Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 23 May 2026, 15:32

Usyk - Decision
12
20%
Usyk - T/KO
37
63%
DRAW
1
2%
Verhoeven - T/KO
8
14%
Verhoeven - Decision
1
2%
 
Total votes: 59

KiwiRider
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by KiwiRider »

gilgamesh wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 01:59
keithmoonhangover wrote: 02 Mar 2026, 06:32
gilgamesh wrote: 01 Mar 2026, 19:33 You all need a swift kick in the gonads for not appreciating this matchup. Hopefully you people give this fight its props after it exceeds your expectations.
OK, you think this is a better match up than me, so I'll ask you a question. How many rounds do you think Verhoeven will win?
Anywhere between 1 to 3
I predict some padding to the proceedings.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by londonwar »

An embarrassing state of affairs.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Cyclops »

KiwiRider wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 03:20
gilgamesh wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 01:59
keithmoonhangover wrote: 02 Mar 2026, 06:32

OK, you think this is a better match up than me, so I'll ask you a question. How many rounds do you think Verhoeven will win?
Anywhere between 1 to 3
I predict some padding to the proceedings.
I reckon Usyk will follow the same plan he did with Tony Bellew. Let Verhoeven box out of his skin and make him think he's actually competitive for a few rounds while chucking out the occasional arm punch and jabbing at air to give the illusion of activity, then turn the screw and highlight-reel KO him when you're satisfied he's knackered.

Kickboxers don't fight many rounds do they? The safest way to win against one in boxing is to stay away for as long as they're used to and then drown them.

I don't bet and I'm unlikely to be watching this but if I did, and if I was, I would bet on mid-late stoppage and expect some guff from the commentary team about how surprisingly well Verhoeven is doing to start with.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Cyclops »

Ruthless-RKO wrote: 01 Mar 2026, 11:05

Peter Fury, uncle and former trainer of Tyson Fury, will be training Rico Verhoeven for his fight against Oleksandr Usyk on May 23rd at the Pyramids of Giza 🤯
Can't wait to hear from "the best Fury" with all of his sold principals and iron morals, who only did his two long stretches behind the door for being a multi-millionaire drug dealer and money launderer and definitely wasn't involved in any murders.

I wonder if Rico will suddenly develop a terrible acne problem as well?
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by joshj909 »

Cyclops wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 08:06
Ruthless-RKO wrote: 01 Mar 2026, 11:05

Peter Fury, uncle and former trainer of Tyson Fury, will be training Rico Verhoeven for his fight against Oleksandr Usyk on May 23rd at the Pyramids of Giza 🤯
Can't wait to hear from "the best Fury" with all of his sold principals and iron morals, who only did his two long stretches behind the door for being a multi-millionaire drug dealer and money launderer and definitely wasn't involved in any murders.

I wonder if Rico will suddenly develop a terrible acne problem as well?
He's equally as much of a prick as John but John is by far more annoying. Peter can at least take credit for coaching family members to a high enough level whereas John tells everyone he did all the work despite both Peter and John''s unsuccessful boxing careers.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

A strong punch to the face ‘means nothing’ to Rico Verhoeven

In September 2015, Tyson Fury, never one for the conventional, turned to a professional kickboxer to help him prepare for the biggest boxing match of his life. The fight in question was a world heavyweight title challenge against Wladimir Klitschko and the kickboxer to whom Fury turned was a 26-year-old from Holland called Rico Verhoeven.

At the time it seemed rather odd for Fury to prepare for Klitschko, a heavyweight champion for nine years, by using a man more synonymous with kicking than punching. He was tall – around six foot five – but size alone did not justify Fury’s faith in Verhoeven. There surely had to be more to it than just size and inherent toughness.

In an effort to find out, I decided to interview Verhoeven back in 2015, just two months before Fury fought Klitschko and changed both the complexion and indeed future of the heavyweight division. Back then, Verhoeven was as unfamiliar to me as he was to most in boxing – though the name was one I had heard, I had never seen him fight – but the Furys not only vouched for him but were longtime admirers. They had, in fact, been aware of the hard-hitting Dutchman for around three years, having first encountered him on one of their training camps in Belgium. That was when Fury and his family first got to see Verhoeven up close and began to wonder if kickboxers – or just Verhoeven – possessed a fortitude boxers lack.

