If he's not ready for him now then he never will be. There's been a full Olympic cycle since him. It shows a real lack in confidence in him if they duck.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 06:04I don't think he's ready for him mickey, it's a fight for a 12/18 months time IMO. We've got this unpolished gem who needs to learn the craft of professional boxing and there is ZERO need to rush him.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 04:59Do you think he'll duck Buatsi?keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑03 Dec 2025, 17:09
It's Whittaker's career. He and his team should decide who they fight and when.
Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
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mickey1975
- Heavyweight

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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
It looks similar to Itauma, they keep talking about beating the big names but they're not willing to fight them. They'd rather crush cans and use other names to boost their views.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 09:38If he's not ready for him now then he never will be. There's been a full Olympic cycle since him. It shows a real lack in confidence in him if they duck.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 06:04I don't think he's ready for him mickey, it's a fight for a 12/18 months time IMO. We've got this unpolished gem who needs to learn the craft of professional boxing and there is ZERO need to rush him.
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keithmoonhangover
- Cruiserweight
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Amateur boxing and professional boxing are different disciplines. If you want an example of that, just watch Orlando Salido beat Vasyl Lomachenko. There is no better example than that.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 09:38If he's not ready for him now then he never will be. There's been a full Olympic cycle since him. It shows a real lack in confidence in him if they duck.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 06:04I don't think he's ready for him mickey, it's a fight for a 12/18 months time IMO. We've got this unpolished gem who needs to learn the craft of professional boxing and there is ZERO need to rush him.
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mickey1975
- Heavyweight

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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Loma won the world title in his next fight against a very good champion. Aj took a year out and still won a World title by the time of the next Olympics. Buatsi is British level.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:00Amateur boxing and professional boxing are different disciplines. If you want an example of that, just watch Orlando Salido beat Vasyl Lomachenko. There is no better example than that.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 09:38If he's not ready for him now then he never will be. There's been a full Olympic cycle since him. It shows a real lack in confidence in him if they duck.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 06:04
I don't think he's ready for him mickey, it's a fight for a 12/18 months time IMO. We've got this unpolished gem who needs to learn the craft of professional boxing and there is ZERO need to rush him.
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keithmoonhangover
- Cruiserweight
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Loma lost his second fight, don't just ignore that. If you think Ben's ready, good for you. I was giving you my opinion.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:05Loma won the world title in his next fight against a very good champion. Aj took a year out and still won a World title by the time of the next Olympics. Buatsi is British level.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:00Amateur boxing and professional boxing are different disciplines. If you want an example of that, just watch Orlando Salido beat Vasyl Lomachenko. There is no better example than that.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 09:38
If he's not ready for him now then he never will be. There's been a full Olympic cycle since him. It shows a real lack in confidence in him if they duck.
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mickey1975
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 22936
- Joined: 02 Mar 2009, 12:54
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Ok. No problem. He won it in the third though and had his learning curve in his second. Ben had his against Cameron. He's in his prime and is boxing guys like the other night? They must be waiting for the top 3 to move on.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:58Loma lost his second fight, don't just ignore that. If you think Ben's ready, good for you. I was giving you my opinion.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:05Loma won the world title in his next fight against a very good champion. Aj took a year out and still won a World title by the time of the next Olympics. Buatsi is British level.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:00
Amateur boxing and professional boxing are different disciplines. If you want an example of that, just watch Orlando Salido beat Vasyl Lomachenko. There is no better example than that.
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keithmoonhangover
- Cruiserweight
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
If you were his manager would you put him in with Buatsi and then Benavidez in his next two fights?mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 11:06Ok. No problem. He won it in the third though and had his learning curve in his second. Ben had his against Cameron. He's in his prime and is boxing guys like the other night? They must be waiting for the top 3 to move on.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:58Loma lost his second fight, don't just ignore that. If you think Ben's ready, good for you. I was giving you my opinion.mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:05
Loma won the world title in his next fight against a very good champion. Aj took a year out and still won a World title by the time of the next Olympics. Buatsi is British level.
