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Claressa Shields has solidified her place in boxing history as a three-division champion and the first-ever undisputed women’s heavyweight champion. With an unblemished record of 16-0, Shields is the only boxer, male or female, to claim undisputed champion status across three different weight divisions in the four-belt era—junior middleweight, middleweight, and now heavyweight.

Over the weekend, Shields made history once again when she defeated the previously undefeated Danielle Perkins in a powerful fight. With just seconds left in the 10th and final round, Shields landed a decisive right hook that floored Perkins. The judges scored the fight 97-92, 99-90, and 100-89, all in Shields’ favour, securing her the win and the undisputed women’s heavyweight title.

This victory not only crowned Shields as the undisputed champion of the heavyweight division, but it also cemented her place as the first boxer in the four-belt era—regardless of gender—to become the undisputed champion in three different weight classes. Shields now holds the WBC, WBA, IBF, and WBO heavyweight titles, with the heavyweight division for women considered to start at 175 pounds.

Shields’ latest victory also ended Perkins’ undefeated record, which now stands at 5-1 with two knockouts. Meanwhile, Shields remains undefeated, with her professional record now standing at 16-0, including three knockouts.

Claressa Shields made history by becoming the first boxer, male or female, to win undisputed world championships in three different weight classes. Shields defeated Danielle Perkins to claim the WBC, WBA, IBF, and WBO heavyweight titles, solidifying her status as a boxing legend.

Claressa Shields has solidified her place in boxing history as a three-division champion and the first-ever undisputed women’s heavyweight champion. With an unblemished record of 16-0, Shields is the only boxer, male or female, to claim undisputed champion status across three different weight divisions in the four-belt era—junior middleweight, middleweight, and now heavyweight.

Over the weekend, Shields made history once again when she defeated the previously undefeated Danielle Perkins in a powerful fight. With just seconds left in the 10th and final round, Shields landed a decisive right hook that floored Perkins. The judges scored the fight 97-92, 99-90, and 100-89, all in Shields’ favour, securing her the win and the undisputed women’s heavyweight title.

Claressa Shields (Getty Images)

This victory not only crowned Shields as the undisputed champion of the heavyweight division, but it also cemented her place as the first boxer in the four-belt era—regardless of gender—to become the undisputed champion in three different weight classes. Shields now holds the WBC, WBA, IBF, and WBO heavyweight titles, with the heavyweight division for women considered to start at 175 pounds.

Shields’ latest victory also ended Perkins’ undefeated record, which now stands at 5-1 with two knockouts. Meanwhile, Shields remains undefeated, with her professional record now standing at 16-0, including three knockouts.

– American Claressa Shields was crowned boxing’s first undisputed world champion in three weight classes on Feb 2, after beating compatriot Danielle Perkins for the women’s heavyweight title by unanimous decision in front of her home crowd in Flint, Michigan.

Shields, who also won middleweight gold medals at the London 2012 and Rio de Janeiro 2016 Olympics, landed a powerful right hand with seconds to go in the 10th and final round, knocking down Perkins and improving her professional career record to 16-0.

The win makes 29-year-old Shields an undisputed champion in a third weight class, adding to her undisputed titles in the middleweight and light-middleweight divisions.

She is the only boxer, man or woman, to achieve the feat.

“It feels unbelievable, to be honest. I had a really hard training camp. And just last Friday, I tore my labrum in my left shoulder, so I wasn’t able to use my good jab today,” Shields said.

Claressa Shields celebrating after winning her fight against Savannah Marshall at the O2 Arena in London on Oct 15, 2022.

“But I didn’t want to call the fight off because I had asked God to give me a big fight in my hometown. He did that. So I decided to keep going through with it. I feel so happy. And shout out to my opponent, Danielle Perkins. Man, that girl was strong as hell.”

Perkins, 42, won her first five bouts before losing to Shields. She won the heavyweight gold at the 2019 world championships in Ulan-Ude, Russia.

