Ellis Warns Keyshawn About Ortiz’s Footwork Early

Ortiz moves. Not flashy. Not reckless. He just does not stand where you want him. That alone changes how rounds feel. You start reaching. You start resetting. The clock moves faster than your work rate. That is where frustration creeps in.

Ellis made it clear this is not about pedigree. Davis has beaten guys who were built to be beaten. This one is different. Ortiz does not give you the same looks. He drifts, slides, stays just far enough away to make you reset your stance again and again.

“A couple of them had no footwork,” Ellis said to MillCity Boxing when asked about some of the opponents Davis has faced as a professional. The implication was clear. Those fights were made to order. Ortiz is not.

That matters early. The first three rounds tell the story. If Davis hurts him, everything settles. The pace drops. The angles disappear. If not, the night gets long.

Ellis does not see collapse. He sees work. Rounds that do not swing hard either way. Judges watching foot placement instead of damage. The kind of fight where nothing feels clean and nobody walks away feeling dominant.

He also did not let Ortiz off the hook. That Teofimo fight showed something. Good movement, yes. But not enough bite. Ortiz created space and then did nothing with it. Against Davis, that kind of restraint costs rounds.

This is where the fight sits. Davis needs to turn pressure into damage. Ortiz needs to turn movement into meaning. If neither does, it drags. If one does, it ends the conversation.

“Ortiz has got pretty good feet,” Ellis said. “It’s going to be a difficult task for Keyshawn in the first few rounds.”

Ellis is not predicting an upset. He is predicting tension. A fight where neither man fully separates. A fight where footwork shapes the early story, and damage decides whether it ever changes.

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2025-12-31 22:48:00

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