TLDR
- David Benavidez defends his WBC light heavyweight title against Anthony Yarde on November 22 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
- Four world title fights headline the card, including Devin Haney vs Brian Norman Jr at welterweight
- Main event ring walks expected around 2:04am GMT/9:04pm ET/6:04pm PT
- Benavidez is heavily favored at 1/12 while Yarde sits at 13/2 underdog odds
- Event streams exclusively on DAZN PPV for $59.99 in the US and £24.99 in the UK
Main Event Odds
David Benavidez vs Anthony Yarde – WBC Light Heavyweight Title
- Benavidez to win: 1/12
- Yarde to win: 13/2
- Draw: 20/1
- Benavidez by decision: 15/8
- Benavidez by KO/TKO: 8/13
- Yarde by decision: 16/1
- Yarde by KO/TKO: 8/1
Full Card Betting Lines
Brian Norman Jr vs Devin Haney – WBO Welterweight Title Jesse Rodriguez vs Fernando Martinez – Junior Bantamweight Unification Abdullah Mason vs Sam Noakes – Vacant WBO Lightweight Title Vito Mielnicki Jr vs Samuel Nmomah – 10 rounds Mohammed Alakel vs Jiaming Li Julio Porras Ruiz vs Pius Mpenda Sultan Almohammed vs Umesh Chavan
Fight Time and Broadcast Details
The Ring IV event takes place Saturday, November 22, 2025 at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The undercard begins at 8pm GMT (11pm local time).
Main event ring walks are scheduled for approximately 2:04am GMT Sunday morning. That translates to 9:04pm ET and 6:04pm PT on Saturday evening for US viewers.
The event streams exclusively on DAZN pay-per-view worldwide. The cost is £24.99 in the UK and $59.99 in the United States.
Coverage begins at 2pm CT (3pm ET) with the main card starting around 4pm CT. DAZN currently offers a seven-day free trial with PPV purchase.
David Benavidez enters as the heavy betting favorite to defend his WBC light heavyweight title against Anthony Yarde. The undefeated American champion holds a perfect 30-0 record with 24 knockouts.
Benavidez, 28, became WBC champion after Dmitry Bivol vacated the belt following his rematch victory over Artur Beterbiev. He initially won the interim title by defeating Oleksandr Gvozdyk on his light heavyweight debut last summer.
The Phoenix native then retained his interim title and added the WBA regular belt with a points win over David Morrell in Las Vegas in February. He withstood a late knockdown in that fight to secure the victory.
Benavidez previously spent three years as WBC super-middleweight champion. He broke division records by winning the belt at age 20.
Yarde’s Third World Title Shot
Anthony Yarde gets his third crack at world title glory at age 34. The London fighter holds a 27-3 record with 24 knockouts.
Yarde previously challenged for world titles against Sergey Kovalev in 2019 and Artur Beterbiev in 2023. Both fights ended in defeats but showcased Yarde’s fighting spirit.
His clash with Beterbiev at Wembley Arena was particularly memorable. Yarde hurt the former undisputed champion before being stopped in the eighth round.
Since that fight, Yarde has posted four wins. He knocked out Jorge Silva and Marko Nikolic before decisions over Ralfs Vilcans and Lyndon Arthur. The Arthur win came on the undercard of Chris Eubank Jr vs Conor Benn in April.
Stacked Undercard Features Multiple Champions
The co-main event features former undisputed lightweight champion Devin Haney moving up to welterweight. He challenges WBO champion Brian Norman Jr in a clash of undefeated fighters.
Haney holds a 32-0 record and has won world titles at lightweight and junior welterweight. Norman Jr, 24, is 28-0 with 22 knockouts and has defended his title twice.
Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez puts his WBC and WBO junior bantamweight titles on the line against WBA champion Fernando Martinez. Both fighters enter undefeated in a unification bout.
The vacant WBO lightweight title will be decided between rising American prospect Abdullah Mason and British fighter Sam Noakes. Mason brings a 19-0 record with 17 knockouts while Noakes is 17-0 with 15 stoppages.



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