“I would love to fight Devin Haney. I would love to fight him,” Davis said. “I told my manager, J. Prince, ‘After I knock Jermaine Ortiz out, you know they’re going to be scared to fight me, right?’ … I knocked him out, and we’ve not heard nothing from them since the fight.”

The issue is the jump. Davis just moved up and is still building at the weight, while Haney is already operating at a different level in the division. Calling for a title fight in that position doesn’t line up as a natural next step.

It would carry more weight if Keyshawn moved to 147 and built his case first by beating names like Brian Norman Jr., Shakhram Giyasov, or Karen Chukhadzhian. Right now, he has one win at 140 and is already calling for a title fight at 147 against Haney.

There are other names around Davis that would answer questions first. Andy Cruz is the obvious one given their history, and fighters like Ernesto Mercado and Giyasov offer real tests at the weight. Those fights come with risk and less reward, which helps explain why they don’t get pushed.

Haney, meanwhile, has no reason to move toward Keyshawn right now. He’s the bigger draw, has more established options, and doesn’t gain much from taking on a fighter who is still trying to define himself at 140.

For now, the callout adds visibility, but it doesn’t change Davis’ position in the division or move him any closer to a title fight at this stage. Keyshawn got attention with the callout, but the path forward still runs through tougher, less visible fights first.

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