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mickey1975
- Heavyweight

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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Definitely Buatsi. I don't think Hearn even cares about making money with him, though. He's just a pawn in his weird obsession with Shalom.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 11:52If you were his manager would you put him in with Buatsi and then Benavidez in his next two fights?mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 11:06Ok. No problem. He won it in the third though and had his learning curve in his second. Ben had his against Cameron. He's in his prime and is boxing guys like the other night? They must be waiting for the top 3 to move on.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 10:58
Loma lost his second fight, don't just ignore that. If you think Ben's ready, good for you. I was giving you my opinion.
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
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Grilling Machine
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 3152
- Joined: 16 Sep 2005, 02:28
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Kraus-Whittaker is such a natural fight to make in the near future. That's how we know it won't happen.
Kraus has shown power, a good chin and sharp timing, but there's a question mark over his stamina and his fundamentals are lacking. He slightly reminds me of Danny McIntosh. If he couldn't flatten Whittaker early doors I think he might fade to a points loss.
The marketing's already been done for Clash of the Egos.
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
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- Joined: 12 Feb 2022, 12:45
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
That’s a blast from the past in comparisons I remember him winning the European titleGrilling Machine wrote: ↑08 Dec 2025, 03:27Kraus-Whittaker is such a natural fight to make in the near future. That's how we know it won't happen.
Kraus has shown power, a good chin and sharp timing, but there's a question mark over his stamina and his fundamentals are lacking. He slightly reminds me of Danny McIntosh. If he couldn't flatten Whittaker early doors I think he might fade to a points loss.
The marketing's already been done for Clash of the Egos.
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Think you may have a good point there , Hearn seems obsessed with Shalom , sort of makes me wonder what if he's worried about his upcoming Dazn renewal , , but regards Whittaker i agree with you if he's not ready for British level , he's got no chance against the top dogs , Think Hearn is gonna follow Franks footsteps , wait until he can hustle and jostle for a minute belt then defend against sub standard opposition Franks done it and mastered it for years , Hearn maybee learning a trick or two off the old dogmickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 12:36Definitely Buatsi. I don't think Hearn even cares about making money with him, though. He's just a pawn in his weird obsession with Shalom.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 11:52If you were his manager would you put him in with Buatsi and then Benavidez in his next two fights?mickey1975 wrote: ↑04 Dec 2025, 11:06
Ok. No problem. He won it in the third though and had his learning curve in his second. Ben had his against Cameron. He's in his prime and is boxing guys like the other night? They must be waiting for the top 3 to move on.
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TheLeprechaun
- Middleweight
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- Joined: 27 Jun 2013, 20:42
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
It's hard to assess Whitakers level. He went out very quickly against Cameron the first time and we have learned nothing since. He has a pretty quick trigger right hand and can land it and hurt guys who don't have great reflexes. We knew that already before his last two fights. His stamina, durability and heart still have big question marks. You could argue that they are known quantities after that first Cameron fight.
Since Buatsi was mentioned, I thought about it and I'd take Whitaker if I could rely on his stamina, durability and heart but because Buatsi has a pound for pound chin in my book, it's going to get hard for Whitaker in there. But Buatsi can be easily outboxed and has to resort to front foot plodding with a leaky defence while doing it. Whitakers snap right hand will land and hurt him probably but Buatsi just has the staying power to stay in there and what is it going to look like when Whitaker is going into the 7th, 8th, 9th rounds of a tough fight...
Since Buatsi was mentioned, I thought about it and I'd take Whitaker if I could rely on his stamina, durability and heart but because Buatsi has a pound for pound chin in my book, it's going to get hard for Whitaker in there. But Buatsi can be easily outboxed and has to resort to front foot plodding with a leaky defence while doing it. Whitakers snap right hand will land and hurt him probably but Buatsi just has the staying power to stay in there and what is it going to look like when Whitaker is going into the 7th, 8th, 9th rounds of a tough fight...
