Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul live stream online and full undercard results: Watch the Netflix card here
Watch the Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul live stream here on Uncrowned for Friday's blockbuster Tyson vs. Paul fight card from AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. In the main event, boxing Hall of Famer Mike Tyson meets popular influencer Jake Paul in an eight-round professional bout with modified rules.
Tyson (50-6, 44 KOs) has been inactive as a professional since losing via sixth-round TKO to Kevin McBride in 2005. He fought to a split draw with fellow Hall of Famer Roy Jones Jr. in a November 2020 exhibition in his most recent in-ring appearance. Paul (10-1, 7 KOs) holds notable boxing victories over former UFC champions Tyron Woodley (x2) and Anderson Silva, as well as combat stars Nate Diaz and Mike Perry since beginning his run as a professional in 2020.
Tyson vs. Paul is a seven-fight card, with the top four bouts airing live on Netflix, free for all subscribers. The three-fight undercard can be watched below on Uncrowned beginning at 5:30 p.m. ET, headlined by a bout for the vacant WBO super middleweight title between Shadasia Green and Melinda Watpool.
Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul main card (LIVE NOW, Netflix)
Heavyweight: Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson
IBF/IBO/WBA/WBC/WBO super lightweight title: Katie Taylor vs. Amanda Serrano
WBC welterweight title: Mario Barrios vs. Abel Ramos
Middleweight: Neeraj Goyat def. Whindersson Nunes via unanimous decision (59-55, 60-54, 60-54)
Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul undercard (Re-watch below)
WBO super middleweight title: Shadasia Green def. Melinda Watpool via split decision (97-93, 94-96, 96-94)
Lightweight: Lucas Bahdi def. Armando Casamonica via majority decision (95-95, 96-93, 98-92)
Featherweight: Bruce Carrington Jr. def. Dana Coolwell via unanimous decision (80-70, 80-70, 80-70)
Keep it locked to this post all night Friday, Nov. 15, as Uncrowned brings you live updates and undercard results from Tyson vs. Paul below. Check out Uncrowned's Tyson vs. Paul live blog for more.
Shadasia Green def. Melinda Watpool
Keith Idec: ARLINGTON, Texas — Shadasia Green made the most of her second shot at a women’s super middleweight title Friday night.
Green outpointed previously undefeated Melinda Watpool on two scorecards and won their 10-round, 168-pound championship match by split decision on the Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul undercard at AT&T Stadium. Green (15-1, 11 KOs), of Paterson, New Jersey, won the vacant WBO super middleweight title by beating Toronto’s Watpool (7-1, 2 KOs) in the last of three bouts streamed on Netflix Sports’ YouTube channel.
Judges Lisa Giampa (97-93) and Justin Reyes (96-94) scored seven and six rounds, respectively, for Green. Judge Jeremy Hayes scored Watpool a 96-94 winner.
The action now shifts to Netflix for four more matches at 8 p.m. ET.
The stronger Green mostly remained in control and seemingly piled up points in her largely uneventful encounter with Watpool. She knocked Watpool off balance by landing her right hand about 35 seconds into the sixth round.
Watpool survived some trouble later in the sixth round as well. She didn’t consistently connect with flush punches on Green, however, and other than during the ninth round had little success offensively against a more aggressive Green.
Two fights before the crowning achievement of Green’s career, she dropped a 10-round unanimous decision to former undisputed super middleweight champ Franchon Crews-Dezurn (9-2, 2 KOs). Green and Baltimore’s Crews-Dezurn fought for the then-unclaimed WBC super middleweight crown this past December 15 at Caribe Royale Orlando in Orlando, Florida.
The 35-year-old Green, a former point guard for Old Dominion University, is represented by Paul’s MVP Promotions.
Lucas Bahdi def. Armando Casamonica
Keith Idec: ARLINGTON, Texas — Lucas Bahdi didn’t punish Armando Casamonica in the manner he promised Friday after Casamonica came in 3.5 pounds overweight Thursday.
Bahdi actually appeared lucky to have escaped with a 10-round, majority decision victory over the previously unbeaten Italian on the Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul undercard at AT&T Stadium. Judge Mike Ross scored their fight a draw, 95-95, but judges David Iacobucci (96-93) and Nate Palmer (98-92) scored Bahdi the winner of a fight that lacked action.
Casamonica (14-1, 3 KOs) has a much lower knockout ratio than Bahdi (18-0, 15 KOs), but the shiftier fighter consistently controlled the pace, pressed the action at times, and never appeared affected by his supposedly dangerous opponent’s punches. Bahdi, who was widely listed as at least an 8-1 favorite, had difficulty tracking down his slippery opponent and couldn’t connect with the type of devastating shot that changed his career almost four months earlier.
In July, a then-unknown Bahdi burst upon the U.S. boxing scene when he knocked out lightweight prospect Ashton Sylve in the sixth round on the Jake Paul vs. Mike Perry undercard at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida.
Sylve (11-1, 9 KOs), of Long Beach, California, was a highly touted 135-pound prospect that Paul’s company, MVP Promotions, represents. The 20-year-old Sylve was initially scheduled to face another young, highly regarded American lightweight, Floyd Schofield, on the Paul-Tyson undercard.
Once Bahdi beat him, MVP Promotions added Bahdi to its roster.
Bruce Carrington Jr. def. Dana Coolwell
Keith Idec: ARLINGTON, Texas – Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington didn’t deliver the knockout he hoped he’d produce on Mike Tyson’s undercard Friday afternoon. But the unbeaten, Brooklyn-bred featherweight contender did atone for his subpar performance seven weeks earlier.
Carrington, 27, dropped Australia’s Dana Coolwell twice, completely controlled the action and convincingly won an eight-round unanimous decision at AT&T Stadium.
All three judges scored it a shutout for Carrington, 80-70 apiece, on their cards in the first fight on the Tyson-Jake Paul undercard.
Carrington (14-0, 8 KOs), who grew up in the same Brownsville neighborhood as Tyson, caught Tyson’s attention by imitating his infamous post-fight speech following his 38-second demolition of Lou Savarese 24 years ago. Tyson pushed Paul to make sure Carrington was provided a spot on this high-profile undercard.
The supremely confident Carrington and his handlers, including promoter Bob Arum, weren’t especially happy with his prior performance, a 10-round majority decision defeat of southpaw Sulaiman Segawa on Sept. 27 at Madison Square Garden’s Theater in New York. He defeated Segawa by the same score, 97-93, on two scorecards, but one judge scored that bout a draw, 95-95.
Carrington got right back into camp for his fight with Coolwell (13-3, 8 KOs).
He felt out Coolwell during the first two rounds, but began to take control in the third round. A right hand by Carrington sent Coolwell to the seat of his trunks a few seconds before the midway mark of the fourth round, but Coolwell was able to recover and made it to the fifth round.
An accumulation of Carrington’s punches also caused Coolwell to take a knee with 1:02 remaining in the eighth round. Coolwell collected himself, got up and made it to the final bell.
Coolwell has not been knocked out in 16 professional fights. Before Carrington shut him out, he had lost only a pair of split decisions to unbeaten opponents — Jake Wyllie (then 4-0) and Ender Luces (then 16-0).