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Alycia Baumgardner successfully defended her junior lightweight titles with a unanimous decision over Bo Mi Re Shin, while Lani Daniels scored a shocking upset against Shadasia Green, winning by TKO in the co-main event.
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On a night when Alycia Baumgardner showed why sheâs considered one of boxingâs hottest properties, it was a longshot from New Zealand in the co-main event who threatened to steal the show.
Baumgardner retained her WBO, IBF and WBA junior lightweight titles early Saturday morning at the Theater at Madison Square Garden with a commanding 10-round unanimous decision over South Koreaâs Bo Mi Re Shin in the headline bout of the first US card staged by Most Valuable Promotions Women, the nascent womenâs boxing platform launched by boxer-influencer Jake Paul.
The 31-year-old Ohio native, fighting out of Dallas under crack trainer Derrick James, dominated Shin for five rounds before turning back a furious rally to win a wide verdict by scores of 98-92, 98-92 and 99-91. (The Guardian had it 98-92.)
But Baumgardnerâs sixth title defense in the 130lb division, where sheâs held at least one belt since 2021, was nearly upstaged by the fight before it. Thatâs when Lani Daniels upset the 4-1 odds against her with a shocking ninth-round technical knockout of unified super-middleweight champion Shadasia Green â a moment that quickly gave way to harrowing scenes when Green was hurried out of the ring on a stretcher apparently unconscious and taken to hospital.
âI hope sheâs alright,â Daniels said in her post-fight interview. âIâm happy but also concerned for her. Iâm happy for this and Iâm happy to become a world champion once again.â
Mike Leanardi, Most Valuable Promotionsâ head of boxing, said Green was âawake and talkingâ at the hospital during a news conference after the main event, which followed a previous report that she was âconscious, speaking and movingâ.
Daniels, nicknamed the Smiling Assassin, previously held the IBFâs version of the light-heavyweight and heavyweight championships, but entered Fridayâs fight coming off back-to-back losses to Claressa Shields and Sarah Scheurich. Now the 37-year-old from WhangÄrei along New Zealandâs northern coast has added a world title in a third different weight class.

Lani Daniels (right) lands a right hand on Shadasia Green during their unified super-middleweight title fight. Photograph: Ed Mulholland/Getty Images
Alycia Baumgardner defended her WBO, IBF, and WBA junior lightweight titles.
Lani Daniels defeated Shadasia Green by ninth-round technical knockout to become a world champion.
The judges scored the fight 98-92, 98-92, and 99-91 in favor of Alycia Baumgardner.
Shadasia Green was taken out of the ring on a stretcher and transported to the hospital after the fight.

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Shortly after Green was stretchered from the ring by a team of EMTs, Baumgardner made her way to the ring at half past midnight accompanied by New York rapper Lilâ Kim, a flashy entrance that elicited wild cheers from the several thousands spectators in attendance.
In a contest held under menâs championship rules with 10 rounds of three minutes each, Baumgardner controlled the action from the opening bell, taking the center of the ring and immediately establishing her technical superiority. Crisp, straight shots punctured Shinâs guard early, while a sharp right-left combination set the tone for a first round that showcased the championâs impeccable timing and accuracy. Shin circled and stayed active, but much of her offense fell short as Baumgardner consistently beat her to the punch.
The pattern held through the second and third. Baumgardner boxed with poise behind a disciplined jab, stepping into range to land clean power shots before slipping out of danger. Shin attempted to disrupt the rhythm, even wrestling Baumgardner to the canvas in the third, but it did little to shift momentum. By the fourth, Baumgardner had the crowd on its feet, snapping Shinâs head back with a concussive right uppercut that briefly threatened to end matters before the challenger steadied herself.
Through five rounds, it was a masterclass in controlled aggression. Baumgardner varied her attack effectively, working both forward and off the back foot as Shin began to lean into a pressure-based approach. That crowding started to pay dividends in the sixth. Shinâs persistence and willingness to absorb punishment allowed her to edge inside, where she found success in scrappy exchanges and finally swung a round in her favor.
The seventh brought the fight to life. Shin barreled forward with urgency, throwing in volume and forcing Baumgardner into uncomfortable exchanges. For the first time, the champion looked briefly unsettled as the challengerâs intensity turned the bout into a genuine contest.
But Baumgardner steeled herself and showed the finishing kick of a champion, reasserting control with deft footwork and a ramrod jab. She created angles, made Shin miss and reset the pace to her liking. By the ninth, the tide had fully turned back. Shin continued to press but absorbed heavy punishment, walking into clean counters as Baumgardnerâs accuracy re-emerged.
The final round provided a fitting close. Baumgardner, comfortably ahead on the scorecards, chose not to coast. Instead, she met Shin head-on in a furious closing exchange, both fighters trading in the center of the ring as the crowd roared. At the bell, they embraced, the champion having delivered a performance that blended technical command with resilience against a relentless challenger.

Alycia Baumgardner was accompanied by New York rapper Lilâ Kim during her ringwalk early Saturday morning at the Theater at Madison Square Garden. Photograph: Amanda Westcott
âAll I knew was I had to stay consistent with my jab and keep setting things up,â Baumgardner said. âBo was going to come regardless, so it was up to me to set the pace and land my shots.â
Moments later, Baumgardner offered a candid explanation for her performance that drew a loud reaction inside the theater. âThree-minute rounds, 10 rounds, on my period,â she said. âBaby, stop playing with me.â
The remark underscored both the physical demands of the bout and the broader push within womenâs boxing toward longer rounds, with Baumgardner among the leading voices advocating for the change. âItâs an adjustment every time,â she added. âThree minutes is a long time, but I think it suits my style. Iâm still growing, still learning.â
Baumgardner said that sheâd like a fight with Katie Taylor next, but also mentioned Amanda Serrano if a matchup with the Irish star canât be made. â[Serrano] makes sense, especially here in New York,â she said. âWe can do it at the Garden. When you ask whoâs tougher, it doesnât matter. Put me in there and Iâll show you.â
She added: âIâm ready to step up again. If fighters arenât willing to go three minutes, we canât even have a conversation. Iâm doing a different level of work. I deserve the biggest fights and the biggest paydays.â