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Am i being outrageous saying clearly ben
whittaker is a massive loss to boxxer but i feel he is a front foot fighter and as soon as he is put under pressure he will unravel … i only have the cameron foghfight as evidence
whittaker is a massive loss to boxxer but i feel he is a front foot fighter and as soon as he is put under pressure he will unravel … i only have the cameron foghfight as evidence
Last edited by Spud MK2 on 09 Dec 2025, 09:36, edited 1 time in total.
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TheLeprechaun
- Middleweight
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
We don't really know if Whitaker even can improve his stamina. He could be a serious force if he has.
Changing his entire set up to Andy Lee is encouraging but his heart looks suspect. The problem for me in that first Cameron fight was that it looked like he ran out of gas. That will make a coward out of many a fighter. Im not sure his actual punch resistance is that bad. He has good power and is dangerous for anyone. A Mark Jeffers fight would be good next. Zak Chelli is english champ and I think thats a fight where Whitaker can land his right hand and get Chelli going.
Changing his entire set up to Andy Lee is encouraging but his heart looks suspect. The problem for me in that first Cameron fight was that it looked like he ran out of gas. That will make a coward out of many a fighter. Im not sure his actual punch resistance is that bad. He has good power and is dangerous for anyone. A Mark Jeffers fight would be good next. Zak Chelli is english champ and I think thats a fight where Whitaker can land his right hand and get Chelli going.
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
TheLeprechaun wrote: ↑09 Dec 2025, 09:15 It's hard to assess Whitakers level. He went out very quickly against Cameron the first time and we have learned nothing since. He has a pretty quick trigger right hand and can land it and hurt guys who don't have great reflexes. We knew that already before his last two fights. His stamina, durability and heart still have big question marks. You could argue that they are known quantities after that first Cameron fight.
Since Buatsi was mentioned, I thought about it and I'd take Whitaker if I could rely on his stamina, durability and heart but because Buatsi has a pound for pound chin in my book, it's going to get hard for Whitaker in there. But Buatsi can be easily outboxed and has to resort to front foot plodding with a leaky defence while doing it. Whitakers snap right hand will land and hurt him probably but Buatsi just has the staying power to stay in there and what is it going to look like when Whitaker is going into the 7th, 8th, 9th rounds of a tough fight...
[/quot
Quality post .. boxing debate at
last!!
i am hoping Adam smith commentates all of
his foghts![]()
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Spud MK2 wrote: ↑09 Dec 2025, 09:46Big massive IF that seems unlikely from what we've seen so far...?TheLeprechaun wrote: ↑09 Dec 2025, 09:15 It's hard to assess Whitakers level. He went out very quickly against Cameron the first time and we have learned nothing since. He has a pretty quick trigger right hand and can land it and hurt guys who don't have great reflexes. We knew that already before his last two fights. His stamina, durability and heart still have big question marks. You could argue that they are known quantities after that first Cameron fight.
Since Buatsi was mentioned, I thought about it and I'd take Whitaker if I could rely on his stamina, durability and heart but because Buatsi has a pound for pound chin in my book, it's going to get hard for Whitaker in there. But Buatsi can be easily outboxed and has to resort to front foot plodding with a leaky defence while doing it. Whitakers snap right hand will land and hurt him probably but Buatsi just has the staying power to stay in there and what is it going to look like when Whitaker is going into the 7th, 8th, 9th rounds of a tough fight...
[/quot
Quality post .. boxing debate at
last!!
i am hoping Adam smith commentates all of
his foghts![]()
![]()
TBF altho' the Cam1 performance was alarming and will hang over him for years...
He did gut it out and find a way not to lose ! Of course it was skanky gamesmanship and everything else and we're right to be worried, but he found an out and has won 2 in a row in good style.
