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The lightweight champion rejected Sharpe’s criticism of his fighting style, but his emotional response fueled the debate over his appeal to boxing fans
Shakur Stevenson forcefully rejected Shannon Sharpe’s claim that his fighting style lacks entertainment value, repeatedly calling the Hall of Famer “ignorant” during a tense podcast exchange. The clash quickly shifted attention from Stevenson’s boxing skills to the criticism surrounding his public image and marketability.
Shakur completely missed a golden opportunity to handle that situation with some poise. When a fighter gets that rattled, it proves the criticism is hitting a little too close to home.
The exchange centered on a debate that has followed Stevenson throughout his career. Sharpe acknowledged Shakur’s skill but argued that his defensive approach does little to entertain casual fans.
“Your style is boring,” Sharpe told Stevenson. “The most exciting fight was against Teo… You take an F for boxing entertainment.”
“You’re ignorant to boxing,” Shakur replied. “That’s how I know you never boxed before. You don’t have a degree in boxing.”
Instead of addressing the fan perspective Sharpe was coming from, Shakur reacted by trying to invalidate Sharpe’s right to have an opinion at all, relying on the old “you never laced up the gloves” argument.
Stevenson dismissed Sharpe’s criticism by repeatedly calling the Hall of Fame tight end “ignorant” about boxing. He argued that someone who had never boxed was not qualified to judge his style, even comparing the discussion to criticizing soccer legend Lionel Messi without understanding the sport.
Sharpe stood by his opinion, making clear he was judging Shakur from the perspective of a fan rather than a fighter.
Sharpe refused to change his opinion, telling Stevenson that technical ability and entertainment aren’t the same thing. Stevenson fired back by repeatedly calling Sharpe “ignorant” and insisting he didn’t know enough about boxing to criticize his style.
It is not just casual viewers who complain. A huge chunk of the hardcore boxing community feels the exact same way. People respect the technical wizardry, but nobody wants to spend hard-earned money to watch a twelve-round safety-first clinic where the priority is strictly avoiding engagement.
By blowing his top and calling Sharpe ignorant, Shakur actually made things much worse for his own brand. It highlighted his massive insecurity regarding his marketability. Deep down, he knows that this exact reputation is what prevents him from becoming a genuine pay-per-view superstar.
If you are truly confident in your craft, you laugh it off. You do not shout about boxing degrees to a football legend who is simply echoing what millions of fans say every time you step into the ring.
Tim Compton is a boxing journalist and contributor to Boxing247.com who has covered the international fight landscape since 2019. He reports on major developments, champions, and rising prospects with a focus on accuracy, sourcing, and analytical clarity.
Source: boxing247.com