After the fight, Shields said she wanted a rematch with Costa Rican Hanna Gabriels, whom she beat in June 2018 in Detroit to claim the World Boxing Association and inaugural International Boxing Federation middleweight titles.

Gabriels has held world championships in four weight classes.

Shields has also dabbled in mixed martial arts, winning two and losing one of her fights. Her last bout was a split-decision win over Kelsey DeSantis in the PFL v Bellator: Champs event in Riyadh last February.

Her life has been made into a movie called The Fire Inside. It was written by Barry Jenkins, who directed and co-wrote Moonlight, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay in 2016. Moonlight won two other Oscars, including Best Picture.

Claressa Shields blasted her way to the undisputed heavyweight championship and nearly knocked out challenger Danielle Perkins in the final seconds, but settled for a win by unanimous decision on Sunday.

Yes, Shields can punch.

“I just feel overwhelmed and so happy.” Shields said.

Shields (16-0, 3 KOs) proved that even the super athletic Perkins (5-1, 2 KOs), a true heavyweight, could not stop her from becoming an undisputed world champion in a third weight division at Dort Arena in Flint, Michigan, her home town.

Claressa-Shields-Powers-to-Undisputed-Heavyweight-Championship

In the opening round it was easy to see the size difference. Shields calmly measured Perkins long right jabs then countered with rocket rights through the guard. The speed was evident in Shield’s punches. Perkins used jabs to work her way in but was caught with counters.

“That girl was strong as hell,” said Shields describing Perkins.

Perkins, a southpaw, was somewhat confident that she was the stronger puncher and the stronger fighter overall. But when Shields connected with 10 rocket overhand rights in the third round the power moved Perkins several feet backward.

Suddenly, Perkins realized that indeed Shields has power.

Perkins became more cautious with her approaches. Though the true heavyweight was not frozen in fear, she was wary about getting caught flush with Shields rights. But bullet jabs and lightning combinations still rained on Perkins.

Finding a way to nullify Shields speed was crucial for Perkins.

The former basketball player Perkins continually proved her athleticism with agile moves here and there, but Shields just was superior in every way.

When Perkins became focused too much on the right, a Shields left hook caught the New York native flush. Suddenly there was another Shields weapon to worry about.

Many critics of Shields had focused on her lack of knockouts. But in her previous fight against another heavyweight, the two-time Olympic gold medalist surprised Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse with knockout power. It’s the same power Shields showed Perkins as if firing a fast ball by powering her right with leverage by using her left leg to produce momentum and an explosive punch.

In the 10th and final round Shields and Perkins exchanged blows. Perkins was looking to connect with one of her power shots when suddenly Shields countered with a perfectly timed right to the chin and down went Perkins with about 10 seconds remaining. She beat the count to finish the round.

“I showed I was the bigger puncher and better boxer,” said Shields. “I knew I could do it because I’m really strong at heavyweight.”

All three judges favored Shields 100-89, 99-90 and 97-92.

It was another convincing performance by Shields. So what is next for the best female fighter pound for pound?

Claressa Shields added to her glittering CV by outpointing Danielle Perkins to become female boxing’s first undisputed heavyweight world champion.

Shields is also the first boxer, female or male, to achieve undisputed status across three different divisions in the four-belt era (heavyweight, middleweight, light-middleweight) after her win over the previously unbeaten Perkins.

Shields, boxing in her native Flint, took her unblemished record as a pro to 16-0 after flooring Perkins with a right hook in the 10th and final round, ahead of the judges scoring the fight 97-92, 99-90, and 100-89 in her favour.

Claressa Shields (right) beat Danielle Perkins (left) to become undisputed heavyweight world champion

The 29-year-old later revealed a shoulder problem she sustained last week meant the fight almost did not take place.

“I actually think I’m going to have to have surgery on my left arm. I tore my labrum last week, so the fight almost didn’t happen,” Shields said.

“I didn’t want to let Flint down, but I really couldn’t use my jab the way that I wanted to. I iced it, I did therapy and now I think I’m going to have a shoulder surgery.”

