Team Boxing League Season 4 Power Rankings: Every Team Ranked From Las Vegas Hustle to San Antonio Snipers
The Team Boxing League's fourth season tips off with 15 teams battling for supremacy. Here's how every squad stacks up from the defending finalists to the rising contenders.

TBL Season 4 Power Rankings: Every Team Ranked
The Team Boxing League's fourth season kicked off March 20, and the championship picture is already forming. Twelve teams. Four divisions. Twenty-four rounds of chaos per match. Here's where everyone stands heading into the early action — ranked by roster strength, Season 3 results, and the fights on deck.
1. Las Vegas Hustle (9-1, West Division)
Nine wins and one loss. Best regular-season record in TBL history. And none of it mattered.The Hustle ran the table through Season 3 — including a convincing 211-202 beatdown of Philadelphia — then watched it evaporate in the semi-finals. NYC Attitude outscored them 227-223 on August 15, and a season's worth of dominance ended in four points. Reinier Salgado earned 1st Star honors multiple times during the regular season, dropping Paul Kroll with a clean shot in the Philly match that had the Meta Apex on its feet. David Hayes' squad doesn't lack talent. They lack a playoff identity. March 21 against LA Elite is the first chance to prove last year's collapse was a fluke — not a feature.
2. Philadelphia Smoke (9-2, East Division)
Philly brought a roster stacked with legitimate credentials. Rashida Ellis — a 2020 U.S. Olympian and 2022 World Champion — went 14-0 across Season 3 rounds and earned First-Team All-Star honors before launching her pro career. Nahir Albright finished 9-0. Rasheen Brown (15-3) took home Round of the Night in the semi-final, dominating Alejandro Patrick Meniano across Launch and Middle rounds and earning 1st Star of the Night. Bob Kane's team beat Phoenix Fury 230-225 in the semis. Then they lost the MegaBrawl by one. Single. Point. 227-226 to NYC Attitude. That kind of loss sticks with a team. March 20 is the rematch. Philly doesn't want a competitive fight. They want revenge.
3. NYC Attitude (6-5, East Division)
Forget the record. These are the champs.NYC went 6-5 in the regular season and it didn't matter one bit. They upset the 9-1 Hustle 227-223 in the semi-final, then edged Philly 227-226 in the MegaBrawl 3 final on August 31 at the Renaissance in Glendale. That's two MegaBrawl titles in three seasons — NYC also won MegaBrawl 1 with a 172-165 win over Atlanta Attack back in August 2023. Stacia Suttles (17-2 in Season 3), Lasha Gurguiliana (11-1), Christina Cruz (12-3), and Isaac Carbonell (13-4) form a core that just knows how to win when it counts. Coached aggression and mental toughness are hard to quantify. But when the Money Rounds hit, this team flips a switch. Their title defense starts March 20 against the team they broke.
4. Phoenix Fury (5-5, West Division)
Don't let the .500 record fool you. Phoenix pushed Philly to 230-225 in the semi-finals — closer than anyone expected against a team loaded with Olympians and All-Stars. Tierra Brandt, Charles Garner, Rahman Muhammad, and Yordan Barrera all posted perfect 20-point rounds in their Quarter-Final destruction of Atlanta Attack (235-220). Raiko Santana and Rockill Brown anchored the light heavyweight slots. Elijah Akana held it down at heavyweight. This roster has depth across every weight class, and that semi-final experience against elite competition is worth more than any regular-season win streak.
5. Dallas Enforcers (5-3, SouthWest Division)
The best team in the SouthWest — and it's not particularly close. Dallas plays a strength-first, pressure-heavy style that grinds opponents down through the Middle Rounds. At 5-3, they own the division's best record and have the kind of physical identity that translates to playoff boxing. The question isn't whether they can bully lesser teams. Can they handle speed? March 28 against Miami is the stylistic clash that answers it.
6. LA Elite (4-5, West Division)
LA made the Quarter-Finals last season and promptly ran into the Philly buzzsaw, losing 219-232. That's a 13-point gap — not a competitive loss. But the West Division is wide open behind Vegas, and a win on March 21 against the Hustle would immediately rewrite this team's narrative. They have the talent to hang with anyone for 16 rounds. The problem is sustaining it through 24. If they figure out the Money Rounds, watch out.
