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Oleksandr Usyk has had a change of heart when it comes to Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford.

Two of the current pound-for-pound greats are set to go head-to-head when Canelo and Crawford collide in Las Vegas in September.

‘Bud’ will be stepping up two weight divisions for the fight and will have the opportunity to become undisputed in a third division, provided that Canelo can first defeat IBF champion William Scull in May.

Another man that knows full well what it is like to be a pound-for-pound great and an undisputed champion is Usyk, having been the sole ruler of both the cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions at various points in his career.

The Ukrainian became undisputed cruiserweight champion with wins over the likes of Mairis Briedis and Murat Gassiev, before repeating the feat at heavyweight after defeating Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua.

Usyk first discussed the Canelo vs Crawford match-up back in June, telling The 3 Knockdown Rule podcast that he would back the American to come out on top.

“I like Terence. He’s a crazy man.

“Terence win. Listen, Terence is different man. Terence works on two sides. Right and left, he’s very smart man. He feels distance and space.”

“Canelo big, yeah, good boxer, but I say, Terence. Terence can box him like a big guy.”

Now that the fight has been officially agreed, Usyk has changed his stance and no longer seems as confident, after he was asked by TNT Sports who he thinks wins the fight and called it a pick ’em

“50-50.”

Usyk isn’t the only big name to change their mind when it comes to Canelo vs. Crawford, with boxing legend Oscar de la Hoya also making a new prediction on the bout.

As one generation comes to a close, another fresh crop of talent is waiting to take its place.

The three kings of this current heavyweight era: Oleksandr Usyk, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are entering the twilight of their careers.

Fury is presently retired, Joshua is unlikely to still be boxing by 2027 and Usyk recently admitted he only has two fights left in his illustrious career.

Boxing needs fresh-faced contenders to take the reins from the superstar trio once they inevitably hang up their gloves in the not-so-distant future.

And luckily for fans of the sweet science, there are plenty of exciting prospects who look destined to achieve big things in years to come.

Two-time Olympic champion Bakhodir Jalolov will be a force to be reckoned with if he can translate his glittering amateur career to the pros.

IBF heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois is still only 27 years old and could become the next man to unify the division provided he can beat Joseph Parker on February 22 and then overcome Usyk in a rematch.

Meanwhile, Teremoana Teremoana, Justis Huni, Richard Torrez Jr, Delicious Orie, Martin Bakole, and Agit Kabayel all look poised to make a big impact.

But the man everyone is most excited about, at least on British shores, is 20-year-old Moses Itauma.

The Chatham-based puncher hasn’t put a foot wrong during his perfect 11-0 start in the paid ranks and he’s got the seal of approval from the current king of the glamour division.

When asked by talkSPORT.com who will succeed him as the next undisputed heavyweight champion, Usyk replied: “Moses Itauma, I think is a great fighter.

“Young. 20 years old. I think Itauma has a big future.”

Usyk is not alone in his assessment of Itauma.

Fury has also dubbed Itauma ‘the future of the heavyweight division’ after sparring with him.

The Brit’s explosive all-action style and eye for a knockout have led to comparisons with the great Mike Tyson.

When Itauma turned over as a pro two years ago, he set his sights on breaking ‘Iron Mike’s’ record as the youngest heavyweight world champion of all time (20 years, 4 months, and 22 days old).

However, he is being moved at a far more conservative pace by promoter Frank Warren, which should prove to serve him well in the long run.

Last time out, Itauma blasted fringe contender Demsey McKean away inside the opening round.

Oleksandr Usyk doubts Tyson Fury is retired for good.

‘The Gypsy King’ had boxing fans with their heads in their hands when he hung up his gloves for a fourth time last month

Before taking to social media to drop the bombshell, Saudi boxing chief Turki Alalshikh was preparing an offer for the long-awaited all-British showdown between Fury and Anthony Joshua.

However, Fury’s decision has put those talks on ice.

Some believe he has merely stepped away from the sport as a way of negotiating a better deal for the AJ fight.

