Boxing
Burning boxing questions: What will the heavyweight division look like in 2026?
Published
3 weeks agoon
The top of boxing’s most significant weight class is apparently as open as it has been in a long time. While many former heavyweight stars such as Oleksandr Usyk, Tyson Fury, Deontay Wilder and Anthony Joshua are still in the title picture, there are many emerging contenders waiting to take advantage of the opportunity to join the higher league.
What will it take for up-and-coming players like Fabio Wardley, Moses Itauma and Richard Torrez Jr. to take the next step?
Usyk currently holds three world heavyweight titles (WBC, WBA, IBF), and Wardley rose to the WBO title shot after Usyk relinquished the belt last year.
Will the remaining belts remain in the same hands? How many fights does Fury have left? Can Joshua and Wilder fight for the titles again?
We explore the future of boxing’s glamor division.
Which players will be winning world titles at the end of 2026?
It’s complicated, but Usyk will likely have at least one of his three titles by the end of the year. Usyk (24-0, 15 KO) may be stripped of one or two belts for overdue mandatory defenses. The latest speculation is that the WBC, WBA and IBF world champion will face 36-year-old Dutch kickboxer Rico Verhoeven in another bizarre crossover fight. If Usyk, 39, moves on, it could cost him one of his titles.
Agit Kabayel (27-0, 19 KO) is in good shape and, as the WBC interim champion, would have the status of full champion if the WBC authorities decide to strip Usyk. Kabayel, 33, may have to defeat former cruiserweight champion Lawrence Okolie next to retain his interim WBC belt. Murat Gassijew (33-2, 26 KO) from Russia stopped Kubrat Pulev in December in a fight for the regular WBA championship (secondary WBA title after the full world title). He could also advance to the world title if Uysk chooses a different opponent next. Moses Itauma (13-0, 11 KO), the 21-year-old rising star of the division, could get a shot at the WBA title later this year if he wins his next fight against Jermaine Franklin on March 28. Itauma would also love to beat fighters like Gassiew.
Usyk’s final goal for later this year may be a trilogy fight with Tyson Fury (34-2-1, 24 KO). If the Usyk vs. fight takes place Fury III, the winner will hold at least one, and possibly two, world titles.
How many more fights will Fury fight before he retires again?
This depends first on his return to fight Arslanbek Makhmudov (21-2, 19 KO) on April 11, and then on a victory over Usyk, Wardley or Joshua, probably in September in London. Two-time former champion Fury has not fought since his second consecutive points defeat to Usyk in December 2024. Losing to Usyk or Wardley in a title fight wouldn’t ruin his chances for a long-awaited, long-awaited fight against English rival Joshua, but it would cut his career tiny. Given Fury’s 37-year-old age, his previous retirement and his available options, he likely has at least three fights left before his next retirement.
Can Wilder and Joshua return to title contention?
Yes. Although both appear to be completely out of contention at the moment, their huge earning potential could see them challenge for the title in the second half of the year. However, in the case of Joshua (29-4, 26 KO), we must wait until the two-time former champion wants to continue his career after the death of two close friends and members of his team in a December car accident that occurred shortly after his sixth-round KO of Jake Paul.
Joshua’s last fight before Paul was in September 2024, when he lost by fifth-round KO to Daniel Dubois. It usually takes a few fights to get back into title contention, but due to the revenue generated, Joshua may get a title shot in his next fight. If Fury wins the WBO belt with the winner of Wardley vs. Dubois (which could happen in April or May), expect to see Joshua in a title fight later this year.
Former WBC champion Wilder (44-4-1, 43 KO) lacks momentum and form, but his name still matters. Wilder’s team hopes that a successful return to fight Derek Chisora on April 4 will secure a title fight for the second half of the year. Even though the 40-year-old looked like a faded team after four defeats in his last six appearances, if he beats Chisora, he could win the title against Usyk.
What is Usyk’s best fight in 2026?
