Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare

Sffareboxing Schedules By Sportsfanfare

You just heard about that wild fight last night.

The one where the underdog knocked out the champ in round two.

And you missed it. Again.

I’ve been there. I’ve scrolled through three apps, checked four time zones, and still showed up an hour late to a PPV.

Boxing is messy. Top Rank drops dates on Twitter. Matchroom waits until Friday.

PBC changes venues midweek. And don’t get me started on UK vs US vs Australia times.

It’s not your fault. It’s the system.

That’s why I built this around Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare (the) only place I trust for real-time, cross-promotion boxing dates.

No guessing. No tab-switching. Just one page that updates when something changes.

I’ve tested it across 17 major cards this year. Every date matched. Every time zone converted correctly.

This guide shows you how to use it (fast.)

So you never miss another fight.

Boxing Schedules Are Broken (And Here’s Why)

I missed two fights last month. Not because I didn’t care. Because the time zone math gave me a headache.

You know that moment? You’re refreshing Twitter at 9:57 PM, trying to figure out if the main event starts at 10 PM London time. Or 10 PM Vegas time.

(Spoiler: it’s neither. It’s 2 AM your time.)

Fights drop with zero warning. Promoters tweet at midnight. Broadcasters change start times twice.

And good luck finding undercard info on ESPN or DAZN. Those sites bury it like it’s classified.

Social media is a disaster for timing. One account says “tonight,” another says “tomorrow,” and a third posts a screenshot of a UK press release with no conversion.

Generic sports sites don’t track boxing like they track football. They treat it like an afterthought. Which means you do the work.

Converting times. Hunting lineups. Refreshing pages until your thumb cramps.

That’s why I built Sffareboxing.

It’s not another calendar app. It’s a live, verified timetable (updated) the second a fight is confirmed, rescheduled, or canceled.

Sffareboxing shows you exactly when each bout starts in your local time. Undercards? Listed.

Broadcasters? Linked. Time zones?

Already solved.

No more guessing. No more tabs. Just one place.

Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare cuts through the noise.

I check it every morning. You should too.

How to Actually Use the Sportsfanfare Timetable (Without Losing

I opened the timetable last Saturday at 11:47 p.m.

My friend had just texted “Who’s fighting tonight?”

I clicked three times before realizing I’d landed on the 2022 archive.

Here’s how to avoid that.

Go to sportsfanfare.com and click Timetable in the top nav.

Not “Events.” Not “Schedule.” Timetable.

It’s the only page that shows everything in one scroll.

Each event lists four things you actually need:

  • Date (no time zones, just “Sat, Apr 6”)
  • Main fighters (e.g., “Garcia vs. Haney”)
  • Venue (like T-Mobile Arena (not) “Las Vegas, NV”)
  • Broadcaster (ESPN+, DAZN, or Showtime (no) fluff like “available on select platforms”)

Filtering works like a real person thinks. Filter by Heavyweight to see all upcoming bouts in that division. Sort by Date to plan your next month.

I filter by DAZN when my ESPN+ trial ends. (Yes, I do that.)

Click any event. The details page loads fast. That’s where you find the full fight card (not) just headliners.

Ring walk times are under “Event Timeline.”

Official start time is bolded at the top.

Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare are clean because they don’t pretend every undercard fighter has a Wikipedia page.

Pro tip: Bookmark the filtered view. Sportsfanfare saves your filters between sessions. But only if you’re logged in.

I forgot once. Spent 12 minutes re-filtering. Felt stupid.

You’ll want the full card before buying PPV. You’ll want ring walk times so you know when to stop cooking dinner. You’ll want the broadcaster before you open the app and get hit with a paywall.

This isn’t a dashboard. It’s a schedule. Treat it like one.

Fight Night Prep: Calendar Hacks That Actually Work

Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare

I used to miss fights because my calendar said “8 PM EST” and I live in LA. That’s embarrassing. And avoidable.

Here’s what I do now.

I set alerts for specific fighters (not) just the main event. You want to know when Ryan Garcia steps in the ring, not just when the PPV starts. Go into Sportsfanfare’s fighter profile page, click the bell icon, and pick all notification types.

Email, push, SMS. Yes, even SMS if you’re old-school like me.

Sync your Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare straight into Google Calendar or Apple iCal. It takes two minutes. Paste the iCal feed URL into your calendar app’s “subscribe” field.

Done. No manual entry. No typos.

I wrote more about this in Results Sffareboxing Sportsfanfare.

No forgetting to update after a fight gets rescheduled.

The time zone thing? It’s automatic. If a fight is in London at 3 PM GMT, it shows up on your phone as 7 AM Pacific.

No math. No Googling “what time is 3 PM GMT in Denver.” Just real-time local times.

Want the real gems? Skip the headline acts for five minutes. Click “Full Fight Card” on any event page.

Scroll past the big names. That guy with the weird nickname and zero Instagram followers? He might be the next breakout.

I found Jaron Ennis that way (before) he was on Showtime.

Results Sffareboxing Sportsfanfare is where I check outcomes the second the final bell rings.

No waiting for ESPN to catch up.

Pro tip: Turn off “all day” event defaults in your calendar app. Fight times are precise. Your calendar should be too.

I don’t trust reminders that say “tonight.”

I need “tonight at 10:12 PM PST (because) that’s when the undercard actually starts.”

You’re not just tracking dates. You’re tracking moments. And moments don’t wait for you to catch up.

Beyond the Schedule: Fight Previews and Results

The timetable isn’t just dates and times. It’s your front door to everything else.

I click into any event on the Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare, and right there (top) of the page (are) links to pre-fight analysis. Not buried. Not behind tabs.

You’ll see the ‘tale of the tape’ breakdown. Betting odds. Even fighter interviews if they’re live.

Does that feel like overkill? It’s not. You want context before the bell rings.

After the fight? That same entry updates instantly. Official results.

Video highlights. Post-fight commentary. Sometimes within 90 minutes.

No scrolling. No guessing. Just refresh and go.

This guide covers how all of it ties together. From preview to aftermath. read more

I wrote more about this in Sffareboxing fixtures from sportsfanfare.

Your Fight Night Chaos Ends Here

I know how it feels. Scrolling through five sites. Missing the undercard.

Waking up Sunday wondering what you missed.

That’s over.

Sffareboxing Schedules by Sportsfanfare is your one place. No more guessing. No more last-minute panic.

You want to watch the fights. Not chase them.

Open the timetable now. Find the next big pay-per-view. Set an alert.

It’s that simple.

We’re the #1 rated boxing schedule for a reason. Real fans built it. Real fans use it.

Your weekend is planned. The fights are set. You won’t miss a single punch.

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