“They were getting a lot of Dutch guys in for sparring but the sparring was turning out to be a real problem,” Verhoeven explained to me. “Most of the guys they were sparring would quit or be sent away after one session. They all thought, No way, this is not for us. You’ve got one of the best boxers in Europe at the time knocking their heads off with just the jab. It was crazy. They weren’t used to it. For us, as kickboxers, it’s totally different to what we’re used to.

“So, back then my trainer hooked us up with them and we started doing some sparring. They came to our gym and we did six or seven rounds. Tyson closed both my eyes inside the first four rounds, which was quite a feat considering we were wearing head guards.

“He definitely surprised me. After four rounds my trainer said, ‘Look, he’s a big guy, he’s now going to start getting tired.’ He told me to speed up. Already both my eyes were closed. I couldn’t see a lot. But I still thought I was going to speed up and kick his ass.

“It never happened. After four rounds Tyson turned southpaw on me. I couldn’t believe it. He was now southpaw and still kicking my ass. I looked over at my trainer as if to say, ‘What the hell is this guy doing?’

“For a man of his size – so big, so heavy – he can move so well. He’ll be backing up against the ropes and I’ll think, Right, now I’m going to take his damn head off! But then he’ll just step to the side and I almost fall out of the ring. I think, How the hell does he do that? He’s leaning on the back leg and is still able to move sideways. It really is crazy. He’s so skilled. He’s a natural. Orthodox or southpaw, it doesn’t matter. It’s amazing to watch him at times.”

The experience stuck with Verhoeven, as one might expect, yet his pride was never dented. He was a kickboxer, after all, and by agreeing to enter Fury’s world – boxing – he was giving up certain advantages in order to sample something new. The eventual taste – blood, pain – may have been bitter and not entirely to his liking, but it didn’t deter Verhoeven, nor put him off going back for more.

“I didn’t enjoy getting my ass whooped, but it was a great learning experience for me,” he confessed. “I was already at a decent level in kickboxing, sparring was always difficult for me to find, and this was something completely new. I liked it. It was difficult to hit him, but I knew if I kept on training and kept on improving, I now had something to work towards. Each time we sparred I got a little bit better.

“I got my respect from them [the Furys] as well. I was different from the other fighters they found in Holland. I just kept coming. Even though Tyson was beating my ass at times, I’d never stop. I’d keep coming back, keep taking my beating and, over time, I got my respect from the Furys. It was mutual respect.”

Although Verhoeven has now competed over 75 times as a professional kickboxer, he has fought only once as a professional boxer, despite him getting a taste for it back in 2012. That one boxing match – a second-round knockout of Janos Finfera – took place in Germany in 2014, but never after that did Verhoeven box again. In fact, his next dalliance with another combat sport came in the world of mixed martial arts the following year when Verhoeven stopped Viktor Bogutzki in round one of a fight in Romania. That, too, was a one-and-done situation, with Verhoeven in the end doing no more than testing the waters and exploring the other dangerous parts of his anatomy.

Still, by broadening his horizons, the current GLORY heavyweight champion does at least have a decent grasp of the differences between the arts. If anything, he is better positioned than most when it comes to pointing them out.

“I don’t want to say our sport is tougher, but when you get kicked to the body, kicked to the leg and kicked to the head, it’s not nice – it hurts like hell,” he said. “But you have to keep going and push through the pain barrier. You can’t just stop. With boxing, it’s just arms. That’s the biggest difference. In kickboxing it hurts when you get a kick right on your thigh; there’s no pain like it, especially when you’re not used to it.

“That ability to fight through the pain is definitely something the Fury team liked about me. I’m used to being hit and hurt. It mentally makes me very strong. A strong punch to the face means nothing to me. It just makes me go, Oh, is that it?

“Also, in boxing you have 12 rounds. You have time to have a look around and ease your way into the contest. It’s not like that in kickboxing, though. The fights are much shorter and you’re into the action straight away. My championship fights are fought over five rounds. Most other fights are three rounds. As soon as the bell goes, that’s it, you fight. There is no time to waste.”

Verhoeven, who turns 37 next month, is perhaps applying the same logic and urgency to his own career. Unbeaten for 11 years as a kickboxer, he is now in the phase of a fighter’s life when final boxes are being ticked and any remaining itches will need to be scratched. If that means boxing again, so be it. If it means not only boxing again, but doing so against the best heavyweight on the planet, Verhoeven is, at 37, apparently game.

