Turki Alalshikh’s relationship with key UK boxing promoters is under fresh scrutiny after Ring Magazine reported a serious internal fallout involving Queensberry.
The situation escalated when the platform attached a Community Note to the post, amplifying scrutiny around the claims.
Ring Report Describes “Unrepairable Rift”
Ring Magazine stated that Alalshikh and Sela were made aware that rumors of litigation had leaked from Queensberry and that this had created what was described as an “unrepairable rift.”
The report also referenced what it characterized as cordial public communications, while alleging volatility behind the scenes.
If that account is accurate, it is more than routine friction in the boxing business. It suggests the Saudi-led operation is prepared to redefine who controls boxing’s biggest nights.
Simon Jordan Predicted Promoters Would Become Disposable
Years before the current dispute, talkSPORT’s Simon Jordan questioned how long traditional promoters would remain essential if the money and matchmaking power sat elsewhere.
“We are in a unique period; these guys are getting these fights made for them. They just turn up, and that for me is not much of a skillset.”
He added, “It does make me wonder if the end game for the Saudis is to say, ‘What do we need these guys for? They are glorified agents; we can own the fighters.’”
Jordan’s most direct line cut to the core of the promoter question: “If I were the money in the room, unless there was a bloody good reason, why would I deal with Hearn and [Frank] Warren? If I’ve got the ability to turn out their lights economically, what do I need them for?”
At the time, Jordan’s comments sounded confrontational. With this week’s reporting, they read like a warning that is starting to land.
From Early Praise To Growing Pushback
When Alalshikh first came to the fore, many fans and sections of the media praised him as a savior who could bankroll the fights boxing could not consistently make on its own.
Over time, that goodwill has taken knocks. Incidents, messaging, and the perception of tighter control have irritated parts of the audience that originally welcomed the spending power.
Boxing enters this phase with credibility debates already running hot, as Alalshikh’s latest moves fuel what many now describe as a heel turn.
The Conor Benn moving to Zuffa Boxing situation remains a dominant talking point in the UK, and it has helped create a broader mood in which fans question governance and accountability across the sport.
Why UK Promoters Were Vulnerable
The UK promoter model has long been strongest at home. Beyond their own country, both Warren and Hearn would be the first to admit that they needed a partner carrying the financial and platform weight abroad.
Saudi Arabia offered the lavish comforts and guaranteed scale that made cooperation a no-brainer. But once Alalshikh began signing “Ring Ambassadors” and forming direct relationships, it became harder to ignore where the leverage was heading.
Promoters rarely disappear overnight in boxing. They become less essential first.
The Bigger Question: Is This Model Built To Last?
There is also a longer view that cannot be brushed aside. A model built around centralized funding can quickly transform boxing, but it also creates a dependency on one power center — and that always carries risk.
If the focus turns and the money tightens, the sport could find itself vulnerable. That is the concern with any system that becomes too reliant on a single power center, no matter how productive the early results appear.
The issue is no longer theoretical — it is unfolding in real time.
Jordan’s quotes explain why some expected this moment — even if few believed it would arrive this bluntly.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a veteran boxing reporter with 15+ years of experience. He has interviewed world champions, broken international exclusives, and reported ringside since 2010. Read full bio.






















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