Mike Perez remains one of boxing’s biggest mysteries. Eight years undefeated, fifty pounds lighter and still going nowhere.
At age 40, Perez should be slowing down physically. Most fighters his age are desperate to maintain weight and squeeze in one last paycheck before retirement.
Perez does the opposite.
Mike Perez is constantly losing weight
The former heavyweight and Prizefighter winner stepped into the ring again on Saturday night in Manchester looking leaner than ever before, weighing in at just under 195 pounds.
Perez moved to 31-3-1 with an eight-round points victory over previously undefeated Franklin Arinze on the Daniel Dubois vs. Fabio Wardley card at the Co-op Live Arena.
This means the Cuban is now just 20 pounds shy of the airy heavyweight limit, despite competing above 240 pounds during his heavyweight career.
This is one of the strangest physical transformations in up-to-date boxing. But the bigger mystery is where it all leads.
Perez hasn’t lost a fight since winning the world title against the division’s number one 200-pounder Mairis Briedis in 2017. He completely rebuilt his body, stayed energetic, won regional belts and even established himself on the bridgeweight scene.
Yet somehow he still seems trapped in boxing limbo.
Saturday’s performance came at around 6pm on the UK undercard against another relatively unknown opponent. Without much pressure. No solemn title talks. There’s no indication that anyone in boxing knows what to do with him yet.
This is what makes Perez such a fascinating case.
The fight with Magomed Abdusalamov changed everything
Talent has never been an issue. Mike Perez is an extremely talented boxer who can punch. So what’s the problem?
Anyone who saw him shoot through Prizefighter in 2011 or trade bombs with Magomed Abdusalamov at Madison Square Garden knows that Perez once looked destined for the very top of the heavyweight division.
But the fight with Abdusalamov changed everything.
Ed Mulholland
Mago suffered life-changing injuries as a result of the brutal war in Novel York, and although Perez escaped unscathed, he never physically regained his former career.
Whether it was mental, emotional, or just the natural aftermath of a terrible night in the ring, something undeniably changed in Perez from that moment on.
Now, at 40, he occupies one of the strangest positions in boxing.
Too aged to be considered a solemn long-term investment. Too talented to be completely ignored. Too experienced for potential clients to take unnecessary risks. But still good enough that people wonder what would happen if someone finally gave him a real chance.
Whether his obvious ability will ever be rewarded, or whether the reward comes too overdue, is impossible to ignore whenever his name comes up.
The Mago fight will always hang over Perez’s career, regardless of what “Rebel” does from here.
But if he somehow manages to win a world title before he leaves, perhaps that shadow would finally fade a little.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.
“I elevated him to number seven in my pound-for-pound list,” Davies said. “I think he against Terence Crawford now, a returning Terence Crawford, would be a magnificent event. Turki Alalshikh, please, inshallah.”
Ennis stopped Zayas in seven rounds on June 27 to add the WBC and WBO junior middleweight titles to the IBF belt he already held. The dominant performance strengthened his position near the top of the 154-pound division and sparked discussion about potential fights with the sport’s biggest names.
While Crawford topped Davies’ wishlist, he also pointed to other options if the former four-division world champion remains retired.
“Boots against Josh Kelly would be good in the UK. It’d be good to bring him to the UK and obviously against Vergil Ortiz would be good as well,” Davies added.
A fight between Ennis and Crawford has long intrigued boxing fans because of the contrast between Crawford’s experience and accomplishments and Ennis’ emergence as one of the sport’s top pound-for-pound fighters. However, Crawford has repeatedly stated since defeating Canelo Alvarez that he has accomplished everything he wanted in boxing and has no immediate plans to return.
Unless Crawford changes his mind, Ennis is expected to pursue another marquee fight at 154 pounds, with Vergil Ortiz Jr. and Sebastian Fundora among the leading names who have been mentioned as potential opponents.
“I’m in the money-getting business,” Shakur said to ESPN about his Zuffa deal. “The money is insane.”
Shakur also rejected the suggestion that signing with Zuffa will limit his career options.
“I wouldn’t have signed if I can’t get the fights that I want. When it comes down to it, I want to fight the biggest and best fights. That’s what I’m in the sport for. We’re not looking for no little, small fights that don’t do nothing for me or my career,” said Shakur.
He then revealed that becoming the undisputed champion is no longer his primary objective.
“I’m not really thinking of being an undisputed champion. I just want to fight the biggest fights. I want to fight the guys that the fans want to see me fight, guys that they’ve been calling for years,” Stevenson said.
The comments signal that Stevenson is placing greater emphasis on marquee fights than adding more titles to his collection.
Asked who he wants next, Shakur pointed to WBO welterweight champion Devin Haney while also renewing his interest in a long-discussed showdown with Gervonta Davis.
“Hopefully my next fight is with Devin Haney since Conor Benn isn’t here. Or, hopefully it’s Gervonta Davis. I haven’t been calling his name lately, but now is the time to fight, so let’s do it,” said Shakur.
One matchup he immediately ruled out was a fight against fellow Zuffa boxer Jose “Rayo” Valenzuela.
“I’m turning the fight down publicly right now just in case that they do come to the table and say, ‘Oh, we want to fight Rayo.’ Shakur will not be fighting Rayo. That will not be happening.”
Shakur’s comments also suggest he expects to have more flexibility than other fighters under the Zuffa banner. Although the promotion launched with its own weight classes and roster, he doesn’t believe those plans will prevent him from pursuing major fights across the sport.
“With all due respect, I feel like I’m the biggest fighter that they got, and there are certain limitations and things that we could do and play around with. I don’t feel like anything is off limits,” said Shakur.
Those remarks leave open the possibility of cross-promotional fights, even as many of the opponents fans most want Stevenson to face remain with rival promoters. He says he signed with Zuffa believing the promotion can deliver both the major fights and the financial rewards he is looking for.
Oleksandr Usyk is appreciated almost unanimously amongst boxing fans for his remarkable career and elite skill, but there is one former cruiserweight world champion who believes the Ukrainian to be an ‘average southpaw’.
After claiming the gold medal at the London 2012 Olympic Games, Usyk excelled as a cruiserweight in the professional ranks, becoming the first four-belt undisputed champion of the division by trumping the likes of Krzysztof Glowacki, Mairis Briedis and Murat Gassiev on away soil.
Usyk then defended the undisputed crown against Tony Bellew before moving up to heavyweight and sensationally replicating the feat by dethroning Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury – and also coming out on top in rematches against both men.
Now, as Usyk’s career reaches its final chapter, with a farewell fight currently being discussed, fans are beginning to reflect on his inspirational success.
The longest-reigning cruiserweight champion of all time, Johnny Nelson, seems less impressed, telling the Fight Your Corner podcastof his opinion that Usyk is and always has been an ‘average southpaw’.
“I have said, Oleksandr Usyk is an average southpaw. I’m not saying that he is an average fighter, but as a southpaw, his style was average. You get outstanding southpaws that make you think, ‘wow, you have got it’, Pernell Whittaker, people like ‘Naz’ [Hameed]outstanding southpaws who use that style to the best of their ability.
“I didn’t say that he was average, as a southpaw he was average. In regards to when he was fighting Tony, to this day I thought that he [Bellew] was doing really well, I thought that he was ahead on points.”
Usyk’s career finale is likely to be a bout with former WBC heavyweight ruler Deontay Wilderwho he has been keen to face in order to complete his hit-list of rival heavyweights in his generation.