Others, like his promoter Frank Warren, think he will stick to his guns.

Usyk’s stance falls closer to the former line of thinking, although his reasoning is far deeper than just money.

“I don’t think about it but I think it is not true,” he told talkSPORT.com in an unprecedented exclusive interview on the London Eye.

“Once Tyson has relaxed, and rested, maybe Tyson will be back.

“Boxing if you do this for a long time: 10, 15, 20, 25 years then boxing is like a drug.

“If you don’t go to training one day then you feel dead. For me, at least.

“I train every day. I don’t do boxing every day. Sometimes I do crossfit, and running training.

“I only do boxing when I am in my camp.”

In many ways boxing is like a drug.

For several pugilists the biggest fight they face is coming to terms with retirement and their fractured lives after boxing.

When your entire existence has been based around the sport and the rigorous routine that comes with it, having that taken away overnight can be devastating to a fighter’s psyche.

So many great champions have fought on for too long; pulled back in by the allure of the bright lights.

Roy Jones Jr insisted at his peak that he would call time on his career before his inevitable decline yet the First Ballot Hall of Famer stepped between the ropes for a professional bout less than two years ago against former UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis at 54 years old.

Walking away from the sport has been equally difficult for Fury, who retired for the first time back in November 2013 following the breakdown of his fight with David Haye.

Three months later, he was back in the ring against Joey Abell before pulling off a monumental upset against Wladimir Klitschko for the unified WBA, WBO, and IBF heavyweight titles in 2015.

Fury and Klitschko were expected to rematch immediately after but the Mancunian’s mental health spiralled out of control, forcing him to call time on his career in July 2017.

Following a three-year hiatus, Fury returned to action in June 2018.

A miraculous recovery saw him snatch the WBC heavyweight title away from Deontay Wilder in an epic trilogy before defending the belt by flattening Dillian Whyte in April 2022 and then retiring thereafter.

Once again, Fury was back in the ring before the year was out as he battered an ageing Derek Chisora from pillar to post in December 2022.

A crossover clash with Francis Ngannou followed before Oleksandr Usyk handed Fury the first blemishes on his professional record in consecutive fights in May 2024 and December 2024.

Three weeks after their sequel, Fury took to social media to announce his fourth retirement.

“Hi everybody, I’ll make this short and sweet, I’d like to announce my retirement from boxing, I’ve loved every single minute of it,” he said in a video posted to Instagram.

“I’m going to end with this: Dick Turpin wore a mask. God bless everybody, I’ll see you on the other side.”

Only he knows if it is for the long run this time.

 

Daniel Dubois defends the IBF heavyweight world title against Joseph Parker on the February 22 Riyadh Season event live on Sky Sports Box OfficeOleksandr Usyk reveals his plan to leave the sport after two more contests and what fight he wants next

Oleksandr Usyk expects to have only two more fights in his career and wants to box the winner of Daniel Dubois vs Joseph Parker next.

Usyk remains an unbeaten world champion after going undisputed at both heavyweight and cruiserweight.

The Ukrainian beat Tyson Fury to win all four of the major heavyweight titles last May. He vacated the IBF belt but retained the unified WBC, WBA and WBO championships with his repeat victory over Fury.

Britain’s Dubois picked up the IBF title and puts that belt on the line against Parker on February 22, live on Sky Sports Box Office.

The winner of that fight could box Usyk later this year for the undisputed heavyweight crown.

“I will fight who will win, Joseph Parker, Daniel Dubois, no problem,” Usyk told Sky Sports.But the Ukrainian, at 38 years old, expects to retire from boxing in the next two years and is likely to fight only once more after his next fight.

“I think two years, one and a half [left in boxing],” he said. “I feel great myself. I feel I have two fights to prepare [for], not more. Just two.”

Dubois targeting Usyk

Dubois challenged Usyk for the unified heavyweight championship in 2023. Ultimately he was counted out in the ninth round but he had put Usyk under pressure at time in their fight.