Claressa Shields (Getty Images)

Preamble

Good evening and welcome to tonight’s undisputed women’s heavyweight championship bout between Claressa Shields and Danielle Perkins. Shields, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and three-division champion, had no shortage of lucrative offers for this fight, where she will attempt to unify all four recognized world belts in a third different weight class. But when given the choice between a marquee venue like Brooklyn’s Barclays Center and a homecoming, she chose the Michigan city of Flint. “My dream is to fight at Barclays,” Shields said this week. “But the occasion calls for me to want to bring it back home because of the history of the fight – the first women’s undisputed championship at heavyweight.”

That decision is about more than just boxing. Shields has long been a symbol of Flint’s fighting spirit, a role cemented by her portrayal in The Fire Inside, a biopic released in December. A city once fueled by the auto industry, Flint has endured decades of economic decline, depopulation, and, most infamously, the water crisis that began in 2014 when lead contamination plagued its drinking supply. While officials insist the water is now safe and the city is making a comeback, many residents remain wary, and economic hardships persist.

Flint mayor Sheldon Neeley sees Shields as the embodiment of the city’s grit. “She really embodies the spirit of the city – coming from crisis to recovery,” he said. “It’s great that she chose her hometown to bring this great showcase here.”

A sellout crowd of 6,000 is expected tonight at Dort Financial Center, the home of the Ontario Hockey League’s Flint Firebirds, while thousands more will watch via Dazn. Shields (15-0, 3 KOs) is fresh off a dominant stoppage victory over Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse for the WBC’s version of the heavyweight title. She’s previously unified the four belts at both middleweight and light heavyweight.

Claressa Shields, left, and Danielle Perkins face off at a press conference on Thursday in Flint, Michigan.

Her opponent, Brooklyn’s Danielle Perkins (5-0, 2 KOs), a former college basketball player at St John’s University, is relishing the newfound attention. “I always have told Claressa that I do always appreciate everything that she’s done for boxing,” said Perkins, who hails from Brooklyn. “Her coming up to the heavyweight division is the best thing that could have ever happened to me in my entire life. No one at any point ever cared about this division until Claressa came up here.”

Stay with us for round-by-round updates, analysis and reaction from Flint, where Shields and Perkins should make their ringwalks in a little more than an hour’s time.

Claressa Shields, one of the most decorated boxers ever, takes on top-ranked contender Danielle Perkins Sunday night for a chance to win another undisputed world title.

Shields fights Perkins at the Dort Financial Center in Flint, her hometown, on Sunday night for the undisputed women’s heavyweight championship. Shields (15-0, 3 KOs), already a champion of five different weight classes, is looking to become the first boxer to win undisputed titles at three different weight classes. Perkins (5-0, 2 KOs) will have to take down Shields on her home turf to win her first championship.

Shields-Perkins headlines a night of 10 fights in the “Vehicle City” featuring four women’s fights. The co-main event is a men’s heavyweight duel between Brandon Moore and Skylar Lacy for the vacant USBA heavyweight title. Five other boxers from Michigan — Jaquan McElroy, Joseph Jerome Starks, Leon Lawson III, Joseph Hicks and Joshua James Pagan — will also fight on the card.

This fight is for the first-ever undisputed women’s heavyweight title in boxing history, and a chance for an American, male or female, to become the undisputed champion at the top weight class since 1992.

Shields is looking to become the first boxer regardless of gender to win undisputed titles in three weight classes — 154, 160 and 175. She became the first boxer to win two undisputed titles after her last fight in Flint at the Dort Financial Center in 2021.

Uncrowned has Claressa Shields vs. Danielle Perkins live results, round-by-round updates, highlights, ring walks and start time for the Shields vs. Perkins fight card on Sunday night at the Dort Financial Center in Flint, Michigan. WBC heavyweight champion Shields defends her belt against Perkins with the vacant WBA, IBF and WBO belts also on the line.

