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Ezra Arenyeka is proof that opening doors really works

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It started with a voice in the crowd. Deafening, confident, intrusive, undesirable. Hearing this voice, every member of the gathered crowd turned, wondering first whether the interruption had been planned, and then whether anyone around them could attribute the name of the man whose words had caused it. From there, attention naturally turned back to Ben Whittaker, the man whose voice was silenced by the latter. We then wondered if maybe Whittaker would be able to provide some context to what was going on. We then wondered if perhaps he had the knowledge we all lacked.

At that moment, looking from the back of a hotel conference room in London, it could have been almost anyone. It could be, for example, a disgruntled hotel guest whose leopard-print bathrobe was previously stolen by Whittaker, or, for that matter, a disgruntled former adversary of Whittaker demanding “respect” that was never shown to Whittaker when they shared a ring. It could have been the voice of one of those modern boxing managers who share their thoughts on everything with fans, whether in cars or in conservatories on Zoom. Or it could have been Mauricio Sulaiman with a modern belt or Turki Alalshikh with a modern idea. It could have been a retired fighter trying to flog CBD oil or a physical manifestation of Ryan Garcia’s tweet. More likely, with Ben Whittaker on stage, it may have been the ghost of Frankie Randall demanding a return to his antique nickname: “The Surgeon.” And if not that, it could be Emanuel Augustus, who wanted all his antique moves and his entire identity back.

For now, we only had an accent and a few words. From these words, he obviously wanted a fight with this man. Fight with Whittaker. Fighting for money. He also accused Whittaker of having fought complete nobodies up to this point and avoided him, a moment that had countless camera-wielding fans turning on the Caps Lock feature on their phones in preparation for the headline. Remember, Whittaker didn’t want to play the same game. Instead, he cooled down any simmering tension by saying, “Someone get this man a Sprite and a banana.” At this point, the only sound in the room was laughter.

Then he sort of disappeared, the burglar; a man with a voice but no name. Taken out of the room through a side door directly into the hall, the agitator achieved his goal and quickly fled, never to return. There was really no need for this as the mission was accomplished. Eventually, the room soon learned that he wasn’t just an attention seeker looking to cause chaos on the Internet, but was actually a boxer. A real boxer. A boxer like Whittaker.

How refreshing, antique school, to see a boxer on the loose, in real life, go to such lengths to show up at another man’s press conference when he could have easily stayed at home and harassed him online like so many in boxing who currently they are very popular. How wonderful to know that some people still want to go a step further, analog men in a digital world.

Later we even got his name: Ezra. Ezra. The name would have to wait. It would have to wait until a better phone signal allowed BoxRec.com to load on my phone. By then, just for fun, I was trying to remember all the notable Ezras I knew. Pound; poet. Koenig; musician. Miller; actor. When it comes to boxing, the only person that came to mind was Sellers, although it couldn’t have been him because he sadly passed away in 2013.

No, this Ezra was a voice and a name modern to all of us. Ezra Arenyeka. That was his name. Or to give it a title: Eworitse Ezra Arenyeka. Born in Nigeria but living in Sale, we all discovered at almost the same time that this was the 28-year-old known as the “African King” who currently holds a record of 12-0 (10), hence his unwavering confidence. He has fought once in the UK, against Mohamed Cherif Benchadi in 2022, but has campaigned mainly in Nigeria, with occasional appearances in Ghana, the Netherlands and Colombia.

“Do you want to interview him?” several of us were asked this afternoon.

“Who?”

“Ezra. Is outside.

I still wasn’t sure if he was a boxer or not at this stage, no matter if he had a good reputation, I sensed that most people who were offered the opportunity politely turned it down. certainly yes, if only to make my point: don’t feed the birds; pay no attention to attention seekers. Or something like that.

And yet, despite the belief that denying him extra attention was the right thing to do, there remained a much greater belief that Ezra Arenyeka had acted insecurely and that in the end he would be the one laughing. Indeed, watching him at work, I was reminded of the moment when Mahmoud Charr – then ‘Manuel’ – did something similar at the press conference at Upton Park after David Haye’s fifth-round stoppage of Derek Chisora ​​in July 2012. That night, when Charr approached Haye at the top table, the reaction was very similar. Yet despite all this uncertainty, this approach worked. Suddenly, without beating anyone of note and despite no one knowing his name, Charr, the so-called “Diamond Boy”, was selected to fight Haye in September. This fight probably would have happened as well if Haye hadn’t found a more entertaining and noteworthy circus act in Tyson Fury shortly after signing the fight with Charr.

