The fight showed that Stevenson struggled to match volume when opponents committed to three and four punch sequences. During Ramírez’s combination attacks, Stevenson often responded by holding or stepping back several feet rather than engaging. That choice reduced his scoring opportunities and allowed Ramírez to control the rhythm. In a short amateur format, pure defense did not carry enough weight with the judges.
What Has and Has Not Changed Since Rio
Stevenson has since refined his professional style, but the basic dynamic remains familiar. Fighters who rely on single shots have had little success against him. William Zepeda, Josh Padley, and Artem Harutyunyan largely attacked one punch at a time. Stevenson blocked, slipped, and countered them with ease.
That context matters when considering Teofimo Lopez. Lopez is not a natural combination puncher in the way Ramírez was as an amateur. Asking him to fully replicate that approach would be a stretch. Still, the underlying idea may be more useful than his recent tendency to load up on isolated power shots.
The Risk and Reward of Chasing Combinations
Lopez already carries a clear power advantage. His hand speed is comparable. Leaning into short combinations rather than single punches could give Stevenson more to process and reduce his ability to reset and control distance.
Lopez is scheduled to defend his WBO light welterweight title against Stevenson on January 31, 2026, at Madison Square Garden. It will be Stevenson’s first fight at 140 pounds, adding another unknown. How much that old Olympic blueprint still applies will depend on whether Lopez is willing, and able, to commit to it.



