Because on May 23, in Egypt, that is exactly what Rico Verhoeven, 1-0 (1 KO), will do. He will box Oleksandr Usyk, the best heavyweight boxer in the world in only his second professional boxing match – some 12 years after the last. He will then presumably realise in the process that everything he experienced in sparring with Tyson Fury is nothing compared to the experience of fighting Usyk – a two-time Fury conqueror – in a competitive bout over 12 rounds. He will realise, too, that it is one thing helping someone else prepare to challenge for the world heavyweight title, as Verhoeven did in 2015, yet quite another thing challenging for the WBC world heavyweight title himself. For that, more than just toughness is required. For that, you are no longer the help. You are instead the one now in need of help.

In this case, that means Fury helping Verhoeven rather than the other way round. Specifically, it means Peter Fury, Tyson’s uncle, training and then cornering Verhoeven for his fight against Usyk on May 23. “It’s going to be a great night; a lot of hard work to be done,” the trainer wrote on social media. “Two great people, two great champions in their own right. What a privilege.”

The last time Peter Fury cornered his nephew, of course, the pair were in Düsseldorf, Germany, where Tyson Fury shocked the world by dethroning Wladimir Klitschko on a cold November night. Since then, a great deal has happened. Fights have been won and lost, drug tests have been failed, titles have changed hands, and relationships have been broken and never fixed. Yet one thing has remained constant throughout the past 10 years: Rico Verhoeven has been a kickboxer, not a boxer.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Steveh583 »

MasterG wrote: 01 Mar 2026, 04:33
Steveh583 wrote: 28 Feb 2026, 18:29 hes a great kickboxer but this is utterly pointless
How do you work out, he's a great kick boxer. It doesn't look like he's fought for any kick boxing title and never progressed from 5 rounder fights. Maybe 5 rounds is the maximum in kick boxing?
I follow kickboxing. wiki him. a legend in his field.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by gilgamesh »

MasterG wrote: 28 Feb 2026, 09:38
keithmoonhangover wrote: 28 Feb 2026, 09:31
joshj909 wrote: 28 Feb 2026, 09:30 If he was a high level boxer, he would have been in boxing where he would have earned a tonne more money.
Exactly. :TU:
Out of all his kick boxing bouts, never fought for a title of any description. He's not even kick boxed at higher than novice 5 round level.

What actually broughtt him to Usyks attention to be a worthy opponent better than the likes of Joseph Parker?
Kickboxing fights are typically 3 rounds for a standard bout, and 5 rounds for Championship fights.

Glory Kickboxing is the biggest promotion in Heavyweight Kickboxing in the World right now no question. It would've been K-1 in the 90's and early 2000's, but Glory took that distinction from them over the last 15 years or so.

Rico has fought all of the biggest names in Kickboxing. Multiple times in fact.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by mickey1975 »

It's apparently because Rico is mates with Jason Staham.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by gilgamesh »

mickey1975 wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 16:26 It's apparently because Rico is mates with Jason Staham.
He was probably a consultant for an action movie or something. Rico actually is in Kickboxer: Vengeance or whatever the hell it was called. A small role, but he's in it.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by joshj909 »

mickey1975 wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 16:26 It's apparently because Rico is mates with Jason Staham.
This is why one guy with a lot of money is not the solution for boxing if they're not interested in the sport and they can be influenced by actors to make random crossover fights.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by KiwiRider »

If Uysk was retired from boxing and did this fight, I wouldn't mind at all, I also wouldn't watch.
But to tie up 3/4 belts through an injury, which I'm also fine with, and then come out with this load of bull while the HW division grinds to a halt?
Well I'm not cool with that.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by gilgamesh »

Lots of Heavyweight Champions have an oddball match or 2 on their record. If Boxing is a circus then the Heavyweight Title is its main attraction and the thing that the most bizarre circumstances in the sport revolve around. It's been that way for over 100 years.

Many guys have fought challengers that weren't exactly worthy of a title shot. Even the great ones would do that sometimes.

Coming off the heels of Frazier vs Ali 1. Frazier's next opponent was Terry Daniels.

That would be about the equivalent of Usyk defending against Johnny Fisher.

