William Scull will return to fight super middleweight contender Jacob Bank on January 31, 2026 at the Sydbank Arena in Kolding, Denmark.
This is the first fight of former IBF 168-b champion Scull (23-1, 9 KO) since his first career defeat against Canelo Alvarez on May 3, 2025 in Riyad. This fight was much closer than the two judges indicated. The scores were 115–113, 116–112 and 119–109.
He beat Canelo – just ask him
In terms of power, speed and offensive weapons, Cuban Scull looked more impressive than what Terence Crawford showed in his narrow 12-round unanimous decision victory over Canelo on September 13. Scull believes he has done enough to deserve this decision against Canelo, but the judges didn’t treat him like Crawford.
The diamond is still in the coarse
Scull showed significantly more power, speed and technical ability than Bud Crawford. He looked like a diamond in the coarse who needed just one minor improvement in his game to beat Alvarez that night. Scull was more physically gifted than Crawford and was a better fit for the 168-pound weight class.
Scull failed when he chose to constantly move rather than stand his ground and operate his quick combos to defeat Alvarez. When Scull stopped and started fighting, he was better than Canelo in virtually every exchange. This was undoubtedly one of the reasons why the Mexican star was reluctant to cut off the ring to force the highly mobile player to mix it with him.
Bank: Danish test
Scull is ranked No. 9 in the IBF rankings at 168 and needs to defeat 24-year-old Dane Bank to move up the rankings a little closer to making his biggest fights. Bank is 4th in the WBO ranking, 12th in the WBC and on September 13, 2025 in Denmark, he wins by knockout in the fifth round against former WBA 168-pound champion Tyron Zeuge.
“The loss to Canelo was an experience that made me stronger. I learned a lot, and now I’m back, more focused and determined than ever,” said William Scull, recalling his loss to Canelo Alvarez earlier this year on May 3.
“Jacob Bank is a teenage, hungry boxer, but I will show him that experience and class make a difference.”
Tom Galm has been covering the global boxing scene since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, business trends and fighter psychology.