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Usyk Vacates: Implications for the Heavyweight Divisions Future
Published
1 week agoon
Oleksandr Usyk didn’t retire. He did something even more revealing. By vacating every heavyweight title while promising one final “Last Dance,” the unbeaten Ukrainian may have just told the boxing world exactly how he intends to finish his career.
Usyk announced on Friday that he is relinquishing all of his heavyweight championships, clearing the way for the contenders waiting behind him to fight for the vacant belts.
“I want to leave all my belts that I own today, to make them vacant, so that the guys who are standing in line can box for them,” said Usyk.
However, the unified champion made one point equally clear.
“I am leaving the belts, but I am not leaving the sport because I have a Last Dance.”
The announcement immediately changed the direction of the heavyweight division.
Last Dance
Only a day earlier, World Boxing News outlined Usyk’s three realistic options.
He could defend against WBC mandatory challenger Agit Kabayel, pursue the lucrative Rico Verhoeven rematch, or retire.
Instead, he walked away from every championship while confirming his career isn’t over.
Had Usyk planned to face Kabayel, go for undisputed with Daniel Dubois again or any other challenger, there was little reason to surrender every belt. He could have retained at least part of his unified championship while completing his career.
In the process, Usyk removed every sanctioning body, every mandatory obligation and every deadline from the equation.
His farewell will now be fought entirely on his own terms.
What It Means
The decision also reshapes the heavyweight division overnight.
Agit Kabayel is expected to be elevated from WBC interim champion to full world champion after waiting years for his opportunity.
The WBA picture could also move quickly, with Moses Itauma vs Filip Hrgovic among the leading candidates to contest the vacant title later this year.
The IBF route appears more complicated. Frank Sanchez currently sits at number one in the rankings, but without a mandatory challenger in place and no number two-ranked contender, the organization has decisions to make before its championship picture becomes clear.

For weeks, WBN has reported that a rematch with Rico Verhoeven remained one of the biggest opportunities available to Usyk despite the complications surrounding his heavyweight reign.
Following their controversial meeting beneath the Pyramids of Giza, Verhoeven repeatedly called for the chance to finish the story after the eleventh-round stoppage denied fans a final round.
The obstacle was never the belts themselves. It was whether Usyk could choose Verhoeven without sacrificing the championships tied to mandatory obligations.
Today, that obstacle disappeared.
By vacating every title, Usyk has given himself complete freedom to select the opponent for his farewell without answering to any sanctioning body.
Whether that final chapter belongs to Verhoeven or another surprise remains to be seen.
With Turki Alalshikh continuing to control boxing’s biggest events, it would be no surprise if a significant offer emerged to finally complete one of the sport’s most controversial heavyweight fights.
Oleksandr Usyk didn’t give up every belt because he was finished. He gave them up because only one thing matters now: the Last Dance.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a veteran boxing reporter with 15+ years of experience. He has interviewed world champions, broken international exclusives, and reported ringside since 2010. Read full bio.
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Anthony Joshuas Top Two Career Wins Amid Retirement Talks | Boxing News
Published
4 hours agoon
July 4, 2026
Anthony Joshua has named the two standout wins of his career, remembering the immense pressure attached to both contests.
In terms of magnitude, it must be said that his showdown with Wladimir Klitschko was the most significant, given the manner in which it unfolded at Wembley Stadium.
At the time, in April 2017, Joshua was the unbeaten IBF champion and had won every fight by stoppage, swiftly becoming the biggest star in British boxing.
Klitschko, meanwhile, had not fought since getting dethroned by Tyson Furywho upset the odds by scoring a unanimous decision victory when they collided in November 2015.
Yet the Ukrainian was still a serviceable operator at world level and, after getting dropped in round five, he stunned the Wembley crowd by flooring Joshua in the following frame.
‘AJ’ then ultimately scored an 11th-round stoppage and, given the manner in which he did so, was able to reach a new level of stardom.
During a conversation with Matchroom’s Eddie Hearn and Frank Smith on DAZNthough, the 36-year-old named wins over Dillian Whyte and Andy Ruiz Jr as his absolute best.
“Klitschko – a lot of pressure. Ruiz 2 – immense pressure. But what was the best win? Can I pick two?
“I would probably pick Dillian Whyte – maddest fight. Good, good scrap. And then [I would pick] Ruiz 2, because people were saying I should retire and that, if I didn’t win, I’d have no chance of getting back in the heavyweight rankings.”
Joshua stopped Whyte in round seven of their all-British grudge match in 2015, before exacting his revenge over Ruiz just under four years later.
After losing their first encounter via a major upset, which resulted in a sixth-round stoppage, ‘AJ’ kept to a strict gameplan and unanimously outpointed his Mexican-American rival.
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Anthony Joshua Aims to Dominate Kristian Prenga and Reassert His Wrecking Machine Status
Published
7 hours agoon
July 4, 2026

