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Keyshawn Davis Decisions Nahir Albright in Norfolk Rematch

3 weeks ago 16

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Date: Saturday, May 16, 2026
Venue: Scope Arena, Norfolk, Virginia
Broadcast: DAZN
Promoter: Top Rank

Keyshawn Davis returned home to Norfolk on Saturday night and closed the chapter on the only blemish near his professional record, sweeping the official scorecards against Nahir Albright in a twelve-round super lightweight rematch at Scope Arena. The card served as Top Rank’s inaugural DAZN event and featured a hometown sweep for the Davis brothers, with Keyshawn, Kelvin, and Keon all collecting wins in front of family, friends, and a Virginia crowd.


Main Event: Davis Sweeps Cards Despite Point Deduction

Keyshawn Davis (15-0, 10 KOs) def. Nahir Albright (17-3-1, 7 KOs) by unanimous decision (117-109, 118-108, 118-108).

The former world champion and Olympic silver medalist delivered the victory Norfolk had been waiting for. The two fighters first met in October 2023 in a bout that ended in a majority decision win for Davis, a result that was later overturned. This time, Davis closed the chapter on the cards.

Davis set the tone in the opening round, firing hard jabs while taunting and grinning at Albright. By the third and fourth rounds, he started landing power shots and dictating the range.

Albright produced his best moment in Round 5, buckling Davis with a sharp right hand that briefly altered the rhythm of the fight. The two continued trading and clinching through the middle rounds. Frustration got the better of Davis in the seventh, when he lifted Albright during a clinch and threw him to the canvas. The referee deducted two points.

Davis fought with more urgency soon after, driving home right hands in the ninth. The championship rounds saw him let his hands go, unloading combinations in search of a stoppage. Albright refused to give it to him.

“I felt amazing. I felt good. He’s a crafty fighter. He’s been around. I tried to go for the knockout. We all saw that he was hurt. I just didn’t get it. But I got the decision, and that’s all that matters,” Davis said afterward.

On the seventh-round foul, Davis offered: “He liked to punch and hold. He does that. So, he was on my neck, and I got angry and flipped him over.”

“I felt like I was beating him up in every round. What really made me pick it up is that he caught me with one good shot. And I was like, ‘I’m about to beat you up now. You ain’t getting nothing else off.'”


Co-Feature: Brian Norman Jr. Stops Josh Wagner

Brian Norman Jr. (29-1, 23 KOs) def. Josh Wagner (19-3, 10 KOs) by TKO, Round 2 (1:24).

The former world champion took the center of the ring early, working behind a low left hand while jabbing Wagner. He invested heavily to the body with hooks throughout the opening round.

In the second, Norman landed a leaping left hook that sent Wagner stumbling backward, setting off a flurry that produced the first knockdown. Wagner beat the count, but Norman quickly launched another attack to score a second knockdown. Wagner rose again, though he immediately complained of a shoulder injury. The ringside physician deemed him unable to continue, and the referee waved it off at 1:24 of the round.

“I came out trying to take his head off. I swung big. But then I decided to chill, work off the jab, and stick to my fundamentals. And then I got the job done,” Norman said.

“Working the body shot was on my mind. I looked at him and saw that he wasn’t very strong in the stomach.”

“I’ve learned a lot with Ronnie Shields. I’m being more calm and cool. And this ring is my home now. We’ll see what’s next. No matter what, I’ll handle business.”


Kelvin Davis Edges Peter Dobson by Split Decision

Kelvin Davis (16-1, 8 KOs) def. Peter Dobson (17-4, 10 KOs) by split decision (99-91 and 97-93 Davis; 98-92 Dobson).

The ten-round welterweight bout saw Davis build an early lead behind his outside boxing, while Dobson found success to the body in the middle rounds. The fight grew increasingly physical down the stretch, with both men trading in close quarters and spending extended stretches in the clinch. The 99-91 card in particular drew immediate questioning from observers on broadcast and across social media.


Yan Santana Defends NABO Title Over Cristian Cruz

Yan Santana (17-0, 13 KOs) def. Cristian Cruz (24-8-2, 12 KOs) by unanimous decision (96-94, 97-93, 98-92).

In his toughest assignment to date, the Dominican contender defended his NABO featherweight title over ten rounds. The aggressive Mexican southpaw dictated a competitive pace from the outset, making it difficult for Santana to land clean shots. Santana found success on the outside, though Cruz continued to apply pressure and force exchanges throughout.


Preliminary Results

Keon Davis (5-0, 3 KOs) def. Edwine Humaine Jr. (9-3, 7 KOs) by unanimous decision (60-54 x3) in a six-round super welterweight contest. The third Davis brother on the card used his height and reach advantages to outland Humaine in nearly every exchange.

Dedrick Crocklem (7-0, 3 KOs) def. Eric Howard (7-5, 2 KOs) by unanimous decision (60-54 x3) over six rounds at super featherweight. The Tacoma, Washington prospect swept the scorecards.


Hometown Showing

The Norfolk card produced wins for all three fighting Davis brothers, with Keyshawn, Kelvin, and Keon each having their hand raised before a hometown crowd at Scope Arena.

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