Similarly, Arenyeka will be rewarded on June 15 at Selhurst Park for his courage, insolence and self-promotion. That’s when, as expected, he’ll actually fight Ben Whittaker and get a chance to back up everything he shouted about the former amateur star at a press conference in a London hotel. Moreover, for both Arenyeka and Whittaker, a single and unexpected outburst at the press conference ensured that the June 15 featherlight heavyweight fight would be the most compelling and significant of Whittaker’s fledgling professional career. This is quite a feat, considering that no one could be sure that he was boxing at all when his opponent attacked.

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Enjoying the excitement of today’s heavyweight landscape

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AS the dust begins to settle on last weekend’s huge fight between Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois, it’s worth taking a step back and looking at just how unpredictable the heavyweight landscape has become in recent years.

Although the fight was not a Hagler-Hearns war as several boxing leaders had suggested, and was in fact more of a one-sided beating, it was still extremely shocking and stimulating.

Just like when any top heavyweight fighter loses in this era, there will always be a vast section of people criticizing him for how he has been exposed, overrated and, of course, how needy the era of heavyweights is.

There were enough topics in the comments that appeared on my social media during the huge heavyweight fight and honestly, I don’t understand the criticism at all.

LONDON, ENGLAND – SEPTEMBER 21: Daniel Dubois punches Anthony Joshua during the IBF world heavyweight title fight between Daniel Dubois and Anthony Joshua on the Riyad Season – Wembley Edition card at Wembley Stadium on September 21, 2024 in London, England. (Photo: Richard Pelham/Getty Images)

Currently, Oleksandr Usyk is beating top fighters after a great cruiserweight performance to establish himself as an all-time great and undisputed king, albeit temporarily due to boxing politics. The UK is led by popular, stimulating champions Fury and AJ, whose weaknesses add drama to their fights.

They have both beaten top players and failed on other occasions. However, their impact on the sport, selling out stadiums and delivering all-time classics on many occasions, has once again brought heavyweight boxing to the forefront of British sport. Add to that Daniel Dubois, the newly crowned IBF champion, as well as a man who endures an unexpected series of devastation and bounces back on his own after two crushing defeats.

It’s strange to think that Joe Joyce had just beaten Dubois and Parker by stoppage and then been beaten three times in the last four, with those he toppled being at the very top of the tree. Coincidentally, Joyce was derailed by Zhang and Chisora, two men Parker defeated! That’s the nature of the game, especially for the huge boys – style creates fight.

Fury easily demolished Chisora ​​three times, only for Chisora ​​to give Usyk his toughest fight, and Usyk then goes on to beat Fury. Dubois, who was stopped by Usyk, attacks AJ, the same AJ who went the distance with Usyk twice.

Ngannou and Wallin worry Fury. AJ drops them off. Joyce stops Parker before Zhang kicks Joyce out twice, only to lose to Parker. Every era has these stylistic contradictions. Look how easily George Foreman took down Ken Norton and Joe Frazier, two men who gave Muhammad Ali absolute nightmares, only for George to be tactically outsmarted and stopped by Ali.

Joseph Parker lands a right hand at Zhilei Zhang during their heavyweight fight in Saudi Arabia (Richard Pelham/Getty Images)

It’s not the greatest heavyweight era in history, but it’s particularly good and incredibly fascinating. When you have an overview of the entire era, you can include the intrigue of Deontay Wilder, who, despite lacking solid boxing fundamentals, at all times possessed great KO power in his right hand that could aid as an equalizer in any fight.

Andy Ruiz, with a combination of quick hands and a desire to create Mexican history despite the odds, caused an upset. Dillian Whyte has entertained us on many occasions. Add to that the likes of Povetkin, Chisora, Parker and Joyce who caused problems for the main players when given the chance to play.

Add to that fighters like Zhang, Bakole, Kabayel and Hrgovic chomping at the bit to get into the title fight, and alongside names like Moses Itauma, Fabio Wardley and Frazer Clarke breaking through, you’ve got a lot of fighting left to do. division and many explosive matchups to come.

This is due to the murky era of heavyweight boxing ruled solely by Klitschko, whose dominance in an era of few worthy challengers and even fewer great fights ensured a numb period in the glamor division.