Could it be we're overstating one 'bad night at the office'..?
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
The WBC have cancelled their order for a light-heavyweight final eliminator between Joshua Buatsi and Ben Whittaker, due to silver champion obligations for Whittaker.
Whittaker became WBC ‘silver’ champion with a first-round knockout victory over Benjamin Gavazi last month.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
wtf obligations does a silver champion have?
Doesn’t a final eliminator take priority.. and who said silver champion means much,
They treating it like it’s a world champion
Doesn’t a final eliminator take priority.. and who said silver champion means much,
They treating it like it’s a world champion
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Come on nobody wants to lose the Silver glory!Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑12 Dec 2025, 11:04 wtf obligations does a silver champion have?
Doesn’t a final eliminator take priority.. and who said silver champion means much,
They treating it like it’s a world champion
Bonkers isn’t it.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
The decision to cancel a final elimination bout due to silver title obligations has left some fans scratching their heads, given that most boxers fight for the silver title in order to earn a final eliminator in the first place.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Ben Whittaker: My mentality is changing with Andy Lee
Light heavyweight contender Ben Whittaker is growing as a fighter, learning under his new trainer and wants to bag more experience in 2026 before he faces the best fighters in the world.
After just 11 bouts, the Olympic silver medallist is being linked to fights against some of the division’s biggest names, and while Whittaker is flashy, brash, and confident, he knows enough about the sport – and is modest enough – to admit he needs more seasoning before he moves a lot further up the ladder.
Whittaker was last week at the IBA Pro event in Dubai and he took in the IBA amateur World Championships.
“It's quite good,” he said, of being in Dubai. “There's a lot going on, but as an amateur I fought in it, so it's good to be back and see some of the kids that I've fought compete for the medals.”
Whittaker turned pro after claiming silver in the 2020 Olympics, and this year has moved from Boxxer to Matchroom, whom he boxed for the first time for last month, wiping out Benjamin Gavazi in a round.
“It was good, it was needed,” Whittaker told Boxing Scene.
“I've only had to include two fights this year, it’s been an inactive year, so hopefully next year, start stepping up a little bit, then we'll see from there.”
It was not all good for Whittaker, however. While he was at the bp PULSE Live Arena in Birmingham to round off his 2025, which has seen him get around seven minutes of ring time, his house was broken into.
Whittaker, 10-0-1 (7 KOs), immediately appeared on social media offering a reward for those who could help him find the perpetrators.
“We got a couple of names, but at the end of the day, it shows you're doing something right when people want to do things like that, sadly,” he explained.
“We obviously won, I had to do all the media, drug testing, then my brother's girlfriend drove past and said all the lights are on and the police are there, so then I had to go back.”
Critics said Whittaker shouldn’t have been paired with the Italian, who was overmatched, but the prospect was just happy to get some more ring time, despite the brevity.
“Yeah, well, it's only overmatched, as people say, because I'm so good,” Whittaker added. “At the end of the day, he was 19-1. Some people's 11th fight [it was Whittaker’s 11th fight], they fought a lot worse. I just went out there, put on a very dominant performance, and I made the levels look different. So for me, I did what I was supposed to do, and we'll see what happens next year.”
Matchroom has clearly been delighted with their high-profile acquisition. In a sport driven by numbers, Whittaker’s socials are comparable with many at the top of the food chain. Boxxer, however, since parting ways with Sky, have linked up with the BBC. Was that a lure for Whittaker to stay?
“Yeah, it's a very good platform, but for me, I think anywhere I go, I can do some numbers,” Whittaker continued. “But it's not about the numbers now for me, it's about progressing in my career, being active and start winning belts.”
It started with Gavazi and once Whittaker had sorted the mess out at his home, he visited Japan again.
