We are coming off one big pay-per-view event (this past weekend’s Ring IV quadrupleheader) and coming up to another (Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz vs. Lamont Roach on December 6), and while there aren’t any huge shows on this weekend’s calendar, there are at least nine televised cards.

So whether you’re in the United States and want to catch some boxing between leftovers and food comas, or if you’re elsewhere and just need your latest fix of sanctioned fisticuffs, here’s what’s on the schedule for you:

The main broadcast begins at 2 p.m. Eastern Time (7 p.m. GMT). A preliminary undercard starts at noon ET (5 p.m. GMT)

Whittaker, 9-0-1 (6 KOs), is a light heavyweight who captured an Olympic silver medal in 2021 for Team Great Britain. The 28-year-old hails from West Bromwich and is coming out of a two-fight rivalry with Liam Cameron. 

Whittaker and Cameron’s first meeting in October 2024 was a close fight with a controversial ending. In the fifth round, both men went over the top rope, and Whittaker said he hurt his leg and could not continue. Whittaker’s detractors accused him of quitting because the bout was perhaps tougher than he’d anticipated. He did his best to shush those critics in their rematch in April, putting Cameron away in the second round.

Gavazi, 19-1 (13 KOs), is a 30-year-old from Germany. He lost a four-rounder in his pro debut but is undefeated since, albeit largely against opponents with sub-.500 records. Gavazi did defeat the 10-0 Branimir Malenica in his last outing, triumphing via 10th-round TKO in December 2024. 

The undercard includes a handful of prospects, including junior welterweight Cameron Vuong, 9-0 (4 KOs), against Gavin Gwynne, 18-4-1 (5 KOs); junior featherweight former MMA fighter Molly “Meatball” McCann, 1-0 (1 KO), against Ebonie Cotton, 1-0 (0 KOs); and middleweight Aaron Bowen, 7-0 (5 KOs), against Tom Cowling, 14-1 (4 KOs).

Saturday, November 29: Frazer Clarke vs. Jeamie “TKV” Tshikeva (BBC Two)

The broadcast begins at 3 p.m. Eastern Time (8 p.m. GMT).

Clarke and Tshikeva were originally scheduled to fight last month before Clarke hurt a rib while training.

Clarke, 9-1-1 (7 KOs), is a 6-foot-6 heavyweight who earned Olympic bronze in 2021 in the super heavyweight tournament. As a pro, he had a pair of encounters with Fabio Wardley in 2024. The first was fought on even terms, ending in a 10-round draw. The second was far less competitive, a frightening first-round TKO at Clarke’s expense in October 2024 that left a visible dent in Clarke’s head. Clarke, a 34-year-old from Burton-on-Trent, England, returned this past April and dispatched Ebenezer Tetteth in just under two minutes.

Tshikeva, 8-2 (5 KOs), is a 32-year-old from London who stands 6-foot-4. He is coming off a sixth-round stoppage loss in April to the 13-1 David Adeleye.

The undercard at Vaillant Live in Derby, England, includes a bantamweight bout between Francesca Hennessy, 6-0 (1 KO), and former 102lb titleholder Fabiana Bytyqi, 22-2-2 (5 KOs). 

Hennessy has gone the eight-round distance in three straight fights, including a points win in March against the 8-12-1 Gemma Ruegg. This is the first time she’s been scheduled for a 10-rounder.

Bytyqi dropped her belt to Tina Rupprecht in early 2024, moved up in weight and picked up a pair of victories at 115 and 118lbs, then bit off too much by going up to 122lbs in September and losing a unanimous decision to the 12-1 Seren Cetin.

Saturday, November 29: Elijah Pierce vs. Lorenzo Parra (ESPN Deportes, ESPN Knockout and ESPN+)

The broadcast begins at 10 p.m. Eastern Time (3 a.m. GMT).

Pierce, 21-2 (17 KOs), is a 29-year-old from the state of Georgia in his second bout at featherweight after competing at or near 122lbs. He outpointed Tramaine Williams and scored a third-round knockout over Mike Plania in 2023, then had a fourth-round TKO of Arthur Villanueva and a unanimous decision over Jose Sanmartin in 2024. This July, Pierce moved up and notched a ninth-round KO of Michael Dasmarinas. Both of Pierce’s defeats came against quality foes at 126lbs: a unanimous decision to Giovanni Cabrera in 2018 and a majority decision to Sulaiman Segawa in 2019. 

Parra, 23-1-1 (17 KOs), is a 30-year-old from Venezuela. His sole loss came in 2017, when he dropped a decision to the 19-2-1 Yonfrez Parejo. Parra was on a run of nine consecutive victories before fighting to a draw with featherweight prospect Omar Trinidad in August.

This show, which is promoted by Manny Pacquiao, is being held at the Pechanga Resort Casino in Temecula, California. The undercard includes one of Pacquiao’s sons, lightweight Emmanuel Pacquiao Jr., aka Jimuel Pacquiao, whose first pro fight is against fellow debutant Brendan Lally.

Saturday, November 29: Justin Pauldo vs. Nike Theran (ProBox TV)

The broadcast begins at 7 p.m. Eastern Time (midnight GMT).

This lightweight bout is the main event at the Save Mart Center in Fresno, California. 

Pauldo, 19-2 (9 KOs), is a 31-year-old from Houston, Texas. He has won two straight since dropping a split decision to Miguel Madueno in early 2024, including an eighth-round knockout of former junior lightweight titleholder Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov in February. Theran, 20-1 (14 KOs), is a 28-year-old from Colombia. He has also picked up two victories in a row since being outpointed by Michael Magnesi in October 2023. In Theran’s most recent outing, he made quick work of a 5-2 foe in June.

