Garcia, 24, said seeing his face around the Las Vegas Strip brought home the meaning of this fight.
“This is what I’ve dreamed of since I was a little boy and now I’m here,” said Garcia.
Even though both sides recognise what Sunday means, there is genuine animosity between the boxers and their camps, a longtime war of words that continued through Thursday’s news conference.
Davis accused Garcia of possessing only a left hook, and Garcia said Davis didn’t have much punching power. They traded several barbs during the presser, calling each other delusional, and chirped again when they came face to face for the traditional pre-fight promotional pose.
Both promoters didn’t hold back, either.
Oscar De La Hoya, CEO of Golden Boy Promotions, got it started by saying Davis’ camp kept asking for various contractual demands to be met, which “points to a team looking to protect their fighter. ... Nothing feels worse than your team not believing in you.”
“That is a confident fighter,” De La Hoya said, looking at Garcia. “That’s why you’re going to see Ryan come out as the new face of boxing Saturday night.”
Leonard Ellerbe, chief executive of Mayweather Promotions, didn’t back down.
“We’re the A-side of the situation,” Ellerbe said. “That’s how the A-side carries itself.”
Some of the back-and-forth likely was promotional schtick, but given the fight is a sellout and is expected to bring in major pay-per-view numbers, it didn’t need much extra hype.
De La Hoya and Ellerbe knew what was at stake when negotiating this match, and they put whatever differences they had aside to make it happen.
“It’s not often in today’s age you see two young fighters both undefeated, both in their prime, step in the ring together,” said Tom Brown, president of TGB Promotions. “This fight will be an instant classic, an all-out war, a Hagler versus Hearns. The good thing is with Tank Davis, we have Hagler.”
Marvin Hagler knocked out Thomas Hearns in the third round of their epic 1985 fight, one of the most action-packed bouts in history.
The Davis-Garcia winner could set up a showdown with undefeated Devin Haney, who owns all four major championship belts in this division. Haney faces former champ Vasiliy Lomachenko in May, also in Las Vegas.
Part of what makes this match so intriguing is both boxers are capable of ending it at nearly any time. Garcia has won 19 of 23 matches through knockouts, while Davis has won 26 of 28 victories by knockout.
It’s like the 1990s when boxing fans knew they couldn’t miss any part of a Mike Tyson fight because he could end it within seconds. In this case, both boxers are capable of doing that.
A great show could elevate Davis or Garcia into a Tyson-like status that boxing badly needs, or at least begin generating the types of conversations in combat sports that have most recently been reserved for mixed martial arts.
Tale of the tape: Davis | Garcia
Record: 28-0 (26 KO) | 23-0 (19 KO)
Height: 166cm | 178cm
Reach: 171cm | 178cm
How to watch
The bout will be broadcast via DAZN, which requires a subscription to view. The card begins at 12pm NZT, with the main event expected to get underway around 3pm.
TAB Odds
Davis $1.36 Garcia $3.10 Draw $14.