“It's like a second home, really,” he said. “A lot of people show me love there, the culture's good, they're very respectful. And it's the first time I've really had a vacation, really. So I had a little break, I'm out here [in Dubai] for a couple of days, then I'm back to the gym on Monday, so all good. I’ll be back at home, I do my first little block with my brother, so I do my S&C, sharpen up on some things there. I always like to go to [trainer] Andy [Lee in Ireland] in some sort of shape, so he's not killing me so much. I'm going to get into some sort of shape, then come January, I'll be over in Ireland.”
Whittaker has had two fights with Lee in the corner. Firstly, he wiped out Liam Cameron in their rematch. Then, came Gavazi – another quick win. And Whittaker can feel himself change with Lee’s guidance.
“Yeah, 100 per cent. I think my last two fights have showed that I still can mess around in there, I still can be flamboyant and showboat,” said Whittaker. “But if, like people said, the levels are different, why mess around and not get them out of there? Really, with Benjamin Gavazi, the old me would have probably made it four or five rounds, play around, get some clips, but I thought, ‘Let's just get him out of there.’ So my mentality’s changing a little bit, and it shows I can punch as well.”
And while Whittaker is preparing for them to take on the world, he is patient and knows that, after just 11 fights, he has plenty of time. His domestic rivals are getting older, too. He might or might not face the likes of Anthony Yarde and Joshua Buatsi – both promoted by Matchroom competitors Queensberry – but Whittaker admits he wants to get more experience.
“I've got the skill, but it's down to this, that's why I've joined Eddie, and I think he's a person, he's professional, he knows the game, he knows when to step you up, when to move you right,” Whittaker explained.
“And for me, all I can do is just keep working hard and beat who's in front of me. But I'd say I'm in a good position, I'm 28. For the weight division, I'm pretty young compared to the other guys, they're like 34, 35. So, if it's a crossroads fight, if it's a 5v5 or something like that, I'll be there, really. The end goal is to become a world champion. That's the main thing I set out to do. Anything other than that's a bonus.”
There are, however, other goals Whittaker has in mind. He wants to perform on the biggest stages and inside boxing’s most iconic venues.
“Just off the top of my head now, I'd like to fight in America, of course, Madison Square Garden, or MGM’s my favourite. But anywhere in America would be good, and start building it from there,” he continued. “I'd love to fight in Tokyo, maybe the Tokyo Dome, or do some fights where the Olympic final was. I'd like to go back there. I'd like to fight in Brazil, I've got a big following there. I'd like to just go all over the globe for me, it'd be good. Different styles, different coaches, different people, I'd like to tick all them boxes.”
Whittaker leans into his divisiveness. His highlight reels, showmanship and knockouts have seen his social media channels hit seven figures.
Does he feel he’s winning the public round?
“At the end of the day, I'm just being me,” he added.
“There's one thing that I like about myself – not to blow my own trumpet – but I'm just being me. You've seen me down there [in Dubai], I've done no interviews. I'm just watching the boxing. I don't really like to be in front of the camera, really. So if people get the real side of me, they'll understand me. If they don't, they don't. But as long as I'm winning and they want to turn up and watch me fight, that's the main thing. I've never been really disrespectful to people. I'm just going there. I've got a different style. I'm flashy. I like to showboat. But at the end of the fight, I shake the hand, I talk to the opponent. I don't know what else I can do. But at the end of the day, as long as I'm winning, as long as they're talking, you're doing something right.”
Whittaker signing with Matchroom saw the Jerry Maguire-style video blow up, with promoter Eddie Hearn screaming down the phone, “Show me the money.”
The introduction went viral.
“I'm in a good position, I've got a good platform, but I've still got to keep winning, keep performing. A hundred per cent [it caught the imagination]. There's only certain people that can do that and I think the match-up with Eddie Hearn, it worked out good, it came out good. A lot of people liked it and hopefully we can do some more.”
Light heavyweight contender Ben Whittaker is growing as a fighter, learning under his new trainer and wants to bag more experience in 2026 before he faces the best fighters in the world.
