Caroline Dubois charcoal portrait women's boxing MVPW

MVPW and ESPN Launch Women's Boxing Platform — Dubois vs Harper Headlines First Card

Tomorrow's Dubois vs Harper card at Olympia London isn't just a fight night — it's the launch of the biggest dedicated women's boxing platform in history. MVPW and ESPN have signed a multi-year deal that could transform the sport.

  • Most Valuable Promotions Women (MVPW) has signed a multi-year deal with ESPN running through 2028, bringing dedicated women's boxing back to the network for the first time since Top Rank's deal ended
  • MVPW-01 launches tomorrow at Olympia London with Dubois vs Harper and Scotney vs Flores — broadcast on Sky Sports in the UK and ESPN in the US
  • The platform currently has 43 fighters under contract including 16 world champions, with Madison Square Garden hosting MVPW-02 on April 17 featuring Baumgardner vs Shin

This Is a Proper Game-Changer

Right then. Let's talk about what's actually happening tomorrow beyond the two brilliant title fights. Because while Caroline Dubois vs Terri Harper is getting most of the headlines — and rightly so — the bigger story might be the platform they're fighting on. Most Valuable Promotions Women, the dedicated women's boxing arm of Jake Paul and Nakisa Bidarian's MVP, has signed a multi-year broadcast deal with ESPN that runs through 2028. This is massive. ESPN hasn't been in the boxing business since their deal with Top Rank ended last summer, and the fact that they've chosen women's boxing as their way back in tells you everything about where the sport is heading. MVPW currently has 43 fighters under contract — 16 of them world champions, 27 top-ranked contenders. That's not a side project. That's a proper promotion with genuine depth.

Tomorrow's Card Sets the Standard

MVPW-01 at Olympia London is the perfect launchpad. You've got Dubois vs Harper for the WBC and WBO lightweight titles — both made weight today without drama — and Ellie Scotney vs Mayelli Flores for the undisputed super-bantamweight championship. Two proper world title fights headlining an all-women's card, broadcast live on Sky Sports in the UK and ESPN in the States. If you'd told me five years ago that women's boxing would be headlining Olympia London with ESPN cameras rolling and Sky Sports beaming it across the country, I'd have said you were dreaming. But here we are. And the quality of the fights matches the platform — this isn't a showcase event with mismatches. These are genuine 50-50 championship contests between elite fighters. The schedule after tomorrow is equally impressive. MVPW-02 goes to Madison Square Garden on April 17 with Alycia Baumgardner defending her three super-featherweight titles against Bo Mi Re Shin. The Garden. For women's boxing. Let that sink in.

Why This Matters More Than the Fights

Make no mistake — the fights are class. But the platform is what changes things long-term. Women's boxing has always had the talent. What it hasn't had is consistent, premium broadcasting with proper promotion, proper production values, and proper pay. The ESPN deal addresses all of that. The fighters under the MVPW banner will now have a guaranteed home for their fights. No more scrambling for undercard slots on men's shows. No more being the "also on the card" afterthought that gets three minutes of screen time before the main event. This is their platform, their stage, and their moment. Credit where it's due — whatever you think of Jake Paul as a boxer, his promotional operation is doing something genuinely important here. The investment in women's boxing is real, the platform is massive, and the roster is stacked. If MVPW delivers on the schedule they've announced through 2028, this could be the most significant structural change in women's boxing since the introduction of three-minute rounds.

My Take: Tomorrow Is Just the Beginning

I'm buzzing for tomorrow night. Dubois vs Harper is a proper fight between two genuine world champions, and if Scotney beats Flores she becomes the youngest undisputed champion in British boxing history at 24. That's the kind of storyline that transcends the sport. But beyond the individual fights, what excites me most is the consistency this deal promises. Regular, dedicated women's boxing on ESPN. Proper cards with proper production. Fighters being paid properly and promoted properly. That's how you build a sport. Not with one-off events that pop up and disappear — with a platform that fans can rely on, week in, week out. Tomorrow at Olympia London. Sky Sports in the UK, ESPN in the US. Don't miss it. If you know, you know — this is day one of something special.

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