The Londoner is convinced that he has developed as a fighter and wants the chance to avenge his loss to Usyk.

“I’m just getting better, improving. They say when you win a world title you improve. So I feel like that’s what’s happening with me. I’m ready to show what I can do again and conquer whoever they put in front of me,” Dubois told Sky Sports News.

“We’ve all got to grow up sometime,” he added. “Run it back.

“My next fight I’m working towards [is Usyk after Parker], I’m ready for it now.”

 

Tyson Fury announced his retirement from boxing last month after losing to Oleksandr Usyk – but a boxing legend believes the ‘Gypsy King’ will return to the ring

 

The rematch concluded with ‘The Cat’ inflicting a second career defeat on Fury through a unanimous decision. Last month brought another jolt from Fury as he announced his retirement from the sport. In a social media video, he declared: “Hi everybody, I’m going to make this short and sweet. I’d like to announce my retirement from boxing. It’s been a blast, I’ve loved every single minute of it. I’m going to end with this. Dick Turpin wore a mask. God bless everybody, see you on the other side. Get up! “.

The rematch concluded with ‘The Cat’ inflicting a second career defeat on Fury through a unanimous decision. Last month brought another jolt from Fury as he announced his retirement from the sport. In a social media video, he declared: “Hi everybody, I’m going to make this short and sweet. I’d like to announce my retirement from boxing. It’s been a blast, I’ve loved every single minute of it. I’m going to end with this. Dick Turpin wore a mask. God bless everybody, see you on the other side. Get up! “.

Amid speculation about Fury’s future in boxing, Khan has shared his thoughts, suggesting the Gypsy King isn’t done yet. Speaking to Betway, Khan expressed his belief: “Tyson is a warrior, and I believe he is the type of fighter who will come back and will not want to leave the sport not giving the fans the fight that they want with Anthony Joshua. I don’t think he will call it a day. He’s going to be there and come back for that one. If that fight isn’t on the table though I don’t think there’s another fight that will motivate him to come back for.”

Usyk defeats Fury in points decision in Riyadh to retain heavyweight title  | Boxing News | Al Jazeera

He further commented on Fury’s current state, saying, “Tyson is a warrior and is no joke. He’s not one of those fighters who is scared, he has just come off two hard fights with Oleksandr Usyk away from his family and I think that is why he didn’t come back to the Ring Magazine event. He wants to relax and spend some time with his family. Sometimes with all of the media attention and the cameras, you want to be left alone and he’s at a point where he wants to be left alone and then when Tyson does want it and gets that itch, he’ll want to come back and get it.”

He further commented on Fury’s current state, saying, “Tyson is a warrior and is no joke. He’s not one of those fighters who is scared, he has just come off two hard fights with Oleksandr Usyk away from his family and I think that is why he didn’t come back to the Ring Magazine event. He wants to relax and spend some time with his family. Sometimes with all of the media attention and the cameras, you want to be left alone and he’s at a point where he wants to be left alone and then when Tyson does want it and gets that itch, he’ll want to come back and get it.”

Daniel Dubois is currently due for a Feb. 22 fight against Joseph Parker, and although there’s been speculation about another potential rematch between Dubois and Anthony Joshua, Dubois’ promoter Frank Warren tells Sky Sports that they actually prefer a rematch against Oleksandr Usyk.

“The big fight that he wants is the rematch with Usyk. Very controversial [first] fight. Those four minutes in that fight when he hurt him – I thought it was a legal blow, I’m not going to go into all that stuff – but he hurt him and he probably gave him his toughest fight he’s had. I think he can beat him. I think the form he’s in now, I think he can beat Usyk.”

A win over Usyk could potentially have Dubois go undisputed at heavyweight and that’s the main goal and priority. Warren continues by saying that Dubois has reached his physical prime combined with an increase in maturity since his loss to Usyk and that’s why he’s confident things will go differently in a rematch.

For now, however, Warren doesn’t dismiss the threat that Parker poses and says that won’t be an easy fight for Dubois, even though he expects it to be a fight that Dubois prevails in.

