Two MVPW cards per yr land on Sky, with additional U.S. shows chosen for UK distribution. The opening event at Olympia is built around belts, not filler, with Dubois and Harper at 135 and Ellie Scotney facing Mayelli Flores for the undisputed super bantamweight championship.
This offers Sky a set position in women’s boxing, with scheduled title fights as an alternative of one-off deals.
The sanctioning picture stays straightforward on the opener. WBC and WBO titles unified at lightweight, while all 4 belts are at stake at 122 in Scotney vs Flores.
From a coach’s angle, the fight is sensible for TV. Dubois keeps her shape, steps in behind straight shots, and lets her mixtures go once she’s set. Harper has the deeper rounds and reads the pace well, mixing body shots with counters when the rhythm changes.
The true play is the schedule. Regular dates keep champions energetic, force defenses, and stop contenders from waiting around.
At 122, Scotney has a probability to take all 4 belts in a single night. That clears the division and pushes the following challengers straight into eliminators.
Sky shouldn’t be stepping in blind. It already carried major women’s fights and has the audience data to back it. Now it adds an outlined schedule and a promoter committed to all-female cards.
That changes how these divisions move. Less delay, fewer soft defenses, more direct title fights.


