“You tweet as much as you run,” one fan replied.
“U keep saying the same s*** God,” another user wrote.
“SHUT UP B****,” another response read alongside a clown emoji.
The comments quickly turned into another social media debate over boxing authenticity, street credibility, and fighter personas online. Shakur drops an “out of the mud” comment like that and seems genuinely shocked when the entire boxing world turns into a firing squad, completely oblivious to the fact that he is the one who handed them the ammunition.
It is the classic actor problem. If the audience feels like you are trying to sell them a persona rather than just being real, they will turn on you instantly.
The boxing public rarely gives fighters the benefit of the doubt once they decide someone is putting on a front. Whether it is a real reflection of his childhood or a calculated attempt to sound tough, the reaction shows he just cannot win the crowd over with that narrative.
With Shakur, because he is already under a microscope for his defensive style, bragging, and his high volume of tweeting, any post that feels like a pose is going to get shredded. People see a multi-millionaire world champion talking about the mud and immediately think it is an act for sympathy points or social media clout.
The lack of self-awareness is what makes it so cringeworthy for the fans watching it unfold. When you are actively draining opponents with catchweights and hiding behind rehydration clauses in boardroom negotiations, you lose the right to use throwback, blue-collar boxing slogans. You are operating like a corporate businessman, not a trench warrior.
Got it out the mud
— Shakur Stevenson (@ShakurStevenson) May 26, 2026
Read the full article here













