Bob Arum believes Keyshawn Davis will be the face of boxing

BOB ARUM was โ€œstunnedโ€ by how fast more than 7,000 tickets were sold to Keyshawn Davisโ€™ first hometown fight Friday night in Norfolk, Virginia.

The 25-year-old Davis, an Olympic silver medallist in 2021, was even somewhat surprised to learn how quickly fans committed to packing Scope Arena in downtown Norfolk, where late legend Pernell โ€œSweet Peaโ€ Whitaker fought 10 times during his heyday. The crowd for Davisโ€™ 10-round main event against Argentinaโ€™s Gustavo Lemos will likely exceed 10,000, more than the announced attendance for Whitakerโ€™s final fight at The Scope โ€“ 9,150 for his unanimous points victory over James โ€œBuddyโ€ McGirt in a WBC welterweight championship rematch that took place in October 1994.

Now that Davis has proven himself as a gate attraction, his 92-year-old promoter is more confident than ever that the talented lightweight is poised to become a lightweight champion who can captivate a broader audience than boxingโ€™s hardcore fan base. Whitaker, the hometown hero Davis idolized as a child, held the IBF, WBA and WBC lightweight titles at times during a celebrated career in which he was considered one the sportโ€™s most talented, accomplished performers, pound-for-pound.

โ€œI told the kid this himself, if he continues developing the way he has, he will be the face of boxing,โ€ Arum told Boxing News. โ€œHe reminds me a lot of โ€˜Sugarโ€™ Ray Leonard, who was the face of boxing in his time.โ€

The talkative, media-savvy Davis is a polished promoter who respects what it means to follow in the enormous footsteps of a Hall-of-Famer like Whitaker, who was 55 when a car struck and killed him in July 2019 in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Davis, the third-ranked 135-pound contender by the IBF, WBC and WBO, also appreciates that his older brother, junior welterweight Kelvin Davis (13-0, 7 KOs), and his younger brother, welterweight Keon Davis (pro debut), are scheduled to fight on his undercard Friday night.

โ€œThis event is bigger than us,โ€ Davis stated during a press conference two months ago in Norfolk. โ€œI want to reach as many people as I can with this event so that the people from this town know that you can make it from here. There are resources here. And weโ€™re bringing resources here, like a gym that kids can go to. I want this event to reach many people. I want the Seven Cities to be on the map, so they can be like Atlanta, New York, or Chicago.โ€

The 10-round bout between Davis (11-0, 7 KOs, 1 NC) and Lemos (29-1, 19 KOs) will be the main event of an eight-fight show ESPN+ will stream. Davis-Lemos undercard coverage is set to start at 11:20 p.m. GMT in the UK (6:20 p.m. ET in the United States).

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