7. Atlanta Attack (4-5, SouthEast Division)
A young roster gaining reps with every card. Trakwon Pettis (19 points in the Quarters) and Brandon Glanton bring real firepower at lightweight and heavyweight. Ariele Davis has been a consistent producer at female super lightweight. The 235-220 loss to Phoenix in the Quarter-Finals hurt, but it was their first taste of playoff boxing — and that matters. Coach-led development is the story here. March 27 against Nashville is a divisional matchup that tells us whether this team took a step forward or stood still.
8. Boston Butchers (4-5, East Division)
The toughest draw in TBL. Boston shares a division with the back-to-back MegaBrawl finalist Smoke and the reigning champion Attitude. At 4-5, they're competitive but haven't broken through against elite competition. Their identity is built on physicality — wearing opponents down round by round until the Money Rounds become survival mode. If anyone's built for a chaotic, grind-it-out playoff run, it's these guys. They just need the regular season to cooperate first.
9. Miami Assassins (4-5, SouthEast Division)
Aggressive style. High-output fighters. Inconsistent results. Miami went 4-5 with a first-round playoff exit (losing 220-232 to the Hustle). Their approach — pushing pace and hunting knockdowns — fits the team format perfectly when it works. When it doesn't, they get outpointed by disciplined squads who let them tire themselves out. March 28 against Dallas is a style-on-style collision. A win there, and they're suddenly a legitimate SouthEast contender.
10. Nashville Smash (3-5, SouthEast Division)
The Smash showed flashes in Season 3 — most memorably a perfect eight-round sweep of the Money Rounds against Miami that proved they can close. Austin Dulay anchors the lightweight division with a 18-4 pro record and 13 knockouts to go with an amateur background of 126-13. The Nashville southpaw is the team's franchise fighter and a legit prospect outside the league. But one star doesn't win 24 rounds. A 221-225 loss to NYC exposed depth issues, and their 3-5 record reflects a team still searching for consistency. March 27 against Atlanta is a must-win divisional fight.
11. Houston Hitmen (SouthWest Division)
Consistent. Competitive. Dangerous in spots. Houston fields a deep roster across weight classes — Martel Washpun at featherweight, Nelson Hampton and James Earle splitting lightweight duties, Todd Manuel at welterweight — but they haven't strung together enough wins to move out of the middle tier. They're the team nobody wants to draw in the first round because they won't beat themselves. March 22 against San Antonio is a Texas rivalry showdown where they're expected to dominate.
12. San Antonio Snipers (2-6, SouthWest Division)
Tough stretch. Two wins, six losses, and the schedule doesn't get easier. March 22 against the Hitmen is a division game they need to win to stay relevant in the SouthWest conversation. A loss drops them further behind Dallas and Houston with no clear path back. The talent is there — it's about putting 24 rounds together. Clean slate, new season. Can they prove they belong? That's the only question that matters.
The March Slate That Defines Everything
March 20 — Philadelphia Smoke vs NYC Attitude: The MegaBrawl rematch. Philly lost by one point. One. They haven't forgotten.March 21 — LA Elite vs Las Vegas Hustle: Vegas went 9-1 and choked in the playoffs. This is the first test of whether they fixed what broke.March 22 — Houston Hitmen vs San Antonio Snipers: Texas bragging rights and SouthWest Division positioning on the line.March 27 — Atlanta Attack vs Nashville Smash: SouthEast Division pivotal. Loser falls behind early with no margin for error.March 28 — Miami Assassins vs Dallas Enforcers: Speed vs power. The result here reshapes the SouthWest race.
Why the Margins Are Razor-Thin
In TBL, every single punch gets scored across 24 individual three-minute rounds — Launch Rounds (1-8), Middle Rounds (9-16), and Money Rounds (17-24). Knockdowns swing rounds from 10-9 to 10-8. Stoppages go to 10-7. When you add it all up, the margins are absurd. The Hustle's semi-final collapse? Four points (227-223). Philly's semi-final win over Phoenix? Five points (230-225). And the MegaBrawl 3 championship — the biggest fight of the year — was decided by a single point (227-226). There is no sport where depth matters more. One bad round from one fighter in one weight class can cost your team a championship.