There are bigger threats in the heavyweight division than Wilder, like Itauma. But if Wilder beats Chisora, he will still attract interest. A meeting with Kabayel in his native Germany would be a gigantic deal, but fighting Wilder in the US or Fury in the UK are the biggest fights available to Usyk. Usyk is unlikely to fight Joshua, who trained with his team last year.
Which youthful heavyweight will make the most noise in 2026?
Itauma may not end the year with a belt, but he will be one step away from a title shot if he can rack up more KO wins this year. If Usyk is stripped of his WBA belt, Itauma could end the year as one of boxing’s youngest champions. Mike Tyson (20 years and four months) and Floyd Patterson (21 years and 10 months) are the two youngest heavyweight champions, and Itauma turns 22 in December. The English boxer is the most stimulating heavyweight in the sport right now and if he continues his knockout form, his fan base will grow. One of the potential fights for Itauma later this year will be the winner of Wardley vs. Dubois.
What will the heavyweight top ten look like at the end of 2026?
Expect Usyk to be No. 1 with a win over Fury, Kabayel or Wilder. Fury, after a tiny break in the fight for victory with several victories over Makhmudov and perhaps the winner of the Wardley vs. Dubois and a three-time world champion will return to the chase group, followed by Kabayel, Itauma, Wardley, Dubois, Filip Hrgovic, Richard Torrez Jr., Okolie, Bakhodir Jalolov and Joshua. Joshua could end a complex year higher on the list if he wins a major fight in 2026. Wardley, who has scored impressive victories, is an influential figure in all of this. If he beats Dubois and then Fury, does that make a potential Fury vs. Joshua fight even less likely? This would put Wardley in second place behind Usyk.
Who can take a gigantic step up 10?
If two-time Olympic gold medalist Jalalov (16-0, 14 KO) is able to compete, he will have a skill set that will make him a top fighter in the next five years. Last year he fought two modest fights in Kazakhstan and Russia.
Another fighter worth paying attention to is Torrez (14-0, 12 KO). The Californian, who won a silver medal at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, could take a huge step forward in his career if he defeats Frank Sanchez in his next fight in an IBF title eliminator.
Richard Riakporhe (19-1, 15 KO) also looks gigantic, powerful and hazardous since moving up from cruiserweight. The 36-year-old Londoner recorded two fast-break victories last year and is already in the WBC rankings. Efe Ajagba (20-1-1, 14 KO), who will face former champion Charles Martin on February 14 at Zuffa Boxing 03, has a gigantic stage to shine this year if he can achieve it, but the 2016 Olympian must do better than he was tied on points with Martin Bakole last May.
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Boxing
Eddie Hearn says Matchroom Talent Agency was scheduled ahead of the Zuffa Boxing fight
Published
2 hours agoon
March 7, 2026
Matchroom’s CEO this week unveiled his recent venture as a talent management company intended to represent athletes and entertainers across several industries. The announcement comes as recent promoters and immense investment groups enter the boxing market, including Zuffa’s recent entry into the sport, which has attracted industry-wide attention.
Hearn rejected the suggestion that the timing of the agency’s creation was linked to these changes, saying the concept was already in development.
“These conversations have been going on for ages, mostly about football,” Hearn said.
Matchroom Talent Agency becomes part of the company’s existing boxing, darts and snooker activities, but the recent division focuses on representation rather than event promotion. Hearn described it as a management operation designed to aid clients gain commercial opportunities and public exposure.
“It’s a management company … like any sports agency or athlete representation company that represents athletes and fighters,” Hearn said.
The agency does not limit itself to professional athletes. Hearn said the plan is to also work with people outside of sports, including entertainment figures.
“We don’t limit ourselves to sports… if you are an actor, a musician, we want to work with you,” he said.
Matchroom has been promoting events across several sports for decades, but the creation of a talent agency brings the company closer to the commercial side of athletes’ careers. Hearn said the move reflects Matchroom’s experience working with broadcasters, sponsors and media partners across a range of sporting and international events.