Even in the early 1980s, it was all Larry Holmes, the 1940s were ruled by Joe Louis, and the 1920s were ruled by Jack Dempsey, who, while making an incredible impact on the sport himself, only defended the heavyweight title five times in six years.

This isn’t the 1970s or 1990s, which were the greatest eras in heavyweight history, but they are very fascinating, with top champions, ever-changing supremacy, great fights, and a lot of really perilous, stimulating challengers.

Anthony Joshua lost to a better man on Saturday night, it’s happened before, but he also defeated a lot of proven good fighters and left a very influential legacy in British boxing, both in and out of the ring. While it’s not the greatest era of heavyweight boxing in history, all things considered, it’s certainly one of the better ones.

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“There’s no way I’m losing to Ryan,” says Mikaela Mayer

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Mikaela Mayer is gearing up for another week of huge fights.

There is some edge to it, though. A developing grudge. A war of words with opponent Sandy Ryan over the alleged betrayal of a former trainer who crossed the street to work with her now-fierce rival. The WBO welterweight title you feel is just part of what is at stake tomorrow night in Up-to-date York.

Mayer comes alive when a camera turns on or a microphone is placed near her. A promoter’s dream. A competitor with a seemingly endless supply of quotes worth millions of dollars.

I caught up with Mayer over Zoom just hours after she landed in Up-to-date York, with a full week of media commitments ahead of her. Before our interview, I had seen an aged quote in which she described herself as unpredictable. For the first time, Mayer paused for thought when I reminded her of something she had said a few years ago.

“I’m unrehearsed. I’m open. I can be unpredictable. I just live life to the fullest,” Mayer said.

I once described Mayer as a teenage rebel who found her cause when boxing came into her life. Her mother had a drinking problem. Demons to overcome. Her father eventually gained custody of Mayer and her two sisters when her parents divorced when she was just five.

“I had to take care of myself,” Mayer says of those formative years. “My dad worked all day, and my mom wasn’t around. I grew up quick. I always needed something, and I’m lucky I found something as extreme as boxing. Something that could hold my attention. Boxing has that extreme factor. That fear factor. It kept me on my toes, because I’m such an extremist. Boxing is demanding and scary. It was impossibly hard at first.”

Boxing caught up with Mayer when she needed it most. A typical teenager who liked to party a little too much. She didn’t come home for days. Playing bass in an all-girl rock band gave her some semblance of stability. She learned to play through repetition.
Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man” was the first song she learned to play. A natural risk-taker, Mayer carried that mantra with her throughout her life.

“I’m such an extremist. Unless something is extremely hard for me, I get bored. I get sidetracked. I seem to thrive on stress,” Mayer once told me. “I feel most comfortable when I’m not comfortable.”

Women’s boxing wasn’t in the same place it is now when Mayer started out in boxing, especially in the professional ranks. You could argue that she would have been better served by seeing how her music life would pan out than risking somehow carving out a career in boxing at a time when there probably wasn’t a career to be carved out, a side of the sport that was still viewed with apathy and indifference. But Mayer sensed she was born different. Her unregulated upbringing certainly helped her roll the dice.

“I always admire that thought process in me,” she says. “I always have it in me. I think the older you get, the more you don’t want to take risks. But as a teenage person, I had no fear. That’s how my dad raised me. He never tried to impose his rules or his opinions. Literally, ever.

“My dad was very laid back. It was a very passive way of raising kids. It gave me a lot of confidence. He never put me down. He never said no or instilled any fear in me. But when boxing seemed impossible, I didn’t have the attitude that a lot of parents instill in their kids.”

Mayer found what she needed in boxing. The seed was planted. Very quickly, she began dreaming of greatness.

“After just a few weeks of training, I wanted to be the best fighter in the world,” Mayer says. “I wanted to fight Gina Carano. At the time, she was a huge name and I wanted to fight her. That’s what I wanted to do. I knew right away what I wanted to do and I put everything into it. Looking back, I had so much determination. I didn’t want to hang out with anyone. I just wanted to train, eat right and do everything I could to be great.”

Mayer has always exuded extreme confidence. Those words carry conviction. They’ve turned her harshest critic into a believer. “I’ve always had that confidence,” Mayer added. “My mom was very eccentric. She made us go out on the dance floor. She made us perform and party with her. She took us places and to parties to meet people, because she liked to party. So we had to fall into that, and she created this social persona. Then my dad got custody, and we had a lot of freedom. We had to make our own decisions. We were thrown into certain circumstances where there weren’t a lot of rules to follow.”

