Within hours of Eddie Hearn admitting he was “pretty devastated,” Kellerman used his Game Over podcast to mock the reaction and declare the move as proof that boxing’s old guard is finished.
“They have been going at Zuffa and mentioning me by name,” Kellerman said. “They have been going after Zuffa and talking wild about me.”
He saved the cleanest shot for Hearn’s tone shift.
“You can’t be talking about how on Monday, ‘these guys suck, and they’re nothing, and I’m so much better,’ and on Tuesday, crying about a loss! Throughout broadcast history or even media history, whenever there has been an expansion, boxing has expanded with it.”
It was delivered with the cadence Kellerman has always favored, part sermon, part scoreboard. The implication was simple. Hearn talked tough about Zuffa. Then he lost a fighter. Therefore, Zuffa wins.
Kellerman went further, casting Zuffa as the next evolutionary step in boxing’s broadcast history. Printing press. Radio. Television. Cable. Streaming. Now this.
“Guys like Eddie Hearn or Oscar De La Hoya who are flailing and insulting Dana White and Nick Khan, I don’t know why you’d pick those two guys to have a fight with. And me. Me either, you really don’t want it.”
“Here’s the new game,” he said. “What they haven’t understood is, the game is already over. They just don’t know it. Game over.”
That is a sweeping conclusion off a single welterweight signing.
Kellerman Crowns Zuffa While Skipping the Saudi Footnote
Benn leaving Matchroom is meaningful. He was a main-event welterweight, a fighter Matchroom built into a draw and leaned on during the fallout from the failed tests. Hearn backed him through the hearings, kept him active overseas, and absorbed the public heat. When a promoter invests that kind of time, energy and reputation in a fighter and then sees him sign elsewhere, it hits hard.
Kellerman treated it like a regime change.
Zuffa Boxing is backed by Turki Alalshikh and Sela Sport through Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. That reality did not receive much airtime in the “new era” speech. Neither did the issue of what follows if one promotional structure begins steering championship routes under its own banner.
Kellerman once made his name challenging promoters. Now he is defending one, aggressively, while taking swings at the competition.
Signing Benn shows spending power. It does not end the promoter business. It does not dissolve sanctioning bodies. It does not rewrite how rankings and mandatories function.
Declaring “game over” makes for good podcast audio. Boxing rarely ends that neatly.
#Max #Kellerman #Declares #Game #Conor #Benn #Leaves #Eddie #Hearn
