Engine erosion
Billam-Smith’s version, which surpassed Lawrence Okolie, relied on an unrelenting engine and an iron chin. However, the punishment he suffered in his loss to Gilberto Ramirez in tardy 2024 and even in his arduous decision over Brandon Glanton in April 2025 was showing signs of wear and tear.
A year out of the ring since the fight with Glanton did not allow him to age in reverse. Inactivity for a 35-year-old slugger is rarely a reset; this is usually the beginning of the end. Before he enters the Bournemouth International Center on June 6, he will have to prove that he has not missed his best days in the gym during this long break.
Różicki’s trap
Ryan Rozicki is the definition of perilous tuning. With a 95% knockout rate, Rozicki doesn’t need to lose to Billam-Smith; All he needs to do is land once and the veteran will find his rhythm.
After the bulky shots Billam-Smith took to Ramirez, can his chin still withstand a neat punch like Rozicki’s?
A year of ring rust combined with deteriorating reflexes is a recipe for disaster against a warrior who thrives on chaos.
Opetai mismatch
Billam-Smith’s obsession with Jai Opetai ignores the technical gulf between them. Opetaia is the crown jewel of the Zuffa team for a reason. He’s younger, faster and has the southpaw move that completely neutralized Billam-Smith against Ramirez.
“If they didn’t have Jai, it wouldn’t have been such a massive move for me,” Billam-Smith said Sky Sports Boxing.
This suggests that the player is prioritizing a final, massive payday over a lasting recovery. If Zuffa Boxing wants to build a long-term brand in the UK, feeding their main UK asset a styling nightmare like Opetaia is a quick way to snuff out their momentum.
Billam-Smith is hoping the “electric” atmosphere at Bournemouth will mask his physical decline. But the audience cannot escape his control and cannot turn back time. If Billam-Smith fights Rozicki, the Opetaia fight will be dead. No one is going to pay to see an aging veteran get picked apart by the division’s top powerhouse after failing to cope at the national level.
Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most critical fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.