The company expects to announce additional contract signings once the agency begins operations. Hearn said the long-term goal is to represent talent across sport, entertainment and media, while continuing Matchroom’s work promoting events in boxing and other sports around the world.
Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most significant fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
Boxing
Jai Opetaia joined Zuffa for Chase Undisputed – now titleless
Published
4 hours agoon
March 7, 2026
Jai Opetai’s quest for undisputed status took a huge hit after the IBF stripped the Australian of the cruiserweight title following confirmation that Zuffa’s championship would be treated as a world title.
Opetaia has repeatedly said his goal is to become undisputed. Even at his final press conference, minutes before the IBF released its statement, Opetaia insisted the belt was on the line.
Directly responding to a question from Fight Hub’s Marcos Villegas, Opetaia said: “Yes, the IBF title is in the pipeline. Don’t listen to everything you hear on the internet because everyone is spreading rumors.”
However, these “rumors” were not like that. World Boxing News reported that the IBF was only considering sanctioning the fight and that an announcement would be made.
Ironically, for Opetai, these explanations came shortly after his own comments and contradicted everything he had confirmed to Villegas.
Zuffa’s undisputed plan
The IBF has already clarified that it is not involved in this event, stating: “The IBF has not had any discussions regarding this fight with any direct representative of Zuffa Boxing.”
The IBF also emphasized boxing’s ultimate goal for champions.
“The pursuit of undisputed status – by unifying the IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO titles – represents the highest ambition in sport.”
Following the IBF’s ruling, it now seems highly unlikely that any other sanctioning bodies will allow one of their titles to be on the line with Zuffa.
USA Boxing withdraws
The event came just hours after USA Boxing withdrew its support for proposed changes to the Muhammad Ali Act that could have allowed the Zuffa championship structure to exist under the current system.
In a letter sent to members of Congress, the governing body clarified that the earlier correspondence “does not represent the official position of USA Boxing” and confirmed that “the Board hereby withdraws this letter.”
The blow to the body puts Opetai’s unquestionable ambitions into solemn doubt.
What was initially presented as the path to boxing’s ultimate achievement – unifying the IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO titles – instead removed the first belt required to begin that journey.
It is unclear at this stage whether Zuffa made any promises during the negotiations.
It is clear that Opetaia is currently under contract to Zuffa and if sanctioning authorities continue to withhold recognition, the Australian currently has no realistic path to an undisputed position once signed with the company.
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.
Boxing
Tim Bradley Predicts Devin Haney vs Rolando Romero Knockout: ‘I Can See It’
Published
4 hours agoon
March 7, 2026
After months of uncertainty, it appears that Devin Haney will clash with Rolando Romero. As speculation mounts, two-division champion Tim Bradley offered his predictions for the fight he believes could see a stoppage.
Becoming the undisputed lightweight champion of the world with a victory over George Kambosos Jr., Haney defended his 135-pound throne in a rematch with the Australian and then against Vasyl Lomachenko to climb up the rankings pound-for-pound.
“The Dream” then dethroned WBC super lightweight champion Regis Prograis in his 140-pound debut and did the same at welterweight when in his first fight at 147 pounds, he won Brian Norman’s WBO belt.
Now Haney is being linked to a unification fight with WBA titleholder Romero Tim Bradley told his YouTube channel that he believes Haney can secure his first stoppage win since 2019 if he and “Rolly” collide.
“[Haney] put [Brian] Norman is lying on the ground, he said [Regis] Prograis’s** on the ground. I don’t understand why he can’t knock Romero’s ass to the ground if he hits him in the right place at the right time. With his timing, yes, he can give it his all too.
“I can even see that if Devin takes over early or midfield, I can even see Devin being able to stop Romero on defense. There are places to put pressure on Romero.”
“You put him on the back burner because he doesn’t have a lot of amateur experience, right, so I still see some nervousness in his game when you start putting pressure on him.”
Saturday, May 30, is the advertised unification date as Haney and Romero look to establish themselves as the man to beat in the welterweight division.
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