Moses Itauma predicts that she intends to knock out Dillian Whyte “Quite speedy” On Saturday evening in Riyadh. Ituma promoted by Queensberry (12-0, 10 KO) says that it will be Ko Whyte (31-3, 23 KO), if it follows the “game plan” in a 12-round grade to Dazn PPV. The event costs USD 49.99.
In the first place in WBO, despite zero wins over credible opponents, 20-year-old Ituma is excited as another British hefty weight and is already fighting for PPV.
“Quite speedy” knockout claim
“If the side of the game, I should do it,” said Moses Ituma BoxnatioN asked if he believes that he would knock out Dillian Whyte on Saturday. “Quite speedy. I don’t know if speed suits me. Whatever they have, I will come prepared. I can’t wait for rock and roll. “
Opponents of Ituma were terribly bad
Who knocked out Ituma, which makes him believe that he will stop Dillian so quickly? 45-year-old Mariusz Wach? 41-year-old Mike Balogun? The opposition, which was fed by Queensberry Ituma, was terribly incensed.
“It doesn’t matter to me. I still get the same if I sell 10 tickets or 50 tickets. You want me to recognize everything and put pressure on myself,” said Ituma.
“It was not a 16-week camp for Dillian Whyte. I had a 16-week camp in general, because I fell in love with Mike Balogun, who of course was a complex training session and a complex camp,” said Ituma. “Even if the opponent was not the biggest, I still had to train as it was. The training camp was still complex. I had a week, and then I returned straight to the training camp.”
Did Ituma really train for 16 weeks?
The Itauma sleeping is still plumping for someone who has gone through a 16-week camp. If he really was in the training camp for so long, he could not cross the boundaries of cardio and diet, because he still shows a lot of fat around his frame.
If he trained difficult, this fat would not be there. With the way Ituma is pumped as another great weight, it must be complex to give him tips as a trainer. How to make him do something if he feels that he only goes through movements? Again, Ituma does not resemble a warrior who passed a 16-week camp.
Dillian Whyte’s hazard
“I think it’s a completely different version of Dillian. I think he will try to box because he lost weight. Of course, he won’t try to knock me out or throw me away in the first rounds. He won’t want to break with me, because he can’t do it for 10 rounds. So I think he tried me.
Whyte has a type of power to go to war with Itaum for 10 to 12 rounds. We do not know how well Ituma can do a blow, because his opposition is so impoverished, both at amateur and professional levels. Whyte could knock out Itauma if something tightly lands in this fight. It is really for the first time in Ituma that he fought with a blow.
Is Ituma sold out?
If you look at the entries of ITAUMA opponents during his low amateur career, it’s shocking like impoverished. He never reached the level of fighters usually seen in the best amateurs.
At the professional level, Ituma was adapted to strictly smaller fighters by his promoters in Queensberry, but he was excited, as if he was dealing with killers. This makes you suspicious that he is sold to the audience as better than he.
Given the noise that ITAUMA received, he should have been fighting a better opposition. In Great Britain, it is different than in the United States to receive the praise and advertisement that ITAUMA receives, he would have to fight the killers if he was an American.
Muhammad Ali is considered by many to be the greatest heavyweight of all time and arguably the greatest fighter of all time, but in the eyes of another pound-for-pound legend, Floyd Mayweather, there is another recent heavyweight who would defeat “The Greatest.”
Ali suffered five defeats in his iconic career, with three of them coming in his last four contests when his best form was well behind him; losing to Leon Spinks, Larry Holmes and then Trevor Berbick.
His other two shortcomings came at the hands of Joe Frazier and Ken Norton, both of whom he avenged twice in his trilogies, which is one of the many reasons why Ali is considered the best heavyweight operator in history.
In addition to Ali, the other standout candidate for the title is Joe Louis, who holds the record for the longest reign in the history of the division – holding the heavyweight title for almost 12 years and making 25 consecutive title defenses.
However, Mayweather said that by participating in the premier “Winner Stays On” match, which features the best heavyweights of all time, Daily mail box that he believes first-rate Lennox Lewis would beat Ali.
Like Ali before his last two fights, Lewis has defeated every opponent in his career, winning rematches against Oliver McCall and Hasim Rahman, who shockingly knocked him out to become one of five three-time heavyweight champions.
There is also some frustration on Duarte’s side with the transfers. He’s still upset about how his Feb. 21 date with former IBF 140-pound champion Richardson Hitchins fell apart on fight day. The tardy withdrawal wiped out months of work, leaving Duarte without results after a full training camp and the associated expenses. This fight will be his first real chance to turn this stretch into something concrete.
Duarte pointed directly to the clash of styles. He expects pressure and prefers to face it rather than deal with it.
“I’m here to show my best and let everyone know what I’m capable of,” Duarte said. “Fierro is an aggressive player, so am I. The only way to neutralize his aggressiveness is to step forward and show him what I mean.”
This approach fits his recent career. Duarte has built his reputation on constant pressure and volume in attack, and he has no intention of changing his identity here. He also used the moment to point to a goal beyond Saturday, naming Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz as the type of fight he wants next if he can beat Fierro.
Fierro didn’t throw away style expectations. He embraced it.
“I love being the underdog. I’m here to crash the party,” Fierro said. “I gave everyone an amazing fight against Pitbull Cruz and I will do it again against Duarte.”
This reference to Cruz is significant. Fierro’s loss in this fight still improved his position due to the pace and damage dealt. Here he’s counting on a similar performance whether he wins or not, but he’s made it clear he expects more this time.
“I’m here to steal the show… we’ll delight the fans and I’ll come out with the victory.”
The fight is scheduled for 12 rounds, which gives it room to turn into something more arduous than a typical undercard fight. Both players rely on pressure, both are willing to trade and neither is talking about caution.
This usually leads to a fight that doesn’t last long.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fighting landscape. His reports focus on the most significant fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
Ahead of reports of a rematch, Manny Pacquiao is unconvinced by Floyd Mayweather’s claims that he is the greatest fighter of all time and even questions his celebrated 50-0 record.
In 2015, Pacquiao became the 48th name on Mayweather’s resume, losing by unanimous decision in Las Vegas on a night when the main event didn’t produce the expected results but finances skyrocketed.
I’m talking to VibrationPacquiao said the fight was contractually agreed upon. He then dismissed Mayweather’s claim as the best ever, saying others had retired undefeated before him and would do it again. In fact, the Filipino icon doesn’t even believe this should be the case with his rival, claiming that he lost to Oscar De La Hoya in 2007.
“I think he lost the Oscar De La Hoya fight. Look it up. I know what boxing is, and if you go through it and watch the fight, Floyd lost it. Very clear, so watch it.”
Mayweather faced Oscar De La Hoya in Las Vegas. It was the biggest fight in sports at the time.
The fight was tight early on, with De La Hoya using his jab and size, but Mayweather adjusted as the match went on, providing cleaner and more precise work down the stretch. He took a split decision to win the title and thus replaced the “Golden Boy” as boxing’s leading commercial fortune.
De La Hoya has long criticized Mayweather for not accepting a rematch clause in his contract, accusing him of retiring at the right time and coming back to avoid it.
If that were the case, the American icon could face similar accusations in 2026, as it increasingly looks like Pacquiao’s rematch – despite his comments – is in jeopardy.
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