ESPN’s Shakur Stevenson-Toka Kahn Clary Tripleheader Averaged 1,550,000 Viewers

Boxing Scene

More viewers watched Shakur Stevenson’s second fight at the junior lightweight limit than his debut at 130 pounds.

Nielsen Media Research revealed Tuesday that ESPN’s telecast of Stevenson’s easy, 10-round, unanimous-decision victory over Toka Kahn Clary was watched by an average of 1,281,000 viewers. ESPN’s entire three-bout broadcast, which lasted two hours and 24 minutes, averaged 1,550,000 viewers.

Stevenson’s previous appearance on ESPN, a sixth-round knockout of Felix Caraballo, drew a peak audience of 609,000 viewers June 9 from MGM Grand Conference Center in Las Vegas, the same site where Saturday’s card took place.

That June 9 telecast took place on a Tuesday, not a traditional night for broadcasting boxing. It also was the first live boxing broadcast in nearly three months because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The beginning of Saturday’s telecast was boosted by a strong lead-in – LSU’s 37-34 upset of sixth-ranked Florida in college football. The length of that entertaining game cause ESPN’s boxing broadcast to begin nearly one hour late, at 10:58 p.m. EST.

The LSU-Florida game averaged 4,622,000 viewers, according to Nielsen.

Nielsen noted that the opener of ESPN’s boxing tripleheader – super middleweight prospect Edgar Berlanga’s first-round technical knockout of Ulises Sierra – attracted 2,289,000 viewers.

Brooklyn’s Berlanga (16-0, 16 KOs) has knocked out each of his pro opponents in the first round. San Diego’s Sierra (15-2-2, 9 KOs) had not been knocked out before Berlanga dropped him three times and stopped him just 2:40 into their scheduled eight-round, 168-pound bout.

ESPN’s viewership dipped following Berlanga’s win.

The network’s second bout, Masayoshi Nakatani’s dramatic comeback against Felix Verdejo, attracted an average of 1,603,000 viewers. Japan’s Nakatani (19-1, 13 KOs) overcame knockdowns in the first and fourth rounds to drop Puerto Rico’s Verdejo (27-2, 17 KOs) twice in the ninth round, when their scheduled 10-round lightweight fight was stopped.

In the main event Saturday night, Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) comfortably beat Clary (28-3, 19 KOs, 1 NC) in a one-sided, 10-round, 130-pound bout. Each judge scored all 10 rounds for Stevenson (100-90), a 2016 Olympic silver medalist from Newark, New Jersey, against Clary, of Providence, Rhode Island.

Keith Idec is a senior writer/columnist for BoxingScene.com. He can be reached on Twitter @Idecboxing.

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