Speaking concerning the proposed June return against Tim Tszyu, Davis was clear about one thing: “Errol Spence gonna carry the fight. Everybody wish to see Errol Spence come back.” In his view, the placement is secondary. The story is the comeback.
Stars travel. Interest follows them.
Spence Still Carries the Fight
Spence has been out of the ring for 3 years because the stoppage loss to Terence Crawford. He is predicted to maneuver up, break right into a recent corner, and fight in Tszyu’s home country. On paper, those are the makings of a road test. Davis doesn’t treat it that way. He treats it as a Spence event that happens to be staged in Australia.
Tim Tszyu has stayed energetic at junior middleweight and draws real gates on home soil. He rebuilt after the Sebastian Fundora loss, put a win back on the record, and still carries name value at 154. Inside camp talk, though, Bernie Davis never viewed it as Tszyu dictating terms.
“Everybody wish to see Errol Spence come back,” Davis said, repeating the concept curiosity around Spence outweighs geography.
Even on the Road
There’s logic to that. Spence’s profession has included travelling before, from beating Kell Brook within the UK to returning after his automobile crash against Danny Garcia. His name was built at welterweight over years of meaningful fights. Tszyu’s rise at 154 has been regular, but this matchup lands at a moment when fans are asking one central query: What version of Spence is left?
If Davis sees it clearly, Tszyu just isn’t staging a crowning night; he’s providing the stage for an additional man’s star comeback.



