
Claressa Shields and Alycia Baumgardner's beef hit another level on Saturday night at the Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano Netflix MMA event. The two women have traded verbal jabs for the past few years, but things got physical on Saturday night. Shields slapped Baumgardner's hand before the two women were separated.
Trending: Claressa Shields SLAPS Alycia Baumgardner during heated argument. #BrunchBoxing pic.twitter.com/3lHfvcILc2
— Brunch Boxing (@BrunchBoxing) May 18, 2026
This isn't the first time the two have argued face-to-face and spiraled into physical confrontation.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
Incident Location |
Intuit Dome, Inglewood, California |
Event |
MVP MMA 1: Rousey vs. Carano (Netflix) |
Date |
Saturday, May 16, 2026 |
Shields Status |
2-time Olympic gold medalist, multi-division undisputed champion |
Baumgardner Status |
Undisputed junior-lightweight champion |
What Happened |
Shields slapped Baumgardner's hand at ringside; security separated the two |
Aftermath |
Shields posted X explanation within the hour with fight-terms framing |
Background |
Multi-year verbal beef including recent Shields on-the-record criticism |
Multiple angles from ringside show Baumgardner approaching Shields and extending a hand. Shields slapped the hand away, stepped into her space, and security moved fast to keep the confrontation from turning into a full brawl. The clip went viral within minutes.
The context matters. Shields had already gone on the record criticizing Baumgardner's most recent performance and the broader MVP Promotions boxing roster, calling herself level 100 and the rest of the MVPW women's roster level 10. A handshake at ringside after that kind of public dismissal was never going to land the way Baumgardner's body language suggested it might.
Shields took to X within the hour to explain herself. Her posts hit three connected themes: the slap was about hierarchy and respect after months of what she called Baumgardner "talking crazy," she's the big dog of women's boxing and not hard to make a fight with on real terms, and any actual fight between them needs hardware and money attached — not a cameras-friendly handshake.
Imma continue giving bitches hell respectfully that lil ass girl said “I’ll beat your ass right now” after already disrespecting me. Now you classy and playing victim. Can’t go around threatening people, take that & try and GET YOUR LICK BACK! #GWOAT pic.twitter.com/ivUmSpe97t
— Claressa Gwoat Shields (@Claressashields) May 18, 2026
The framing is consistent with what Shields has said publicly for over a year. She'll fight Baumgardner at 147, 154, 160 or 168 pounds if there's a belt-level offer, but she's not chasing a fight at junior-lightweight on Baumgardner's terms. Her pattern of publicly calling out other fighters earlier this year fits the same playbook.
To put it plainly, no.
Baumgardner has said for years she'd fight Shields at 147 pounds, claiming a framework deal once existed and that Shields backed away when the business or weight specifics got difficult. Shields has said she's open to it from 147 to 168 as long as belts or multiple belts are attached, but more recently called Baumgardner a "non-factor" at those weights and questioned whether the fight is worth her time.
The reality is Shields fights up in the neighborhood of 175 pounds. There is no way we'll see Shields lose the weight necessary to fight Baumgardner. She's a naturally bigger woman and it would be a massivem ismatch.
The slap and the X thread don't formally move the negotiation any closer. What they do is convert an abstract callout into a genuine grudge with viral footage and receipts attached, which is exactly the kind of storyline fuel a real promotional push would need.
Women's boxing has been waiting on this matchup for several years, and Saturday's slap puts it back in the news cycle in a way that pure social-media exchanges haven't. The undisputed champion at junior lightweight against the multi-division undisputed champ across multiple higher weight classes is the kind of legacy fight the sport rarely produces, and now it has a real ringside incident attached to its narrative.
The bigger picture is that Shields has spent the last year criticizing the broader MVP Promotions women's roster while she sits outside that promotional structure. Baumgardner is one of MVPW's flagship names. A Shields-Baumgardner fight pulls promotional rivalry, weight-class crossover, and undisputed-vs-undisputed status together into one bout, and the slap just reminded the boxing world that all of those threads are still live.
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