A circus bout where you're not sure what might happen is more interesting than a surefire slaughter.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Coco »

Makes me think that Uysk isn't as confident in himself as before

He doesn't need the money, and this generates far less than fighting a top 10 opponent.

I would understand fighting Jake Paul much more.

Maybe he is keen on fighting Fury again, wants to keep active, and take a zero risk fight
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by joshj909 »

High level kickboxers boxing record:
Nieky Holzken
Kicking record: 95-17
Kickboxing achievements: Glory Champion
Boxing record: 15-2
Notable boxing matches: Callum Smith (L)

Tenshin Nasukawa
Kickboxing record: 42-0
Kickboxing achievements: RISE and RIZIN champion
Boxing record: 7-1
Notable boxing matches: Jason Maloney (W-UD), Takuma Inoue (L-UD), Floyd Mayweather (L-KO1-Exb)

Rico Verhoeven
Kickboxing record: 66-10
Kickboxing achievements: Glory Champion
Boxing record: 1-0
Notable boxing matches: None

Tyrone Spong:
Professional kickboxing record: 107-7-1(1)
Kickboxing achievements: Glory Champion
Boxing record: 14-0
Notable boxing matches: None

Jerome Le Banner:
Professional Kickboxing Record: 87-23
Kickboxing achievements: K1 champion
Boxing record: 6-0
Notable boxing matches: None

Samart Payakaroon:
Professional Kickboxing Record: 200-48-2
Kickboxing achievements: Unknown
Boxing record: 21-2
Notable boxing title: WBC Super Bantamweight Champion

Yoshiki Takei:
Professional Kickboxing Record: 23-2
Kickboxing achievements: K1 Champion
Boxing record: 11-1
Notable boxing matches: Jason Maloney (W-UD), Aidgo Higa (W-UD), Christian Medina (L-TKO4)

Kyotaro Fujimoto:
Professional Kickboxing Record: 21-7
Kickboxing achievements: K1 Champion
Boxing record: 21-2
Notable boxing matches: Daniel Dubois (L-KO2), Solomon Haumono (L-TKO5)

The main summary is that the smaller guys have way more success than the big guys but some kickboxers have had success. However, all of them have had boxing matches prior to their biggest fights whereas Verhoeven has not.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Spong was supposed to be Usyk’s HE debut.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by joshj909 »

Ruthless-RKO wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 10:07 Spong was supposed to be Usyk’s HE debut.
He was also supposed to face Rivas before Rivas retired due to his eyesight.

He got KO'd by 45 year old Kharitinov in MMA recently and also by Sam Alvey in Karate Combat. Another kickboxer that moves over to face MMA fighters fairly late and gets KO'd below their supposed level.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by Flump »

gilgamesh wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 23:29 Lots of Heavyweight Champions have an oddball match or 2 on their record. If Boxing is a circus then the Heavyweight Title is its main attraction and the thing that the most bizarre circumstances in the sport revolve around. It's been that way for over 100 years.

Many guys have fought challengers that weren't exactly worthy of a title shot. Even the great ones would do that sometimes.

Coming off the heels of Frazier vs Ali 1. Frazier's next opponent was Terry Daniels.

That would be about the equivalent of Usyk defending against Johnny Fisher.

A circus bout where you're not sure what might happen is more interesting than a surefire slaughter.
This is all true, however, taking Ali's farce with Inoki as an example, he also defended the title 4 times in the same year, 2 of those defences were against solid World class fighters. What happens after this clown show with Usyk, another year off?
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by JamesPhilips »

I cannot genuinely believe that 26% of boxrecers believe Verhoeven has a chance let alone will win…. Esp by stoppage.

Must be some serious trolling…. Rico is a poor boxer and not much powet
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by joshj909 »

JamesPhilips wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 10:54 I cannot genuinely believe that 26% of boxrecers believe Verhoeven has a chance let alone will win…. Esp by stoppage.

Must be some serious trolling…. Rico is a poor boxer and not much powet
More people have voted that Verhoeven wins than Usyk wins by decision which is mad.
Last edited by joshj909 on 04 Mar 2026, 12:33, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by jamesmcdonnell »

Flump wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 10:40
gilgamesh wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 23:29 Lots of Heavyweight Champions have an oddball match or 2 on their record. If Boxing is a circus then the Heavyweight Title is its main attraction and the thing that the most bizarre circumstances in the sport revolve around. It's been that way for over 100 years.