Promoter Frank Warren explains that if he beats Joseph Parker, Daniel Dubois will target an Oleksandr Usyk rematch rather than Anthony Joshua; Daniel Dubois defends the IBF heavyweight world title against Joseph Parker on February 22, live on Sky Sports Box Office

Anthony Joshua could have missed out on the chance to get a fight with the Daniel Dubois vs Joseph Parker winner next.

Dubois defends the IBF heavyweight world championship against New Zealand’s Parker on February 22, live on Sky Sports Box Office.

Oleksandr Usyk Reveals Whether Anthony Joshua-Daniel Dubois Will Be For IBF  World Title - Seconds Out

If Britain’s Dubois is victorious, he’ll look to take on Oleksandr Usyk, the unified WBC, WBA and WBO titlist, for an undisputed heavyweight world championship in his next fight.

That would be a rematch for Dubois, who lost to Usyk in 2023 in Poland.

Usyk did visit the canvas in that fight, from a shot that was ruled low. The Ukrainian took his allotted recovery time and rose to halt Dubois in the ninth round.

Dubois went on to become the IBF champion last year and knocked out Anthony Joshua in his most recent fight.

Despite talk of an immediate rematch with Dubois, Joshua, formerly a unified champion himself, will likely have to wait for another world title shot.

“First of all, [Daniel Dubois] has got to get through a tough fight in Riyadh on February 22 against Parker,” promoter Frank Warren told Sky Sports News.

That is no walk in the park, that’s going to be a tough fight. If he comes through that, he’s got a lot of options.

“But the big fight that he wants is the rematch with Usyk. Very controversial [first] fight. Those four minutes in that fight when he hurt him – I thought it was a legal blow, I’m not going to go into all that stuff – but he hurt him and he probably gave him his toughest fight he’s had.

“I think he can beat him. I think the form he’s in now, I think he can beat Usyk.”

Then Dubois would be the undisputed world champion, the status Usyk held when he first beat Tyson Fury before he had to vacate the IBF belt.

It's dangerous' - Oleksandr Usyk reveals Anthony Joshua's major problem  after Daniel Dubois loss - Daily Post Nigeria

“[Going undisputed] that’s what this heavyweight thing is all about,” Warren said.

Warren is convinced that Dubois will defeat Parker. The New Zealander has claimed he can take the champion to breaking point in their fight.

But thinking Dubois will quit, Warren warned, would be a grave miscalculation. “[Jarrell] Miller did, [Filip] Hrgovic did and AJ did. They all said the same thing and he stopped them all. All of them. Stopped them all. Done it in style and come from behind in a couple of those fights,” the promoter explained.

“Against Hrgovic, you look at those first three rounds. It was a tough three rounds to get through but then he grit his teeth and showed what he’s about and it’s the same with AJ. Going into that fight with AJ, AJ was on a roll he had some good wins, the crowd was behind him. From the very first bell he [Dubois] was the governor.

“In the last four fights, including Usyk, he’s been the underdog and he’s upset the odds in three of those fights.

“Twenty-seven years of age, he’s matured not just physically but mentally. He’s showing what he’s all about. For the first time in five fights he goes in as the favourite, against a former world champion in Joe Parker, who is on a roll, a big roll at the moment.

“So this fight again is going to be something extra, extra special.”

Daniel Dubois vs Joseph Parker and the Artur Beterbiev vs Dmitry Bivol rematch will be live on Saturday February 22 on Sky Sports Box Office. Book now!

Derek Chisora won again, and threw out three big names for his potential 50th fight later this year.

Derek Chisora did his thing yet again, out-working and out-fighting Otto Wallin over 12 rounds in an IBF heavyweight eliminator today in Manchester, scoring a win by unanimous decision.

Judges saw it 114-112, 116-110, and 117-109 for the veteran. Bad Left Hook unofficially scored the fight 117-109 for Chisora.