Mayer took that confidence into her fight with Sandy Ryan this weekend. After two controversial losses to Alycia Baumgardner and Natasha Jonas in recent times, Mayer will be hoping for third time lucky against Ryan, a fight that will see the American return home after four consecutive fights in the UK. Mayer despises the “former” tag, and defeating Ryan would make her a world champion after two years without a world title under her belt.

The bookmakers can’t separate them, but Mayer sees it differently. “I’m just better. I’m just going to do whatever I want. There’s no way I’m losing this fight.”

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Family opposition won’t distract former world champion

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FIGHT PREPARATION typically focuses on two fighters jumping through the ropes, attempting to knock each other out.

How the fight came about, the personalities of the fighters, their careers and their predictions all play a part in the weeks, days and hours leading up to the first bell. But sometimes a storyline comes along that steps into the middle of it all and has its own punch that gets the spotlight.

On Friday evening [September 27] Charlie Edwards will face European bantamweight champion Thomas Essomba at York Hall, live on Channel 5. Edwards, a former WBC flyweight world champion, is the older brother of Sunlit, a former IBF flyweight world champion. Essomba v Edwards is a unique twist though, as in addition to his own boxing career, Sunlit has immersed himself in the managerial side of the sport, and one of his clients is… Thomas Essomba.

Although the thought of his brother in the opposing corner has left him a little rattled, Charlie Edwards has focused on the game and seems fully focused on his second fight with novel coach Stephen Smith.

“It’s a novel belt for me, it’s part of my heritage and my trophy cabinet at home,” he says.

“That’s the belt I really want and want to put in. Although my brother is in the visiting corner and he’s actually choosing Thomas’ side in this fight.”

Edwards spoke on Zoom just weeks before his 21st birthdaysaint fight knowing full well that his brother is a talking point in the supporting cast of two leading men. The 31-year-old spoke at length, moving between the European title fight and Sunlit’s place in all of this.

“We all know we’ve had some minor disagreements in the past, but I thought they were covered up,” he says.

Charlie admitted he wanted the fight personally. It wasn’t presented to him as an option, for example, after his points win over Georges Ory in April. However, Sunlit was pushing for the Essomba fight, which led to some back-and-forth, but the truth is Charlie wanted to face the EBU champion in his first fight after a 10-month layoff.

“All my attention is on Thomas,” says the challenger.

“Sunlit won’t bother me, he won’t shake me up. All I do is go to bed thinking about Thomas and wake up thinking about Thomas. In fact, I’ll probably end up missing him. So it’s all systems go in my favor. I’m ultra-professional, I always have been.”

However, Sunlit’s raw emotions on the other side haven’t gone completely unnoticed by his brother. Whatever those feelings are, Charlie knows that these are all business and special circumstances that are unlikely to repeat themselves in the future.

“He took his management career very seriously. Clearly, there was no wasted effort,” Charlie says of Sunlit.

“I’m grateful because it brings more eyes to this fight, which is what I need. Especially after all the inaction and politics behind the scenes that keep me inactive. I’ve put in a lot of strenuous work, grind and consistency over the past few years.

“I’m really looking forward to this fight because I feel like I’m entering the peak years of my career. I feel like my strength has skyrocketed. I’ve settled in [being] man, I gained a lot more weight than that.”

Edwards will return to York Hall this Friday. (Photo: Richard Pelham/Getty Images)

Edwards enters the fight with former two-time super featherweight world title challenger Stephen ‘Swifty’ Smith in his corner, and Edwards also gives the Liverpudlian plenty of credit in this novel phase of his career.

“He was the lithe I needed in my darkest days, giving me back my life and my confidence,” Edwards says of Smith.

“We all know his boxing brain is unmatched. His IQ in the boxing ring is top notch.

“The way he sees things, the way he explains them, and most of all, the energy that flows between us. We can be there doing 12 to 20 rounds in the gym. The entire time in the gym, I feel like I’ve been there for five minutes.

“That’s why I know he’s the guy for me. When you’re locked in and focused, the energy that’s being given just takes me to the next level. The knowledge that he puts into me and what he sees [in] My strengths and how I can employ them to the best of my ability.

“I’ve been working on a lot of other things that will come to fruition and shine on fight night. Now I’m forceful in the bantamweight division. Now I’m hitting. My feet are in the right place. I can only talk so much, but I have to walk and show it on fight night.

“It’s going to be a great performance, but also a terrifying performance.”

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