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Boxing’s 25 best under-25s: which British fighters made the list?

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ESPN’s annual ranking of the top 25 players under 25 is here. As always, British interest in the full list is high, and this year’s ranking is special considering who will take the top spot.

Since March 2024, Moses Itauma has fought six fights, nine rounds in total. In August, he advanced in the competition by defeating veteran Dillian Whyte, whom he finished in less than two minutes. His next fight is the American Jermaine Franklin Jr. on January 24, during which he wants to silence any questions about the hype.

Itauma is one of the most invigorating heavyweights in boxing, whom former champion Tyson Fury believes is the future of the division.

“Moses Itauma will eliminate all the venerable guys in the division,” Fury said in an Instagram story after Itauma’s victory over White. “[Oleksandr] Usyk, [Anthony] Joshua, [Jarrell] Miller. Whoever is there is so venerable. [Zhilei] Zhang, whoever the hell else is out there, Luis Ortiz. All these great names from the past.

“Even the one who took my belts [Usyk]. Moses will destroy it, because it is a fight between a juvenile man and an venerable man. And an venerable man can’t mess with a juvenile man.”

So who else is on the list of a mighty group of British fighters under the age of 25? Andreas Hale and Nick Parkinson look at this and provide some analysis.

1. Moses Itauma (13-0, 11 KO)

Heavyweight rival
20 years
Ranking 2024: 10

Warrior: Itauma, an ESPN 2024 prospect, is not a person who can legally drink alcohol in America, but after a speedy and brutal 2025, she found herself at the top of this year’s list. Competing in the land of giants, the 6-foot-10 southpaw isn’t necessarily bigger than the top heavyweights, but he’s undoubtedly the future with his unique combination of size, speed and power.

Most significant moment or achievement: Heading into the White fight, the biggest question surrounding Itauma was whether his remarkable finishing prowess would continue once he started competing. That question was definitively answered when he defeated Mike Balogun and two-time interim heavyweight champion Whyte in 2025. Itauma stopped Balogun in two rounds – the third-longest fight of his career – in May and was assigned to fight Whyte, who was considered his toughest opponent to date. The fight against “The Body Snatcher” was not competitive.

Future prospects: To properly transform from a prospect to a contender to being the man everyone wants to see against Usyk in just two years is a huge testament to his potential. Itauma will begin his 2026 campaign against the hard-wearing Jermaine Franklin on January 24 and will try to do what Anthony Joshua couldn’t: stop Franklin. Then you will have to wait to see which heavyweight fighter will want to enter the ring with him. The scary thing is that Itauma still has four years to make this list.

10. Adam Azim (14-0, 11 KO)

Junior welterweight fighter
23 years venerable
Ranking 2024: 9

Warrior: The junior welterweight has a fan-friendly style, quick hands, a risky left hook and lightning-fast reflexes. He only had two appearances this year, but he did well in both. He stopped veteran Sergei Lipinets, who briefly held the IBF world title in 2017 and 2018, in nine rounds in February, then patiently broke down Kurt Scoby’s stubborn resistance in round 12 on November 15.

Most significant moment or achievement: At the most significant stage of Azim’s career, during the Chris Eubank Jr. match. vs. Conor Benn 2, which took place on November 15 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Azim was too skillful and experienced in the ring for Scoby. Azim dominated the early rounds with his jab and dropped his hands from round 8 onwards. He put Scoby under grave pressure in round 11 and ended the fight in the next round by landing a series of precise punches to the head and body. Dealing with Scoby’s nonsense during fight week was also a good learning experience for Azim as he moved on to bigger fights.

Future prospects: Azim is making steady progress and will face better opponents in 2026. The two governing bodies are ranked 9th and 10th, so he likely needs more wins to secure a title shot. One fight that would be popular: against English rival Dalton Smith, who challenges Subriel Matias for the IBF title on January 10.

12. Caroline Dubois (11-0-1, 5 KOs)

WBC women’s lightweight world champion
24 years venerable
2024 position: 16th

Warrior: Dubois defended his WBC lightweight title twice this year. She was promoted from interim champion to full world champion in December 2024 after Katie Taylor vacated the belt. Dubois previously complained that Taylor was holding back her career by refusing to fight her. She had a frustrating technical draw in January when Jessica Camara was deemed unable to continue following a cut. Dubois then passed Bo Mi Re Shin by majority vote in March, but has not boxed since.

Most significant moment or achievement: Dubois has a mighty arm, but she hasn’t stopped any of her previous six opponents. Her best performance remains a unanimous victory over Maira Moneo, whom she knocked down with a left hook in round 6 and thus won the interim WBC title in August 2024.