“I want to hurt him,” Joshua said to DAZN Boxing when discussing the fight. “It’s not nothing to do with him. It’s just me. It’s just I believe in myself, and I know I can do it, and I want to prove to myself I’m a serious wrecking machine. I got dynamite in both hands, and I want to punch with bad intentions.”
Joshua said his comments were not personal toward Prenga.
“You got to take him out. You got to have the right mindset, the know-how and have full belief in yourself,” Joshua said.
The 36-year-old also acknowledged that the pressure surrounding the fight extends beyond his opponent. Joshua said he feels responsibility to perform, secure a victory and move on to the marquee fight he has targeted next.
“I want to perform. I want to win. I want to fight Fury,” Joshua said. “I’ve got an obligation to my fans.”
Earlier in the interview, Joshua admitted that it has been difficult not to think beyond Prenga because of the opportunities that could follow.
“It is on Prenga, but it’s also on Fury because I want it all,” Joshua said. “I’ve mentioned in this interview now, undisputed, world champion, Prenga, Fury, I want it all.”
Joshua faces Prenga on July 25 in what is expected to be a tune-up ahead of a potential showdown with Tyson Fury later this year.
A convincing performance would keep those plans on track, but Joshua made it clear that he is aiming to send a stronger message than simply winning. Joshua meets Prenga on July 25 in Saudi Arabia. A victory is expected to move him toward the Tyson Fury fight he repeatedly discussed during the interview.

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Jack Dempsey Defeats Tommy Gibbons in Tactical Heavyweight Title Defense on July 4, 1923
Published
7 hours agoon
July 4, 2026

Dempsey arrived in Shelby as boxing’s biggest star and a champion known for finishing challengers inside the distance. Gibbons, meanwhile, was regarded as one of the sport’s finest boxers, relying on timing, movement and defense rather than knockout power.
The championship was awarded to Shelby, Montana, an oil-boom town hoping to transform itself into a major sporting destination. Local businessmen financed a massive wooden stadium with room for approximately 40,000 spectators and guaranteed enormous purses to lure Dempsey into defending his title there. It proved to be one of boxing’s greatest promotional miscalculations.
As expected, Dempsey immediately took the center of the ring and marched toward Gibbons, looking to end matters early. A hard right hand landed flush and briefly stunned the challenger, forcing Gibbons to tie up repeatedly while regaining his composure.
Although Dempsey controlled the opening session, Gibbons survived the champion’s early assault without going down.
Gibbons quickly showed why he had earned a title opportunity. Rather than exchanging punches, he relied on movement, defense and well-timed clinches to frustrate Dempsey.
During the second round, Gibbons opened a cut near Dempsey’s eye, giving the champion an unexpected problem. The challenger slipped punches, landed occasional counters and repeatedly smothered Dempsey before the champion could unleash his trademark combinations.
The pace became far more tactical than fans had anticipated. The middle rounds belonged to strategy more than violence.
Dempsey continued stalking forward, throwing hooks and rights whenever Gibbons stood still long enough to exchange. Gibbons answered by circling, clinching and targeting the body while making the champion miss far more often than usual.
Round seven produced one of the fight’s biggest moments when Dempsey finally trapped Gibbons against the ropes and landed several heavy punches that appeared to have the challenger in trouble. Gibbons weathered the storm, tied Dempsey up and escaped without suffering a knockdown.
Years later, Dempsey admitted landing cleanly on Gibbons had been exceptionally difficult, comparing the task to “threading a needle in a high wind.”
Knowing the fight was closer than expected, Dempsey increased his urgency over the championship rounds.
He enjoyed one of his best stretches in the 11th, landing several clean punches that momentarily slowed Gibbons. The challenger, however, refused to wilt. He continued slipping shots, countering when opportunities arose and surviving every exchange.
By the 15th and final round, Dempsey pressed hard for the knockout that never came, throwing combinations and forcing the action until the final bell.
For the first time in Dempsey’s heavyweight title reign, an opponent had lasted the full distance. Remarkably, neither fighter was knocked down during the entire contest.
Referee Jack “Jim” Dougherty awarded Dempsey a unanimous decision after 15 rounds, allowing the champion to retain the undisputed heavyweight championship in his fourth successful title defense.
Although Dempsey won convincingly on points, the performance generated criticism because many fans expected another devastating knockout. Gibbons, meanwhile, emerged with his reputation significantly enhanced after becoming the first heavyweight to hear the final bell against the champion.
The lasting story extended far beyond the ring. Despite months of promotion, only about 7,200 paying spectators attended the event, leaving thousands of empty seats inside the newly built stadium. Many others watched without purchasing tickets from nearby hills overlooking the arena.
The disappointing gate fell well short of covering the enormous financial guarantees promised to Dempsey and those involved in staging the event. Shelby’s investors suffered devastating losses, several local banks eventually failed, and the town’s dream of becoming a major boxing destination disappeared almost overnight.
Gibbons returned to Minnesota as a hometown hero and later defeated Georges Carpentier before retiring several years afterward. Dempsey remained heavyweight champion until losing the title to Gene Tunney in 1926.
More than a century later, Dempsey vs. Gibbons remains one of boxing’s most memorable championship bouts—not because of a spectacular knockout, but because it combined an outstanding technical performance by Gibbons with one of the sport’s greatest promotional and financial collapses.

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