end it early on. This is another fight on Netflix, on a Friday night, and close to the holiday season. The streaming giant will want to get its money’s worth in viewer retention ahead of airing two NFL games on Christmas Day.”
All odds are for moneyline bets as of Friday, via BetMGM
- Heavyweight: Jake Paul (+650) vs. Anthony Joshua (-1200)
- Cruiserweight: Anderson Silva (-300) vs. Tyron Woodley (+225)
- Unified Super Featherweight Title Bout: Alycia Baumgardner (-1400) vs. Leila Beaudoin (+650)
- Super featherweight: Jahmal Harvey (-5000) vs. Kevin Cervantes (+1100)
- Undisputed Bantamweight Title Bout: Cherneka Johnson (-900) vs. Amanda Galle (+500)
- WBC Strawweight Title Bout: Yokasta Valle (-1200) vs. Yadira Bustillos (+600)
- Welterweight: Avious Griffin (-550) vs. Justin Cardona (+350)
- Cruiserweight: Keno Marley (-10000) vs. Diarra Davis Jr. (+1200)
- WBC Lightweight Title Bout: Caroline Dubois (-5000) vs. Camila Panatta (+1000)
All odds are for moneyline bets as of Friday at 2:50 p.m. ET, via BetMGM
- Jake Paul (+650) vs. Anthony Joshua (-1200)
- Heavyweight: Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua
- Cruiserweight: Anderson Silva vs. Tyron Woodley
- Unified Super Featherweight Title Bout: Alycia Baumgardner vs. Leila Beaudoin
- Super featherweight: Jahmal Harvey vs. Kevin Cervantes
- Undisputed Bantamweight Title Bout: Cherneka Johnson vs. Amanda Galle
- WBC Strawweight Title Bout: Yokasta Valle vs. Yadira Bustillos
- Welterweight: Avious Griffin vs. Justin Cardona
- Cruiserweight: Keno Marley vs. Diarra Davis Jr.
- WBC Lightweight Title Bout: Caroline Dubois vs. Camila Panatta




