
Shannon Ryan
Kaos
Bio
Right then — Shannon "Kaos" Ryan has been quietly building one of the most polished portfolios in British women's boxing for the last three years and the wider audience has finally caught up. The London-based super-flyweight is a sharp, fast-handed orthodox boxer with proper finishing instincts, and on Saturday at The Halls in Wolverhampton she added the vacant Commonwealth super-flyweight strap to her IBF Intercontinental title with a two-round demolition of Nicola Hopewell.
Stylistically Ryan's a textbook front-foot boxer-puncher with a long jab for her division and a step-back right hand that she punches through the target. She's not the biggest hitter at 115 — only two stoppages in eleven wins coming into Hopewell — but the combination of speed, footwork and timing means the work piles up early and she finds the finish when an opponent slows. Her sole loss was a contentious decision early in her career; the rebuild from there has been a textbook climb through the regional and intercontinental ladder.
The Commonwealth strap and IBF Intercontinental belt now position Ryan as the British super-flyweight to beat, and a world-title eliminator before the end of 2026 looks the natural next step for a Matchroom-aligned star with this kind of momentum.