Despite succumbing to the might of David Benavidez in their epic clash, skillful operator David Morrell Jr is undaunted in his quest for supremacy.
David Morrell is already looking past the damage of 2025 and pointing squarely at what he believes comes next. He says 2026 is his year, and the target is clear. Undisputed at light heavyweight. The former two division champion spoke this week about resetting his career after a year that forced uncomfortable self review. Morrell lost for the first time against David Benavidez and then edged past Imam Khataev in a narrow decision that raised as many questions as it answered. Those two fights pushed him toward a major change. Morrell has parted ways with longtime trainer Ronnie Shields and brought in Cuban coach Ismael Salas, a move he describes as necessary rather than dramatic. “2026 is going to be my year. I want to fight for undisputed world titles at 175 pounds,” Morrell said on Podcast El Palco. “First comes an important fight, possibly against Callum Smith or someone at that level.” That fight remains unresolved. The WBO ordered Morrell to face Smith in July 2025, but negotiations between Matchroom and Warriors Boxing and TGB Promotions have stalled through multiple extensions. The situation remains unresolved as the calendar turns. For Morrell, the bigger shift is happening in the gym. He said the decision to leave Shields was about timing and clarity rather than dissatisfaction. “I decided to change trainers because I needed a new voice in my corner, someone who would understand me better right now,” Morrell said. “Ronnie did an excellent job for many years. The time came to evolve and correct details I saw in my last fights, especially in defense and handling pressure.” He was more blunt about the direction under Salas. “I want to be smarter, not just rely on power. With Salas, we’re polishing all of that to be ready for the big names.” Those details mattered in 2025. Against both Benavidez and Khataev, Morrell spent long stretches shelled up, absorbing work without answering back. When he did let his hands go, he hurt both men. Then he stopped. Khataev even dropped him in the fifth round of a split decision that many felt could have gone the other way. Morrell has not closed the door on Benavidez either. “A lot of people are asking for the rematch. If he decides to stay at light heavyweight, of course, I’d love it,” Morrell said. “I learned a lot from that fight. It would be a different war.” If Morrell is serious about that path, the improvement has to show. The power is there. It always has been. The next version needs to use it before the fight slips away.
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