Remember I told yall I don’t need nobody and yall laughed
— Shakur Stevenson (@ShakurStevenson) June 4, 2026
Shakur’s post reads like someone with a chip on their shoulder. It is the look of a fighter building a defensive wall and trying to convince himself as much as the public.
When a fighter feels the need to constantly broadcast that they do not need anyone, it usually signals the exact opposite. That “me against the world” stance is often a classic shield for deep professional insecurity, especially when the landscape around them gets dangerous.
By pushing everyone away and adopting an isolated, unappreciated persona, it creates a built-in narrative safety net. If the massive, dangerous fights against the top tier from 130 to 147 pounds do not happen, he can easily blame it on the industry “blackballing” him or claim that nobody wants to see him win. It gives him a perfect, self-made excuse to stay in a comfortable lane while avoiding the absolute sharks circling those divisions.
If Shakur got the same chest of gold that Conor Benn got after he signed with Zuffa Boxing, ambition may have gone out the window along with it. It is incredibly hard to get up at 5:00 AM to run when you are sleeping in silk sheets, or in Shakur’s case, when you just got a massive backing from Zuffa.
With Eddie Hearn basically letting the cat out of the bag that Shakur has officially aligned with Zuffa Boxing, the financial reality changes completely. If the rumors of Zuffa paying absurd market rates are true, Shakur just secured the kind of generational wealth that alters a fighter’s perspective.
When you get that level of bumming around money right after a massive win like dethroning Teofimo Lopez, the immediate need to risk it all against every hungry contender from 130 to 147 fades. He doesn’t have to take a legacy-defining risk to secure his future anymore. The comment “I don’t need nobody” suddenly takes on a double meaning: it is an emotional defense mechanism against critics, but it is also a literal financial reality. He is set.
Now, the real test is going to be what Zuffa tries to do with him. Word is already circulating that they want a massive matchup against Devin Haney next, but reports are suggesting Shakur’s side might be the one dragging their feet.
It will be telling to see how his career is managed from here. Is he going to use this financial cushion to demand the absolute top-tier fights on his own terms, or is he going to coast on massive paydays against safer options?
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