'HE'S HURT HIM!' Oleksandr Usyk vs. Derek Chisora | Every Punch

Chisora (36-13, 23 KO) has said he wants to do 50 pro fights, and this was No. 49, so the next one may be the last. And he’s fought himself into position, given how boxing works, for it to possibly be a world title fight.

The 41-year-old Chisora opened up a big lead in the fight by controlling the tempo and keeping Wallin (27-3, 15 KO) from achieving much at all, or even attempting to do a whole lot for most of the bout. Wallin was down in the ninth round on a right hand, and went down again just before the final bell of the evening, clipped as Chisora was winging both hands, as he did many times.

Watch highlights of Oleksandr Usyk's unanimous points decision win over  Derek Chisora in their heavyweight fight

Chisora then presented the crowd with three options for his 50th fight: Oleksandr Usyk, Anthony Joshua, and Daniel Dubois. The crowd was most positive about the Joshua idea, and least about Dubois.

Oleksandr Usyk is arguably the greatest heavyweight of the modern era. The Ukrainian holds two wins each against the likes of Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury.

Usyk is also the first ever undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era.

Chisora, set to take on Otto Wallin in Manchester this weekend, spoke on the Ariel & Ade show ahead of his contest and made some interesting comments about Usky, claiming that he gets PTSD from the 38-year-old.

Chisora said:

That Ukrainian guy gives you PTSD. He made my young brother [Joshua] cry on the stage, he made Tyson Fury retire. Nobody can deal with him. I sat down with him a couple of weeks ago. I asked him where he lives now, he said: ‘Ukraine. Yesterday my security told me to go in the bomb shelter but I said ‘no’. Rockets are flying past my house but me, I sleep’.

– Derek Chisora

He added:

When he’s telling me this story, I ask myself, ‘What do you have to have to beat him?’ The guy is lying down and rockets are flying past his house. While you’re in your big house in Knightsbridge where the only problem you have is taxis beeping outside your door. How do you beat a guy like that? You have to have craziness.

– Derek Chisora

Oleksandr Usyk last fought in December 2024 and earned his second win against Tyson Fury. Any news regarding Usyk’s potential return date is yet to come.

Oleksandr Usyk is considered by many to be the very best heavyweight on the planet right now.

Usyk has achieved what no other man has done before, and that is to become an undisputed champion in the four-belt era in both the cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions.

Although Evander Holyfield famously won all the belts in these two divisions, there were not as many on the line. It was his fight with Tyson Fury in May which saw Usyk add the WBC to his collection of IBF, WBA and WBO belts which he had taken off Anthony Joshua in 2021, and then defended in 2022.

A second fight with Fury in December, and another points win after 12 rounds, saw the Ukrainian southpaw once and for all confirm that he is the best big man on the planet despite, ironically, being smaller than most his peers in that division.

Many feel he could retire and leave a rich legacy behind, though the man himself has vowed that he will fight on.

One potential opponent is the top ranked heavyweight Martin Bakole, who says he is the only fighter who can defeat the great Ukrainian.

“Yes [I believe I’m the only man who can do it.] I will beat him easy, I will knock him out. I’m saying this not only because I spar him but I know how to stop southpaws. I learnt all my life, boxing my bother who’s southpaw, how to stop southpaws. All his movement, all that, I will stop that, I will knock him out.”

Speaking to Boxing King Media, Usyk’s promoter Alex Krassyuk says former sparring partner Bakole will rule the division after Usyk but says they will not fight each other as Bakole has no belt.

“Please don’t forget Martin Bakole, he is a real threat to anyone. No one wants to fight him. After Usyk retires Martin Bakole will be the king of the division.

I think Oleksandr would not fight Martin Bakole for just one reason, Martin Bakole has no belt. Oleksandr would probably have the motivation when he comes back to boxing, he has to fight for something extraordinary, which is probably undisputed again.”

That means the only opponent for Usyk would be the winner of Daniel Dubois’ IBF world title defence against Joseph Parker on February 22.

Bakole fights in May for his shot to become mandatory for the belt, so may have more bargaining power if he wins and gets the fight.