In the co-feature, Muhammadkhuja Yaqubov will take on late replacement Cristian Cruz Chacon, who is stepping in for an injured Jessie Magdaleno. 

Yaqubov, 23-1 (12 KOs), is a 30-year-old from Tajikistan who is ranked fourth at 130lbs by the WBC. Yaqubov’s lone loss came in 2022, when he dropped a wide decision to Foster. He has put together a five-fight win streak since. Most recently, Yaqubov took a majority decision in August against the 19-2 William Foster III. Chacon, a 28-year-old from Mexico, is 24-7-1 (12 KOs). He’s on a two-fight winning streak since losing a unanimous decision in April 2024 to Ruben Villa.

Also on the undercard, junior flyweight contender Erik Badillo will face former titleholder Elwin Soto.

Badillo, 18-0 (8 KOs), is rated first at 108lbs by the WBC and WBO, 8th by the IBF and 12th by the WBA. In July, he outpointed Gerardo Zapata in a WBC elimination bout; the title is held by Carlos Canizales. 

Soto, 21-3-1 (13 KOs), won the WBO junior flyweight title in 2019 with a 12th-round TKO of Angel Acosta. He made three successful defenses before losing a split decision to Jonathan Gonzalez in 2021. Soto then lost again, edged unanimously but narrowly by one point on all three scorecards against former champ Hekkie Budler. Soto is 2-0-1 since then and last fought in November 2024, when he had to settle for a split draw with the 11-3-3 Moises Caro. He is currently ranked 12th by the WBO and 13th by the WBC.

(Note: ProBox TV and BoxingScene are both owned by Garry Jonas.)

Saturday, November 29: Reymart Soledad vs. Apinun Khongsong (TrillerTV)

The broadcast begins at 2 p.m. Eastern Time (7 a.m. GMT).

This fight headlines a card in Bangkok, Thailand. Soledad, 7-0 (5 KOs), is a 25-year-old welterweight from the Philippines. Khongsong, 25-4 (21 KOs), is a 29-year-old from Bangkok whose name may be familiar to those who recall his one-round loss to Josh Taylor in 2020.

Saturday, November 29: Francis Lafreniere vs Francy Ntetu (TrillerTV)

The broadcast begins at 8 p.m. Eastern Time (1 a.m. GMT).

Lafreniere, 20-7-2 (11 KOs), is a 37-year-old from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, who spent his career as a middleweight and now is returning after six years away as a light heavyweight, main eventing this card at a venue in his hometown called La Nesra.

Ntetu, 19-6 (4 KOs), is a 43-year-old originally from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and now living in Quebec. His record includes stoppage losses to David Benavidez, Marcus Browne, Erik Bazinyan and David Lemieux. Ntetu is older but has been more active than Lafreniere. There was a two-year break between 2018 and 2020 and then a 29-month break into 2023, but since then he has fought four times, including a split decision win in June against the 13-2 Yan Pellerin up at cruiserweight.

Saturday, November 29: Gradus Kraus vs. Rostam Ibrahim (DAZN)

The broadcast begins at 2 p.m. Eastern Time (7 p.m. GMT).

Kraus is a 24-year-old light heavyweight from The Netherlands; this show is taking place in Rotterdam. He is 8-0 with 7 KOs, or 11-0 with 8 KOs if you include IBA Pro bouts, which are listed separately on BoxRec. Kraus was last in the ring as a cruiserweight in September, taking a points win against the 7-1 Scott Forrest. 

Ibrahim, 13-1-2 (8 KOs), is a 33-year-old from Germany. He was knocked out in six rounds in September 2023 by Serhat Guler, who was 3-0 at the time but is now 8-2. Ibrahim then spent 18 months out of the ring before returning earlier this year and notching a pair of KO victories over opponents with records of 36-45 and 25-17.

Saturday, November 29: Julio Luna vs. Dante Jardon (DAZN)

The broadcast begins at 9 p.m. Eastern Time (2 a.m. GMT).

Luna, 24-1-2 (14 KOs), is a 27-year-old welterweight from Mexico. His lone loss came against Giovani Santillan via unanimous decision in 2022. Luna is on a five-fight winning streak. His most recent appearance was up at 154lbs in June, when he took out the 12-3-1 Adrian Gutierrez in three rounds.

Jardon, 36-11 (26 KOs), is a 37-year-old from Mexico City. He’s lost four of his last six and is coming off a 13-month layoff.

This show is taking place in Metepec, Mexico.

Sunday, November 30: Constantin Ursu vs. Ryan Amos (DAZN)

The broadcast begins at 11 a.m. Eastern Time (4 p.m. GMT).

This fight was originally scheduled for May but was postponed when Ursu suffered a biceps injury. It will headline at York Hall in London, England.

Ursu, 13-0 (6 KOs), won the vacant Commonwealth belt in March with a seventh-round knockout victory over the 13-1 Eithan James.

Amos, 16-2-2 (2 KOs), has won three straight against gimme opponents with a combined record of 4-48 since losing on points to the 8-1 Bilal Fawaz in October 2024.

David Greisman, who has covered boxing since 2004, is on Twitter @FightingWords2. David’s book, “Fighting Words: The Heart and Heartbreak of Boxing,” is available on Amazon.