- MVPW-01 inaugural card at Olympia London delivered three world title fights, all won decisively by the betting favourites
- Caroline Dubois unifies WBC and WBO lightweight titles with a dominant performance against Terri Harper, including a round-six knockdown
- Ellie Scotney becomes Britain's youngest ever undisputed champion, defeating Mayelli Flores for the undisputed super-bantamweight crowns
- Chantelle Cameron moves up two weight classes to win the vacant WBO super welterweight title, showcasing her elite-level technical boxing
- MVPW platform with 43 fighters and 16 world champions, backed by ESPN, represents a seismic shift in women's boxing infrastructure
A Historic Night — And a Business Story
Before we break down the boxing, let's talk about what actually happened here. MVPW launched with 43 fighters on the roster. Sixteen of them are world champions. The company partnered with ESPN to televise their inaugural card. And they put on a show that delivered exactly what the sport needed — elite-level women's boxing with proper stakes, proper platform, and proper prize money attached.
This isn't just a sporting achievement. This is a business story. Women's boxing has been stuck in the margins for years, fighting for scraps of attention, begging for platform time, and getting paid a fraction of what the male fighters earn. MVPW just changed the equation. They said: we're going to build an entire promotion around women fighters, we're going to secure broadcast deals, we're going to pay them like world-class athletes, and we're going to prove that women's boxing can draw an audience.
Tonight proved the theory works.
Dubois Unifies, Scotney Makes History, Cameron Breaks Through
Three fights. Three different stories. Caroline Dubois came in as the champion with the credentials. She faced Terri Harper, who was battle-tested but a tier below. Dubois delivered exactly what a champion should — she knocked Harper down in round six and coasted to a dominant unanimous decision. The scorecards were 98-91, 98-91, 97-92. That's a fighter in complete control.
Ellie Scotney's performance might have been the most impressive of the night. Coming in as challenger, facing an opponent who wanted to come forward and pressure, Scotney showed composure, ring intelligence, and the technical brilliance of someone who belongs at the elite level. Unanimous decision 96-94, 100-90, 100-90. And with that win, she became Britain's youngest ever undisputed champion. That's historic.
Chantelle Cameron? Moving up two weight classes is a legitimate risk. You leave your natural strength behind. You face bigger, stronger opposition in their world. Cameron handled that risk perfectly. Dominating Michaela Kotaskova with methodical body work and clean boxing, Cameron showed she's not just a 147 or 154 fighter — she's a genuine world-class boxer who can operate at multiple weights. 100-90, 99-91, 99-91. Statement performance.
The MVPW Difference
Here's what makes MVPW different from every other platform women's boxing has had. They didn't build around one fighter. They didn't create a promotion with a handful of champions and a lot of filler. They loaded up with 43 fighters. Sixteen of them have world titles. They have depth. They have multiple star power stories.
And they partnered with ESPN. That's broadcast muscle. That's distribution. That's the ability to get these fighters on primetime, to build narrative arcs, to develop new stars instead of just recycling the same names. When Dubois unifies, it matters because millions of people saw it. When Scotney becomes Britain's youngest undisputed, it registers because the platform amplifies it.
This is what women's boxing needed. Not sympathy. Not a token event. Real investment. Real platform. Real prize money. And it showed tonight.
The Biggest Night British Women's Boxing Has Ever Had
Think about what we just said. Britain has produced elite women fighters for years — Dubois, Scotney, Cameron, and many others. But they've never had a night where three British women fought for world titles on the same card with a major broadcast partner behind it. The Olympia was rocking. The crowd was invested. The boxing was elite-level. And three British fighters walked out as champions.
If you know, you know — this is a watershed moment for British women's boxing. This is the night where the sport moved from the margins to the mainstream. Not because of charity, but because a promotion saw the talent, saw the market, and built a business model around it.
What's Next?
MVPW has established the platform. The fighters have shown they can deliver elite-level boxing. The broadcast partnership is solid. Now it's about maintaining momentum. About booking the next MVPW event with just as much intrigue, just as many titles on the line, and just as much quality. Because one historic night proves the concept. Multiple historic nights build a movement.
Make no mistake — women's boxing just took a proper step forward. And it started at Olympia London on April 5, 2026. Three titles decided. Three British champions. One historic night. British boxing should be proud.
MVPW-01 Results: Caroline Dubois def. Terri Harper UD10 (98-91, 98-91, 97-92) — WBC and WBO lightweight unification. Ellie Scotney def. Mayelli Flores UD (96-94, 100-90, 100-90) — Undisputed super-bantamweight. Chantelle Cameron def. Michaela Kotaskova UD10 (100-90, 99-91, 99-91) — Vacant WBO super welterweight title.