After just 11 bouts, the Olympic silver medallist is being linked to fights against some of the division’s biggest names, and while Whittaker is flashy, brash, and confident, he knows enough about the sport – and is modest enough – to admit he needs more seasoning before he moves a lot further up the ladder.
Whittaker was last week at the IBA Pro event in Dubai and he took in the IBA amateur World Championships.
“It's quite good,” he said, of being in Dubai. “There's a lot going on, but as an amateur I fought in it, so it's good to be back and see some of the kids that I've fought compete for the medals.”
Whittaker turned pro after claiming silver in the 2020 Olympics, and this year has moved from Boxxer to Matchroom, whom he boxed for the first time for last month, wiping out Benjamin Gavazi in a round.
“It was good, it was needed,” Whittaker told Boxing Scene.
“I've only had to include two fights this year, it’s been an inactive year, so hopefully next year, start stepping up a little bit, then we'll see from there.”
It was not all good for Whittaker, however. While he was at the bp PULSE Live Arena in Birmingham to round off his 2025, which has seen him get around seven minutes of ring time, his house was broken into.
Whittaker, 10-0-1 (7 KOs), immediately appeared on social media offering a reward for those who could help him find the perpetrators.
“We got a couple of names, but at the end of the day, it shows you're doing something right when people want to do things like that, sadly,” he explained.
“We obviously won, I had to do all the media, drug testing, then my brother's girlfriend drove past and said all the lights are on and the police are there, so then I had to go back.”
Critics said Whittaker shouldn’t have been paired with the Italian, who was overmatched, but the prospect was just happy to get some more ring time, despite the brevity.
“Yeah, well, it's only overmatched, as people say, because I'm so good,” Whittaker added. “At the end of the day, he was 19-1. Some people's 11th fight [it was Whittaker’s 11th fight], they fought a lot worse. I just went out there, put on a very dominant performance, and I made the levels look different. So for me, I did what I was supposed to do, and we'll see what happens next year.”
Matchroom has clearly been delighted with their high-profile acquisition. In a sport driven by numbers, Whittaker’s socials are comparable with many at the top of the food chain. Boxxer, however, since parting ways with Sky, have linked up with the BBC. Was that a lure for Whittaker to stay?
“Yeah, it's a very good platform, but for me, I think anywhere I go, I can do some numbers,” Whittaker continued. “But it's not about the numbers now for me, it's about progressing in my career, being active and start winning belts.”
It started with Gavazi and once Whittaker had sorted the mess out at his home, he visited Japan again.
“It's like a second home, really,” he said. “A lot of people show me love there, the culture's good, they're very respectful. And it's the first time I've really had a vacation, really. So I had a little break, I'm out here [in Dubai] for a couple of days, then I'm back to the gym on Monday, so all good. I’ll be back at home, I do my first little block with my brother, so I do my S&C, sharpen up on some things there. I always like to go to [trainer] Andy [Lee in Ireland] in some sort of shape, so he's not killing me so much. I'm going to get into some sort of shape, then come January, I'll be over in Ireland.”
Whittaker has had two fights with Lee in the corner. Firstly, he wiped out Liam Cameron in their rematch. Then, came Gavazi – another quick win. And Whittaker can feel himself change with Lee’s guidance.
“Yeah, 100 per cent. I think my last two fights have showed that I still can mess around in there, I still can be flamboyant and showboat,” said Whittaker. “But if, like people said, the levels are different, why mess around and not get them out of there? Really, with Benjamin Gavazi, the old me would have probably made it four or five rounds, play around, get some clips, but I thought, ‘Let's just get him out of there.’ So my mentality’s changing a little bit, and it shows I can punch as well.”
And while Whittaker is preparing for them to take on the world, he is patient and knows that, after just 11 fights, he has plenty of time. His domestic rivals are getting older, too. He might or might not face the likes of Anthony Yarde and Joshua Buatsi – both promoted by Matchroom competitors Queensberry – but Whittaker admits he wants to get more experience.
