Paul vs. Joshua results: Alycia Baumgardner batters Leila Beaudoin to retain unified title on Netflix

MIAMI, FLORIDA - DECEMBER 19: (L-R) Alycia Baumgardner punches Leila Beaudoin in their unified super featherweight world championship during Jake Paul v Anthony Joshua at Kaseya Center on December 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Ed Mulholland/Getty Images for Netflix)
Alycia Baumgardner punches Leila Beaudoin in their unified super featherweight world championship bout on the Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua undercard.
Ed Mulholland via Getty Images

Alycia Baumgardner showed great poise and patience to destroy Leila Beaudoin over 12 three-minute rounds on Friday in the co-feature bout of Netflix’s Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua fight card.

It was a bout that saw unified super featherweight world champion Baumgardner follow in the footsteps of Amanda Serrano, her Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) stablemate, as a trailblazer for the women’s side of the sport, pushing forward with 36-minute fights — no different to male fighters. The WBC, through president Mauricio Sulaiman, opposes the advancement, favoring the traditional 10 two-minute rounds for women instead, citing fighter safety. And so Baumgardner dropped her WBC championship for this fight.

But Friday at the Kaseya Center in Miami, Baumgardner (17-1, 7 KOs) showed she has championship endurance to go with all the technical assets we’ve seen from her through the years, beating Beaudoin (14-1, 2 KOs) in brutal fashion.

Keeping her guard high to her head early in the fight, Baumgardner — still the WBA, WBO and IBF world champion — boxed with flurries and behind her jab. The result was an early accumulation of damage on Beaudoin, who had bruising already around her eyes after only three rounds.

With the benefit of three-minute rounds, Baumgardner had more time to work, and boxed patiently.

However, considering her lackluster win in her last MVP outing against Jennifer Miranda, she was under pressure to deliver — either a beatdown, a knockdown, or at the very least a moment — so MVP could heighten its promotion of an American seemingly destined for the top of the sport.

And it was not long before Baumgardner delivered all three, as that moment — a knockdown — came in the seventh round.

A short right hand put Beaudoin on the canvas. She rose to her feet, was saved pretty much by the bell, and returned to the corner. However, her body language on the stool was concerning. With bruising all over her face, and a coach pouring water over her head to cool her down, it looked like she might vomit.

For Baumgarnder, there was no issue adjusting to the increased fighting time, but Beaudoin visibly struggled.

To her credit, the challenger hit Baumgardner with a three-shot combination in the eighth round as Beaudoin tried to fight her way out of trouble, displaying her extraordinary heart, before finding brief moments of success late in the championship rounds.

But ultimately this was a clear, technical and merciless Baumgardner victory, who deserved her lopsided unanimous decision win with scores of 117-110, 117-110 and 118-109.

“I gave myself an A-plus just for showing up,” Baumgardner told Uncrowned’s Ariel Helwani on the Netflix broadcast.

She later added that she was not disappointed to go the distance because “it just shows the level of my skill. I can box,” Baumgardner said. “I can punch.”

As for what’s next — well, according to Baumgardner “there are a lot of girls lined up.”

Whether one of those girls could be Caroline Dubois, who also excelled on Friday’s MVP card, remains to be seen.

For full coverage of Paul vs. Joshua, including live results, play-by-play and highlights of the entire Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua main card, check out Uncrowned’s Paul vs. Joshua hub.

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