Many guys have fought challengers that weren't exactly worthy of a title shot. Even the great ones would do that sometimes.

Coming off the heels of Frazier vs Ali 1. Frazier's next opponent was Terry Daniels.

That would be about the equivalent of Usyk defending against Johnny Fisher.

A circus bout where you're not sure what might happen is more interesting than a surefire slaughter.
This is all true, however, taking Ali's farce with Inoki as an example, he also defended the title 4 times in the same year, 2 of those defences were against solid World class fighters. What happens after this clown show with Usyk, another year off?
That is my problem too. He is now holding the belts up.

Time to retire methinks.

I suspect he may well announce his retirement shortly after this fight. He is going to be 40 soon
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by joshj909 »

jamesmcdonnell wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 11:30
Flump wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 10:40
gilgamesh wrote: 03 Mar 2026, 23:29 Lots of Heavyweight Champions have an oddball match or 2 on their record. If Boxing is a circus then the Heavyweight Title is its main attraction and the thing that the most bizarre circumstances in the sport revolve around. It's been that way for over 100 years.

Many guys have fought challengers that weren't exactly worthy of a title shot. Even the great ones would do that sometimes.

Coming off the heels of Frazier vs Ali 1. Frazier's next opponent was Terry Daniels.

That would be about the equivalent of Usyk defending against Johnny Fisher.

A circus bout where you're not sure what might happen is more interesting than a surefire slaughter.
This is all true, however, taking Ali's farce with Inoki as an example, he also defended the title 4 times in the same year, 2 of those defences were against solid World class fighters. What happens after this clown show with Usyk, another year off?
That is my problem too. He is now holding the belts up.

Time to retire methinks.

I suspect he may well announce his retirement shortly after this fight. He is going to be 40 soon
It would've been a lot easier for him to beat Kabayel and Wardley before 40 than after if that's his intention. He could've beaten them both then had as many novelty fights as he liked without the belts and he wouldn't have been under much threat.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by jamesmcdonnell »

joshj909 wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 12:45
jamesmcdonnell wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 11:30
Flump wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 10:40

This is all true, however, taking Ali's farce with Inoki as an example, he also defended the title 4 times in the same year, 2 of those defences were against solid World class fighters. What happens after this clown show with Usyk, another year off?
That is my problem too. He is now holding the belts up.

Time to retire methinks.

I suspect he may well announce his retirement shortly after this fight. He is going to be 40 soon
It would've been a lot easier for him to beat Kabayel and Wardley before 40 than after if that's his intention. He could've beaten them both then had as many novelty fights as he liked without the belts and he wouldn't have been under much threat.
Perhaps Usyk is aware that he is slipping and doesn't fancy it?

He seems the type that would know if he had lost a step or two.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by mickey1975 »

jamesmcdonnell wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 12:46
joshj909 wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 12:45
jamesmcdonnell wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 11:30

That is my problem too. He is now holding the belts up.

Time to retire methinks.

I suspect he may well announce his retirement shortly after this fight. He is going to be 40 soon
It would've been a lot easier for him to beat Kabayel and Wardley before 40 than after if that's his intention. He could've beaten them both then had as many novelty fights as he liked without the belts and he wouldn't have been under much threat.
Perhaps Usyk is aware that he is slipping and doesn't fancy it?

He seems the type that would know if he had lost a step or two.
No version of Usyk should lose to those two. Kabayel was horrendous last time out.
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Re: Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven | DAZN - 23 May 2026

Post by jamesmcdonnell »

mickey1975 wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 12:52
jamesmcdonnell wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 12:46
joshj909 wrote: 04 Mar 2026, 12:45

It would've been a lot easier for him to beat Kabayel and Wardley before 40 than after if that's his intention. He could've beaten them both then had as many novelty fights as he liked without the belts and he wouldn't have been under much threat.
Perhaps Usyk is aware that he is slipping and doesn't fancy it?

He seems the type that would know if he had lost a step or two.
No version of Usyk should lose to those two. Kabayel was horrendous last time out.
Well, maybe he intends to fight on. I think the Wardley fight (if he wins) would be a good retirement fight.

I really cannot see the point in fighting Wilder, who seems to not only be shot to shite, but a complete car crash waiting to happen, he is like Oliver McCall 2.0.
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