Davis vs Cuellar: Live Online Date, Time, TV And Stream Info ...

Welcome to Watch Davis vs Cuellar Live Stream Boxing Online Free HD TV Coverage

A pair of former world champions look to regain their status atop the super featherweight division tomorrow night when they meet for the WBA belt on Showtime.

Trainer Kevin Cunningham expects Gervonta Davis to record his 11th-straight knockout and regain a 130-pound title tomorrow night in his clash with fellow former champion Jesus Cuellar at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

“We’ve had seven or eight different sparring partners for “Tank,” and he’s going right through these [expletives],” Cunningham said.

“Tank has been knocking out sparring partners or beating them up so badly they wanna leave camp. I can’t predict a round, but there’s no way this fight goes the distance. I see Tank obliterating Cuellar.”

Davis (19-0, 18 KOs) meets Cuellar (28-2, 21 KOs) as part of a Showtime-televised tripleheader (9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT) with the main event featuring four-division champion Adrien Broner facing former welterweight titleist Jessie Vargas and a co-feature between former 154-pound champion Jermall Charlo and once-beaten contender Hugo Centeno for an interim 160-pound title.

Davis and Broner are training for the first time under Cunningham at his gym in West Palm Beach, Florida, with Davis separating from career-long corner man Calvin Ford.

“Adrien invited me to come down here to West Palm Beach … to train with Kevin. I saw Kevin’s routine and I really liked it,” said Davis, a 23-year-old native of Baltimore, Maryland.

“We have a big house coach provided for us. We all live together, Adrien and I. We’re being responsible. No South Beach, no clubbing. Just training hard.”

Davis returns to Barclays Center — the site of his penultimate achievement — where, at 22 he became the youngest reigning champion with a seventh-round knockout of Jose Pedraza, in January 2017.

Davis then traveled to London for his initial defense last May, when he dropped and stopped southpaw Liam Walsh in the third round in front of Walsh’s hometown fans.

“I was one of the youngest world champions in boxing,” said Davis. “It’s not that I was not prepared for it. I was just so young and it happened so quickly. I had to adapt to it. Live up to the hype. It was hard.”

Davis lost his crown at the scales before his second defense in August, an eighth-round knockout victory over Francisco Fonseca.


“I needed a change after my last fight,” said Davis, who vanquished an unbeaten fighter for the third straight time in Fonseca. “I let others down, but think I let myself down more than anything. I learned to be a different fighter, more responsible.”

Comments