Shields (15-0, 3 KOs), Uncrowned’s No. 1 pound-for-pound women’s boxer in the world, is a five-division champion and former two-division undisputed champion, having held the undisputed super welterweight crown in 2021 and the undisputed middleweight title twice between 2019 and 2024. Shields won the WBC heavyweight title with a second-round knockout of Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse this past July.

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JULY 27: Claressa Shields, poses with the WBC Elizabethan Belt and the WBO World Lightweight and Heavyweight Title belts after a second-round KO over Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse at Little Caesars Arena on July 27, 2024, in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Terrell Groggins/Getty Images)

Perkins (5-0, 2 KOs) has never been scheduled for more than eight rounds and comes into the bout as far less experienced than her championship opponent. Perkins boxed on the undercard of Shields’ fight with Lepage-Joanisse, winning a wide unanimous decision over Christianne Fahey.

Heavyweight prospects Brandon Moore (16-1, 10 KOs) and Skylar Lacy (8-0-2, 6 KOs) clash on the undercard in a bout scheduled for 10 rounds. Moore recently teamed up with Dmitry Salita’s Salita Promotions, which is promoting Sunday’s card and has a long-standing relationship with Shields.

Shields vs. Perkins begins at 7:30 p.m. ET on DAZN, with main event ring walks expected at around 11:00 p.m. ET.

Follow all of the action with Uncrowned’s live results and highlights, as well as play-by-play of the main card below.

Undisputed heavyweight title: Claressa Shields vs. Danielle Perkins

Heavyweight: Brandon Moore vs. Skylar Lacy

Super welterweight: Joseph Hicks Jr. vs. Keon Papillion

Super lightweight: Joshua Pagan vs. Ronal Ron

Super featherweight: Caroline Veyre vs. Carmen Vargas

Super bantamweight: Ashleyann Lozada vs. Denise Moran

This weekend, Claressa Shields will attempt to increase her collection of heavyweight titles when she takes on Danielle Perkins in a clash that has been eagerly anticipated by boxing fans for some time.

 

Shields will make the first defense of her WBC crown as she pursues the undisputed crown against the challenger, who is seeking her first world title.

Shields, a two-weight undisputed champion with a brilliant career so far, goes into the ring as the favorite to take the victory, but will also be wary of any possible danger in the event to be held at the Dort Financial Center in Detroit, Michigan.

The two-time Olympic champion Shields (15-0, 3 KOs) will look to keep her professional unbeaten streak alive in her hometown of Michigan against undefeated heavyweight contender Danielle Perkins.

Claressa Shields vs Danielle Perkins: Date, time, and how to watch the boxing fight

The fight will be for Shields’ WBC heavyweight title and the WBO light heavyweight title, as well as the vacant WBA heavyweight title.

“I feel very blessed at this time in my life and career,” Shields said in a statement. “But make no mistake, every blessing came with blood, sweat and tears. My home in Flint helped shape me into the person I am today. That city, with all its struggles and strengths, built something in me that cannot be broken.

“Without Flint and the determination I developed there at an early age, I don’t know if I would be here today. I can’t wait for this homecoming event,” Claressa added.

While Perkins (5-0, 2 KOs), a native of Brooklyn, New York, won her last fight by unanimous decision over Christianne Fahey in July to become the top-ranked contender, Shields has taken note of this.

“Danielle Perkins is undefeated and a strong contender, but I’ve been fighting my whole life, not just in the ring,” said Shields. “Whether it’s in my personal life, in the amateur boxing ring or as a professional world champion, I just don’t fail. February 2 will be no different.”

When is the fight between Claressa Shields vs Danielle Perkins?

The fight will take place on Sunday, February 2 at the Dort Financial Center in Detroit, Michigan.

What time is the fight between Claressa Shields vs Danielle Perkins?

The event will begin at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Time in the United States, 4:30 p.m. Pacific Time.

Shields and Perkins are expected to enter the ring at 10:50 p.m. ET (7:50 p.m. PT).

Where to watch Claressa Shields vs Danielle Perkins fight live in USA?

The fight will be available to watch live on the streaming service DAZN.