“I've got the skill, but it's down to this, that's why I've joined Eddie, and I think he's a person, he's professional, he knows the game, he knows when to step you up, when to move you right,” Whittaker explained.
“And for me, all I can do is just keep working hard and beat who's in front of me. But I'd say I'm in a good position, I'm 28. For the weight division, I'm pretty young compared to the other guys, they're like 34, 35. So, if it's a crossroads fight, if it's a 5v5 or something like that, I'll be there, really. The end goal is to become a world champion. That's the main thing I set out to do. Anything other than that's a bonus.”
There are, however, other goals Whittaker has in mind. He wants to perform on the biggest stages and inside boxing’s most iconic venues.
“Just off the top of my head now, I'd like to fight in America, of course, Madison Square Garden, or MGM’s my favourite. But anywhere in America would be good, and start building it from there,” he continued. “I'd love to fight in Tokyo, maybe the Tokyo Dome, or do some fights where the Olympic final was. I'd like to go back there. I'd like to fight in Brazil, I've got a big following there. I'd like to just go all over the globe for me, it'd be good. Different styles, different coaches, different people, I'd like to tick all them boxes.”
Whittaker leans into his divisiveness. His highlight reels, showmanship and knockouts have seen his social media channels hit seven figures.
Does he feel he’s winning the public round?
“At the end of the day, I'm just being me,” he added.
“There's one thing that I like about myself – not to blow my own trumpet – but I'm just being me. You've seen me down there [in Dubai], I've done no interviews. I'm just watching the boxing. I don't really like to be in front of the camera, really. So if people get the real side of me, they'll understand me. If they don't, they don't. But as long as I'm winning and they want to turn up and watch me fight, that's the main thing. I've never been really disrespectful to people. I'm just going there. I've got a different style. I'm flashy. I like to showboat. But at the end of the fight, I shake the hand, I talk to the opponent. I don't know what else I can do. But at the end of the day, as long as I'm winning, as long as they're talking, you're doing something right.”
Whittaker signing with Matchroom saw the Jerry Maguire-style video blow up, with promoter Eddie Hearn screaming down the phone, “Show me the money.”
The introduction went viral.
“I'm in a good position, I've got a good platform, but I've still got to keep winning, keep performing. A hundred per cent [it caught the imagination]. There's only certain people that can do that and I think the match-up with Eddie Hearn, it worked out good, it came out good. A lot of people liked it and hopefully we can do some more.”
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johnmanchester
- Light Flyweight
- Posts: 245
- Joined: 12 May 2025, 04:36
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Whittaker pro career has been criminally mismanaged. He's so far behind where he should be.
Some of these Olympians who signed with Boxxer have ended up in similar positions - inactive, and /or arriving late to the levels they should be at.
Artingstall has been so inactive she's actually looking to re enter the amateur pool and go for another Olympics! Her pro outings have been so few that she still qualifies.
Some of these Olympians who signed with Boxxer have ended up in similar positions - inactive, and /or arriving late to the levels they should be at.
Artingstall has been so inactive she's actually looking to re enter the amateur pool and go for another Olympics! Her pro outings have been so few that she still qualifies.
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TheLeprechaun
- Middleweight
- Posts: 5135
- Joined: 27 Jun 2013, 20:42
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
Those Artingstall 6 rounders remind me of the glory days of early Bradley Skeete stinking out a joint on boxnacion
Re: Ben Whittaker signs with Matchroom
what a truly outstanding post full of knowledge andjohnmanchester wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025, 10:13 Whittaker pro career has been criminally mismanaged. He's so far behind where he should be.
Some of these Olympians who signed with Boxxer have ended up in similar positions - inactive, and /or arriving late to the levels they should be at.
Artingstall has been so inactive she's actually looking to re enter the amateur pool and go for another Olympics! Her pro outings have been so few that she still qualifies.
fact.