Future prospects: Dubois has been inactive since March while her promoter Boxxer signs a fresh UK television deal, with no confirmation of her next fight. The fight Dubois wants is a title unification fight with WBO lightweight champion Terri Harper, which would be one of the biggest fights in women’s boxing in 2026, if it happens.

18. Callum Walsh (15-0, 11 KO)

Junior middleweight fighter
24 years venerable
2024 position: 22nd

Warrior: The six-foot southerner hails from Ireland but has fought almost exclusively in the US. Walsh, who is trained by Freddie Roach in Los Angeles, says working on fishing boats at the age of 16 gave him a mighty work ethic, and that same challenging work has seen him make steady progress in 2025. After a stunning first-round knockout of Dean Sutherland in March, he scored a fifth-round technical decision win over Elias Espadas in June and won a unanimous decision. over Fernando Vargas Jr. in September. Vargas’ victory in front of a Netflix audience and headlining a card headlined by Terence Crawford’s victory over Canelo Alvarez helped raise Walsh’s prestige. Vargas stopped all but two of his 17 previous opponents, but Walsh showed skillful and skilled boxing to win by four rounds on the judges’ scorecards in the title fight.

Most significant moment or achievement: His quick victory over Sutherland, sealed with a left hand followed by a powerful right hook, highlighted Walsh’s potential. Sutherland was on the canvas after Walsh’s speed and arm strength proved too much for him.

Future prospects: IBF world champion Bakhram Murtazaliev will defend his belt against Josh Kelly in early 2026, and Walsh could be well prepared to fight the winner.

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The Tyson Fury – Anthony Joshua fight will take place in November 2026 at Wembley

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Image: Tyson Fury vs Anthony Joshua Set for November 2026 In Wembley

This part is settled. The contract is already in force, and the date has been set for the end of 2026. Everything is currently underway in Riyad until July 25.

“To my friends in the UK – it’s happening. It’s signed,” Turki Alalshikh said.

It is not yet known what Joshua’s next fight will be. He still has to go through Prenga in Riyad and come out neat. No cuts, no knockdowns. That’s how these fights fall apart. Not in boardrooms, but in the ring.

Fury (35-2-1) has already taken care of his team. He came back, dealt with Arslanbek Makhmudov and managed the rounds without taking a penalty. He looks like a guy who can still go twelve rounds and still concede a draw when he needs to.

Joshua (29-4) is in a different place.

He has had fits, but not against ones that test him under pressure. The loss of Dubois still exists. As the pace slowed and the punches returned, his form faltered and he stayed in range for too long. Something like this can’t happen again without a signed contract.

This time the business side moved first. Turki Alalshikh said straight: “It’s signed,” and Fury supported it. No more delays and shifting dates.

Now all that’s left is execution.

Fury will provide size, clinch work and consistent pace over the distance. Joshua will need excellent timing, a powerful base and a willingness to put his hands down when the opening comes.

The deal is real. July 25 will decide whether this fight stays on track.

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Opponent Anthony Joshua’s 20 KOs resulted in 196 total losses after a 1-2 early defeat

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Joshua vs Prenga crop

Anthony Joshua’s next opponent has a perfect knockout rate on paper, but a closer look at that record raises immediate questions about what that number actually means.

Putting this fight under the WBN lens, Kristian Prenga had 20 stoppages for a total of 196 losses, a figure that outshines much of the luster of his undefeated KO streak and was portrayed as a threat in Matchroom’s recent announcement.

On the surface, the numbers suggest danger. In reality, the double-digit number of stoppages masks careful selection and controlled progression, rather than a proven test at the level at which Joshua has operated for the better part of a decade.

This becomes clearer when we look at one of the first blemishes on Prenga’s record.

Early failure in context

Prenga’s lone defeat came in just his fifth professional appearance, an eight-round decision to Dutchman Giovanni Auriemma in Steenwijk. Complaints about a hometown decision pale in comparison to a player whose story tells a story of its own.

Auriemma finished with a modest 2-6-2 record and no knockout victories in ten fights, playing mostly at the grassroots level and struggling to make an impact beyond it.

His victory over Prenga stands out from the rest of his resume, which largely consists of losses and draws against similarly modest opponents.

This is not an interpretation of Prengi’s current abilities. It just shows the record and the fact that he failed to knock out a journeyman in 24 minutes of action.

Record under a microscope

When these details are paired with Prengi’s streak of early finishes, a bigger picture quickly emerges.

