Retired at 22. Remembered forever.

Tenesca “Champ” Davis

The Ecuadorian-American knockout artist from Log Island, New York, who didn't do boxing ... he was boxing!

26-1Pro Record
22 KOsKnockouts
147–154Weight Class
5'5"Height

"He can have heart, he can hit harder and he can be stronger, but there's no fighter smarter than me!".

Tenesca “Champ” Davis, known online as “Chump,” was born in Guayaquil, Ecuador and moved to New York as a child. He rose from Log Island into one of the most controversial and marketable boxing stars of the late 2020s.

At only 5'5" with a 65-inch reach, Davis was never supposed to dominate welterweight and super welterweight. Then the bell rang, and all the math got disrespectful.

Switch stance. Counterpunch. Detonate.

Analysts described Davis as a rare blend of slick defense, timing, deceptive footwork, and violent finishing ability. He could win clean rounds with counters, then suddenly turn a technical fight into a demolition job.

Ring IQ

Angles, traps, feints, and timing built around forcing opponents into mistakes and his sniper.

Power

His “sniper right hand” became the signature shot of his highlight reels.

Persona

Luxury watches, diamonds, entourages, menage a trois, and unmatched star power.

Champ Davis standing on the corner after a knockout

26 wins. 22 knockouts. One disputed ending.

26-1 Professional record

Davis first became undisputed at 147 before moving up for massive pay-per-view money fights at 154. His only loss came by controversial disqualification during his final fight, after a stoppage sequence led to an unfortunate death inside of the ring.

147

Undisputed welterweight run

154

Super welterweight money era

Final Fight

Disqualification controversy, a passing inside of the ring, and retirement

The names that built the legend.

Texas Pressure

Armando “OJ” Trelles

A relentless pressure fighter whose trash talk battles with Davis became appointment viewing before they ever shared a ring.

Technical Rival

Jairo “Sherm” Carias

A Central American counterpuncher whose split-decision loss became one of the most iconic fights in Davis lore, seeing a brutally one-sided fight.

PPV Monster

Kenneth “P-Boy” Alarcon

An undefeated knockout artist whose feud with Davis turned into one of the decade’s biggest fictional boxing events.

“They call it power. I call it precision. My right hand a sniper.”

After the DQ, he vanished.

No farewell tour. No ceremonial comeback. No soft retirement interview. Champ Davis left boxing with the belts, the controversy, and the internet trying to piece together what actually happened.

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