You just missed the first round.
Again.
Because the time on that blog post didn’t match the network’s tweet, which contradicted the promoter’s email, and nobody told you the fight got pushed back two hours.
I’ve been there. More times than I care to admit.
Boxing schedules are a mess. Time zones stack up like bad debt. Broadcast details vanish mid-week.
Last-minute changes happen with zero warning.
It’s not your fault.
This isn’t about being disorganized. It’s about sources that don’t talk to each other.
We update Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare constantly. Not once a day, but as things shift.
Real fans run this. Not bots. Not interns.
People who cancel plans for undercards.
We cross-check every announcement. Every timezone. Every streaming link.
No guesswork. No “check back later.”
Just one page. One truth.
You’ll know when it starts. Where it airs. And whether you need popcorn or patience.
That’s it.
Sffareboxing Timetables: What’s Next and Where to Watch
This schedule is updated weekly. All times are approximate and subject to change based on the length of undercard bouts.
I check these dates every Tuesday morning. Not because I love spreadsheets. (I don’t).
But because missing a main event feels like showing up late to a wedding toast.
Here’s what’s confirmed right now:
| Event Date | Main Event Fighters | Venue/Location | Main Card Start Time | How to Watch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sat, Jun 15 | Crawford vs. Spence Jr. | T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas | 9:00 PM EST | PPV via ESPN+ |
| Sat, Jun 29 | Ugas vs. Garcia | Crypto.com Arena, LA | 10:00 PM EST | DAZN |
The Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare are the only ones I trust for real-time updates. I use this guide to cross-check every time a promoter drops a new date.
Undercard highlights for June 15:
- Ramirez vs. Munguia (middleweight)
- Lopez vs. Galarza (featherweight)
Undercard highlights for June 29:
- Bivol vs. Beterbiev rematch (tentative. Watch this space)
- Warren vs.
Kambosos Jr. (lightweight)
Does your cable package include DAZN? Because if it doesn’t, you’ll need to grab a subscription before fight night.
No one wants to sit through five minutes of buffering while the opening bell rings.
I’ve done it. It sucks.
Set a reminder. Bookmark the page. Or just come back here every Monday.
That’s what I do.
How to Decode Fight Night Schedules Like a Pro
I used to think “10 PM ET” meant the main event started then. Turns out I was wrong. And frustrated.
And late to bed.
Fight nights have three start times (not) one. The broadcast start time. The main card start time.
And the main event ring walk. They’re rarely the same.
The broadcast starts early. Usually with prelims. That’s the undercard.
Fighters you’ve never heard of, trying to get noticed. Sometimes it runs long. Sometimes it gets cut short.
That’s why the main card drifts.
I once waited 90 minutes for Tyson Fury’s ring walk because the prelims bled over. No warning. No apology.
Just silence and my own impatience.
Here’s how I convert times now:
10 PM EST = 7 PM PST = 3 AM GMT (next day).
I wrote more about this in Results Sffareboxing Sportsfanfare.
Yes, that means UK fans are up past midnight for a US primetime show.
Pro Tip: The times listed on the Sportsfanfare Boxing Event Timetables are almost always for the broadcast start, not the first punch of the main event.
That’s why your friend in LA texts “It’s on!” at 7 PM (and) nothing happens for 80 minutes.
Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare don’t hide this. They just assume you know. You don’t.
Neither did I.
So I check the official UFC or PBC press release and the Sportsfanfare timetable side by side. One tells me when the broadcast kicks off. The other tells me when the real action should start (if) things go smoothly.
They rarely do.
Want to avoid missing the first real punch? Skip the scroll. Open two tabs.
Compare. Then pour yourself a drink and wait.
Never Miss a Punch: Tools & Tricks for Staying Updated

I set calendar reminders for fights like it’s a doctor’s appointment. Because it is. Your attention is the only thing on the line.
Open Google Calendar or Outlook. Type in the fight date, time, and venue. Add “Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare” to the title so you know it’s official.
Turn on notifications for that event. You’ll get a ping 15 minutes before. That’s enough time to mute your boss’s Slack thread and open the stream.
Follow Sportsfanfare on Instagram and X. Not just the main account (follow) the fighters too. Last-minute walkouts?
Weight issues? Ref changes? They post it first.
Not press releases. Not bloggers. Them.
The weigh-in isn’t ceremonial. It’s the final checkpoint. If both fighters make weight, the main event is happening.
No delays. No swaps. That’s when I stop refreshing and start prepping snacks.
Use the ESPN app. Go to Settings > Notifications > Toggle on “Boxing.” Then tap “Customize” and add the specific fighters’ names. You’ll get alerts only for them (not) every amateur bout in Bakersfield.
Push notifications beat bookmarks every time. Bookmarks collect dust. Alerts shake your pocket.
I check the Results sffareboxing sportsfanfare page the morning after. Not for spoilers (for) context. Who landed clean?
What went sideways? That’s where real analysis lives.
Don’t wait for someone it for you. Grab the tools. Set the alerts.
Show up.
You already know what happens if you don’t.
Beyond the Timetable: Get the Full Fight Night
I skip the main event sometimes. Not on purpose. I just get hooked on the undercard.
That’s where real fighters cut their teeth. Not the polished stars. The hungry ones.
The ones who’ll headline in two years.
You want pre-fight analysis? Skip the hype reels. Go to the official broadcast pre-shows.
Or read BoxingScene or The Ring. They don’t sugarcoat it.
Does anyone actually watch the whole card anymore? Yeah, me too. And it’s better than scrolling.
Post-fight pressers? Sportsfanfare posts them fast. Their YouTube channel has full audio and raw cuts.
No fluff, no delays.
Results drop there too. No waiting for a site to update at 2 a.m.
You’re not just watching fights. You’re tracking careers. Watching styles clash.
Learning what pressure looks like before the big stage.
Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare tell you when all this happens (not) just the headliner.
And if you want the full list of upcoming cards with dates, venues, and broadcast details? That’s exactly what the Sffareboxing Fixtures From Sportsfanfare page gives you.
Bookmark This Page and Be Ready for Every Fight
I’ve been there. Scrolling through five sites. Refreshing Twitter at 2 a.m.
Missing the main event because some blog got the time wrong.
This page fixes that.
Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare is live. Updated. Accurate.
No guesswork.
You want the real time (not) what some forum said in 2022.
Bookmark this page now. Make it your first stop before any Sportsfanfare event to get the most accurate timetable.
It takes two seconds. Do it.
You’ll thank yourself when the bell rings.
Now you’re all set for the next big night of boxing.

Alfredorique Isom plays an essential role in shaping the scientific foundation of Sport Lab Edge. With a strong focus on biomechanics and athletic conditioning, she helps transform complex sports science into practical tools for performance improvement. Her dedication to precision and athlete well-being has strengthened the platform’s mission to promote effective training and recovery strategies.