A fighter with a 100% KO rate, one whose opponents have suffered 196 defeats and whose only defeat came after a 1-2 victory, belongs to a very specific category.

This happens more often than it should. But that explains why the reaction to this fight was what it is.

Fans on social media called the fight a “waste of time” and used offensive terms, with one fan even stating that he would prefer to watch the rematch with Jake Paul on July 25 in Riyad.

Joshua is in no unknown danger. It will be matched to a player who has been brought in in a way that minimizes risk and maximizes appearance.

This distinction matters. Prenga was blown up after an impressive 20 wins and 20 KOs. But this isn’t a test – it’s a formality disguised as one.

If you look at it, opportunity is the problem because it’s the type of contract and headlining gig that boxers break their records for and why there are so many guarded records in this sport.

To give US and UK viewers a point of reference, Prenga can be compared to Christopher Lovejoy. Lovejoy eventually strengthened after amassing 19 KOs from 19 fights, but was pummeled by Manuel Charr in two uncomfortable rounds.

Lovejoy’s record today is 20-3-1, with every fight outside of Mexico ending in a failed attempt at victory.

Toasty-up under control

It’s understandable for Joshua to want to composed down after the trauma of what he went through.

But it comes down to what could have been staged in the gym as a warm-up, without dressing up as the hit of the season in Riyad. This is not.

This is just another event in Saudi Arabia’s portfolio, and likely fits into commitments to DAZN and Turki Alalshikh’s broader schedule.

Joshua’s fight immediately aired on Netflix after appearing there in December. It probably went over the edge in terms of formality, leaving fans to deal with the mess that was left as usual.

What we get now is more waiting. Potentially another eight months leading up to the December fight with Tyson Fury, which will hopefully land him where he belongs – in the British Isles.

If the current direction points to a different pre-Christmas date in the Riyad season, the reaction of British fans will be predictable, even with the promise of a rematch at Wembley.

Anthony Joshua faces Kristian Prenga in 'The Comeback' heavyweight fight poster taking place July 25 in Riyad, Saudi Arabia on DAZN

Choosing your opponent

When it comes to Prenga, the less said about this choice, the better.

The Albanian has one notable win against Joey Dawejko, whose name Joshua knows well from sparring before the fight with Andy Ruiz Jr. in Recent York.

Plus, the comparison becomes harder to ignore and only prolongs the disappointment felt after a decade-long wait for a British superfight hanging in the balance.

Joshua is effectively returning to the level of opposition he faced before his fight with Dillian Whyte in 2015, when his early streak was based on quick finishes and narrow resistance.

At this stage, no one had lasted three rounds with Joshua as he bulldozed his way through opponents such as Gary Cornish at the O2 Arena.

Should Prenga be expected to beat this three-round benchmark – probably not.


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.

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It has been announced that Anthony Joshua’s opponent is set to return from his year-end fight with Tyson Fury

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Anthony Joshua’s comeback opponent announced as Tyson Fury fight agreed for end of year

Anthony Joshua’s next opponent has been revealed ahead of his fight with Tyson Fury scheduled for later this year.

Joshua and Fury have been on a collision course for almost a decade and it seemed their fight would finally be confirmed after “The Gypsy King” defeated Arslanbek Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London earlier this month.

An exchange with Joshua then ensued, but ‘AJ’ stood his ground when his team insisted there would likely be a warm-up fight before facing Fury.

Joshua’s last fight was in December when he defeated YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, but before that his last fight against a legal opponent was in September 2024 when he was knocked out by Daniel Dubois in an IBF heavyweight title fight.

“AJ” was also involved in a tragic car accident just weeks after his fight with Paul, which sadly claimed the lives of two of his close friends, so it is clear why he preferred the next fight to be a warm-up to best prepare for Fury.

A warm-up opponent has now been confirmed following the announcement that Joshua will face relatively unknown Kristian Prenga on July 25 in Riyad, Saudi Arabia.

Prenga has a 100% knockout record and all 20 of his wins have come within the distance, but the type of opponents he has faced throughout his career are at a level below Joshua’s.

In 2017, in his fifth professional fight, he suffered a 1-2 loss to opponent Giovanni Auriemma, but since then he has won all 16 fights, the last one coming in February, when he knocked out Joe Jones in the first round 16-14-1.

Nevertheless, Joshua is expected to win comfortably before he begins preparing for his long-awaited showdown with Fury, although it has now been reported that ‘The Gypsy King’ could have another warm-up fight of his own.

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