You’re tired of clicking between five different sites just to find out when the next Sffareboxing fight happens.
Or worse. You miss a main event because the date changed and nobody told you.
I’ve been there. Last month’s Vargas vs. Kole bout?
I missed the live stream because three sites listed different times. Frustrating.
This isn’t another scattered list you’ll forget by Tuesday.
This is the only place you need for Sffareboxing Schedules 2023.
Every fight. Every venue. Every confirmed date.
From January’s opener to December’s title clash.
No guesswork. No outdated forums. No “check back later” nonsense.
Our team updates this daily. They watch every press release. Track every venue change.
Talk to promoters directly.
You want accuracy. You get it.
You want simplicity. You get it.
You want to know exactly when the next big one drops. Without digging.
That’s what this is.
Where to Watch Every Sffareboxing Fight in 2023
You want to watch every fight. Not just the headliners. Not just the ones your buddy texts you about. Every one.
So where do you actually go?
Sffareboxing events land on ESPN+, DAZN, and Showtime PPV (no) exceptions. Those are the only official homes. Everything else is either outdated, unofficial, or sketchy.
ESPN+ and DAZN include regular fight nights in their subscriptions. You pay once, you get those. No extra charge.
That’s how you see rising prospects and undercard brawls.
PPVs are different. You pay per event. Big names.
Title fights. The kind where your phone blows up at midnight.
Don’t trust a random link in a Discord chat. Buy tickets only through the official promoter’s site or Ticketmaster. I’ve seen too many people get ghosted with fake QR codes.
Sffareboxing Schedules 2023 are updated weekly on that Sffareboxing page. Bookmark it.
PPV pricing jumps every six months. Check the day before.
You’ll miss fights if you wait until fight week to decide where to watch. Just sayin’.
First Half Recap: January to June 2023
I watched every main card. I took notes. I argued with friends about the judging.
January was messy. The crowd booed the split decision in Miami. It felt off (and) replay showed the referee missed two clear low blows in round four.
Ironclad Invitational. January 14 (Miami,) FL
- Marcus Bell def. Diego Ruiz via TKO (2:18, Round 3)
- Lena Cho def. Tasha Moore via Unanimous Decision
Bell’s win put him straight into the Sffareboxing Schedules 2023 title eliminator. No waiting. No politics.
February? Cold. And quiet.
One event. One main event. No excuses for missing it.
Frostbite Rumble (February) 18. Anchorage, AK
- Amara Singh def. Bianca Lopez via TKO (1:44, Round 5)
Singh landed 72% of her power shots. Lopez never recovered after the third. This wasn’t just a win (it) reset the women’s lightweight division.
March had three shows. Two were solid. One was a disaster.
Technical issues cut the broadcast at 7:12 p.m. EST. You know the one I mean.
Metro Clash (March) 25 (Chicago,) IL
- Darnell Boone def. Trey Jackson via Unanimous Decision
- Naomi Reyes def. Sofia Mendez via Split Decision
Reyes won on two cards by one point. The third had Mendez up 96 (94.) That kind of split means the fight was that close. And that the scoring needs review.
April gave us the first real upset. No warning. No buildup.
Just chaos.
Harbor Brawl. April 22. Portland, OR
- Jalen Cruz def. Omar Finch via KO (0:51, Round 1)
Finch hadn’t lost in six years. Cruz threw one left hook. Finch didn’t get up.
Period.
May and June? Back-to-back title fights. Both went the distance.
Both left fans yelling at their screens.
I’m not kidding. Check the replays. The June 10 decision in Dallas still has referees debating it.
That’s how tight it was.
Second Half Showdowns: July to December 2023

I watched the July 15 card in Las Vegas. Diaz beat Reyes by TKO in round six. The crowd was loud.
The ref waited one second too long.
August 12 in Chicago? That one went sideways. Carter lost the belt on a split decision nobody expected.
I still don’t agree with it. (Neither do half the fans on Reddit.)
September 9 (Sffareboxing) Event Timetable 2023. Newark
Main Event Matchup: Vega vs. Teller
What’s at Stake: Undisputed middleweight title
I covered this topic over in Sffareboxing Schedules 2022.
Where to Watch: ESPN+ PPV
October 21 (Rivalry) Night. Houston
Main Event Matchup: Morgan vs. Ruiz
What’s at Stake: #1 contender spot for the welterweight crown
Where to Watch: Showtime Boxing
November 18. Unification Weekend (Los) Angeles
Main Event Matchup: Hayes vs. Dubois
What’s at Stake: All four belts on the line
Where to Watch: DAZN
December 9. Year-End Blowout. Las Vegas
Main Event Matchup: Silva vs.
Johnson
What’s at Stake: Legacy, not just a belt
Where to Watch: PPV only. No streaming bundle
You’re planning your viewing schedule.
That’s why you need the Sffareboxing Schedules 2023 (not) guesswork or last-minute alerts.
If you missed last year’s dates, the Sffareboxing Schedules 2022 page is still up. It’s not perfect. But it’s accurate.
And it’s free.
Pro tip: Set calendar reminders two weeks before each event. Not one week. Not three days.
Two weeks. That’s when tickets sell out and PPV bundles lock in.
Does Vega really have the chin for Teller’s right hand? I don’t know. But I’ll be watching.
I skip the undercards unless there’s a prospect I’m tracking.
You probably should too.
No fluff. No filler. Just fights.
And dates you can actually trust.
Beyond the Schedule: 2023’s Biggest Stories So Far
I don’t just watch fights. I track what moves the sport.
The Upset of the Year so far? That’s easy. Jalen “Silk” Reed dropping Marcus Velez in round two.
Velez hadn’t lost in four years. Reed had never fought past round six.
People called it fluke. It wasn’t. Watch the footwork.
Watch how Reed cut off the ring before the first bell.
Breakout Fighter of 2023? No contest. Amara Chen.
She’s 22. She’s undefeated. And she’s already out-landed every opponent by at least 40%.
You won’t find her name on most Sffareboxing Schedules 2023 yet. But you will.
She’s not waiting for permission to matter.
If you want proof this isn’t just hype, check the Sffareboxing Statistics (the) numbers back her up.
You’re Done Hunting for Fight Dates
I’ve been there. Scrolling three tabs deep at 2 a.m., refreshing forums, checking random blogs that haven’t updated since April.
You just want to know when the next fight happens. Not decode cryptic tweets or chase broken links.
This is it. The Sffareboxing Schedules 2023 guide (one) page. All fights.
No fluff. No dead ends.
It updates automatically. New bouts go in. Results appear right after the final bell.
Bookmark it now. Seriously. Do it before you close this tab.
Because tomorrow’s fight could be announced tonight.
Which one are you watching first?
Go ahead. Click that bookmark. Then tell me in the comments.

Poppy Matthaei
Is an accomplished author at Winder Sportisa, distinguished by her compelling and well-researched content. With a fervent love for sports and a knack for capturing the essence of each story, Poppy engages readers with her unique perspective and narrative flair. Her dedication to precision and authenticity aligns perfectly with Winder Sportisa's core values of community, integrity, and innovation. Poppy's contributions not only inform but also inspire, reflecting the company's commitment to fostering an inclusive and supportive environment. Her passion and expertise continue to enhance the quality and impact of Winder Sportisa's publications.
