Stevenson has handled his business on big nights. ESPN built him into a main event fighter. Riyadh Season placed him on cards with global attention. He has walked to the ring as the A-side and fought like it.
His win over Teofimo Lopez is the one that holds up strongest under tape study. Lopez was experienced, physically strong, and still dangerous when he lets combinations go. Stevenson kept the fight long with a superb jab, stepped around the lead foot, and took Lopez’s right hand out of play. Over twelve rounds, he dictated the pace and limited clean exchanges.
That is elite work.
Beyond that, the resume is still forming. Edwin De Los Santos brought power and a live left hand, but he had not cleared out proven technicians. William Zepeda came in unbeaten and aggressive, pressing behind volume and body shots, yet he was stepping into his first championship-level assignment. Stevenson handled both with discipline, working behind the jab and refusing to trade recklessly.
Mayweather’s early run followed a harsher order. Genaro Hernández had not been beaten at 130 when Mayweather stopped him for his first world title. Diego Corrales was 33-0 and regarded as one of the hardest punchers in the sport when Mayweather dropped him five times and forced the stoppage. Jose Luis Castillo pushed him through a physical fight in his prime. Mayweather came back in the rematch and closed the argument clean.
Those were seasoned fighters at their peak. That is how reputations are built inside the ropes.
Stevenson has the tools. His range control is sharp, he works behind a disciplined jab, and he takes a man’s best punch away by inches. He keeps his feet under him, turns opponents, and banks rounds without taking clean counters. That kind of control wins on any stage.
But closing shows is different from clearing out killers in their prime. Mayweather earned those nights after he beat undefeated punchers and reigning belt holders at full strength. Stevenson is boxing under those lights while still building that layer of names on his record.
If Stevenson keeps stepping in with fighters at their peak and taking away what they do best, the comparison will settle itself in the ring. Until then, the Mayweather talk leans more on skill and stage time than on a stack of prime scalps.

























