
Ortiz’s camp took the position that Golden Boy’s DAZN deal, which expired December 31, 2025, cleared his path. They treated the end of that broadcast agreement as the break point. Golden Boy went the other way and filed suit, maintaining the promotional contract stands on its own. The temporary restraining order tells you the court saw enough in that claim to press pause while the case plays out.
Golden Boy’s court move reshapes the welterweight picture and stalls a significant eliminator
The timing cut clean. Ortiz’s manager was deep into talks for Ennis, a fight that would have sorted real ground at 147. Golden Boy went to court and locked the door. No new deals. No fresh signatures. Not until a judge rules on the contract.
Ennis was lining up a live opponent, the kind who can start with the jab, hold center ring, and force exchanges that reveal levels. That opportunity vanished once the order came down. Now Ennis circles for another dance partner while Ortiz waits on lawyers instead of rounds.
Golden Boy has not secured a final victory. They secured leverage. Ortiz cannot shift promoters, cannot chase a belt on another platform, cannot move his career forward without clearance.
This is no longer about purse splits or broadcast lanes. It is a legal fight now. The timeline belongs to the court, and the welterweight line stalls until someone hands down a decision.
Robert Segal is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24 with more than a decade of experience covering fight news, previews, and analysis. Known for his straightforward reporting and ringside perspective, he delivers authoritative coverage of champions, contenders, and emerging talent worldwide.
