Gervonta “Tank” Davis (30-0-0, 28 knockouts) made his return to the ring after more than a year away on Saturday night in Las Vegas, as he faced off with the previously undefeated challenger Frank Martin (18-0-0, 12 KOs) for the WBA World Lightweight championship. We hadn’t seen Davis since his knockout victory over Ryan Garcia last April, and despite over a year away, he didn’t show much sign of ring rust in what became an eighth round knockout win.
Martin was a game challenger for much of the fight, often having a response to Davis flurries with strong punches of his own, but he never seemed to truly bother Davis, who continued to walk him down even as he got tagged with counters.
.@Gervontaa and @frankmartin.,2016 land a pair of right hands in RD5.
Order #TankMartin now: https://t.co/n1dJ3UqkqF pic.twitter.com/SHH77ns3XU
— Premier Boxing Champions (@premierboxing) June 16, 2024
Tank lands strong and Frank comes back with some heat of his own. #TankMartin pic.twitter.com/TyfxRODq61
— Premier Boxing Champions (@premierboxing) June 16, 2024
Eventually, Davis was able to back Martin up against the ropes in the eighth and caught him flush with a vicious combination, first a left uppercut that stunned Martin and caused him to drop his hands, followed by a clean left hook that put him out for good.
The Gervonta Davis KO in slow motion. WOW. Picture perfect uppercut and hook. Tank, indeed. #TankMartin pic.twitter.com/GbgbB8dFOB
— Joshua Sánchez (@jnsanchez) June 16, 2024
Davis celebrated the knockout win with a backflip off the ropes, as he knew Martin wasn’t getting up from that left and started his celebration before the referee had even finished the count.
Don’t doubt @Gervontaa. He said RD8. He delivered RD8. #THEONE! #TankMartin pic.twitter.com/2t2V0eGEd2
— Premier Boxing Champions (@premierboxing) June 16, 2024
There are a number of potential big fights to make for Davis at lightweight going forward, as Shakur Stevenson holds the WBC belt and Vasiliy Lomachenko holds the IBF belt at the moment. Either would be tantalizing matchups, but as is always the case in boxing, it’s much easier to said than done to get the top fighters against each other.