Robert Helenius: Good things happen when you don’t give up

Robert Helenius, who faces Deontay Wilder on Oct. 15, says good things happen when you don’t give up.

Robert Helenius’ secret to success isn’t complicated: Keep on grinding.

That commitment to his boxing career has taken the heavyweight contender through the worst of times to the biggest fight of his life, a pay-per-view meeting with former champion Deontay Wilder on Oct. 15 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

It’s been a long up-and-down journey for the 38-year-old Finn, who climbed to the top of the rankings a decade ago, almost lost it all because of a shoulder injury and then ended up back in the thick of the title hunt when that seemed all but impossible.

“I have this worker mentality,” Helenius told Boxing Junkie. “I tend to grind through stuff, just do my best, and see where I land.”

Helenius (31-3, 20 KOs) became a genuine threat to the then-champion Klitschko brothers after knocking out Samuel Peter and Sergei Liakhovich and outpointed Derek Chisora, all in a remarkable 2011.

However, the victory over Chisora came with a price: The right-hander tore a tendon in his power shoulder during training for the fight. He had surgery the following year but, even after rehab, the shoulder wasn’t the same.

That made it impossible to stay active. He fought once in both 2012 and 2013 before stepping away from the sport for two years, a period when he was forced to move from his training base in Germany back to Finland and pick up work in construction and logging.

Then things went from bad to worse: He was stopped in six rounds by tough, but limited Johann Duhaupas in Helsinki in 2016 and lost a wide decision to Dillian Whyte the following year in Wales.

At that point many believed he was finished as a relevant heavyweight … if they thought about him at all.

“I (tore) a tendon in my right shoulder before the Chisora fight and everything went straight down from there,” Helenius told Boxing Junkie on Friday. “I went six, seven years where training didn’t feel right. Every camp my shoulder was hurting. …

“It was hard but I had three kids to take care of. I had to take a deep breath and keep grinding and grinding.”

The dark clouds began to lift in 2018, as he was preparing to face Erkan Teper in Germany. Suddenly the pain in his shoulder was gone, which was like being freed from boxing prison. That allowed him to train properly for the first time since his peak year of 2011, which resulted in a knockout of Teper.

 

He had a setback in his next fight, an eight-round knockout loss against Gerald Washington in 2019 that he described as “devastating.” However, he was ill with flu symptoms before and during the fight, which helped him make sense of the loss and maintain his confidence.

Then, after one more fight, came his renaissance.

Helenius was an afterthought going into his fight with Adam Kownacki in March 2020, just an opponent. Afterall, he had been stopped by Washington two fights earlier. And the unbeaten Kownacki was one of the hottest young heavyweights in the world.

The result? Helenius, his prodigious power on full display, stopped the Polish-American in four rounds. And then he did it again seven months later, this time in six rounds.

He was all the way back.

“He was the perfect opponent for me,” Helenius said of Kownacki. “I’ve been fighting this kind of guy all my life … shorter guys who are always coming, coming and coming. I have pretty good counterpunching and footwork. I knew I had a really good chance to prove myself.

“It was a huge relief for me,” he went on. “I knew I could get a new chance to get to the top, to keep my promise to get the belt to Finland.”

He’ll have to get past Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) to do that, which will be no easy task.

Helenius knows that first hand, having sparred with Wilder. The American’s power is as destructive as it seems to anyone paying attention, as if there are any doubts. He adds one thing, though: He can crack, too.

Indeed, the 6-foot-6½, 240-plus-pounder enters the fight with a lot of confidence after his back-to-back knockouts of Kownacki even though he acknowledges that Wilder represents his “biggest challenge yet.” He believes he has what it takes to score what would be a massive upset and then set his sights on a world title.

It goes back to grinding.

“Keep on grinding, keep on doing your thing,” he said, “and I think things will turn out good in the end no matter how bad you feel in the middle.”

Robert Helenius: Good things happen when you don’t give up

Robert Helenius, who faces Deontay Wilder on Oct. 15, says good things happen when you don’t give up.

Robert Helenius’ secret to success isn’t complicated: Keep on grinding.

That commitment to his boxing career has taken the heavyweight contender through the worst of times to the biggest fight of his life, a pay-per-view meeting with former champion Deontay Wilder on Oct. 15 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

It’s been a long up-and-down journey for the 38-year-old Finn, who climbed to the top of the rankings a decade ago, almost lost it all because of a shoulder injury and then ended up back in the thick of the title hunt when that seemed all but impossible.

“I have this worker mentality,” Helenius told Boxing Junkie. “I tend to grind through stuff, just do my best, and see where I land.”

Helenius (31-3, 20 KOs) became a genuine threat to the then-champion Klitschko brothers after knocking out Samuel Peter and Sergei Liakhovich and outpointed Derek Chisora, all in a remarkable 2011.

However, the victory over Chisora came with a price: The right-hander tore a tendon in his power shoulder during training for the fight. He had surgery the following year but, even after rehab, the shoulder wasn’t the same.

That made it impossible to stay active. He fought once in both 2012 and 2013 before stepping away from the sport for two years, a period when he was forced to move from his training base in Germany back to Finland and pick up work in construction and logging.

Then things went from bad to worse: He was stopped in six rounds by tough, but limited Johann Duhaupas in Helsinki in 2016 and lost a wide decision to Dillian Whyte the following year in Wales.

At that point many believed he was finished as a relevant heavyweight … if they thought about him at all.

“I (tore) a tendon in my right shoulder before the Chisora fight and everything went straight down from there,” Helenius told Boxing Junkie on Friday. “I went six, seven years where training didn’t feel right. Every camp my shoulder was hurting. …

“It was hard but I had three kids to take care of. I had to take a deep breath and keep grinding and grinding.”

The dark clouds began to lift in 2018, as he was preparing to face Erkan Teper in Germany. Suddenly the pain in his shoulder was gone, which was like being freed from boxing prison. That allowed him to train properly for the first time since his peak year of 2011, which resulted in a knockout of Teper.

 

He had a setback in his next fight, an eight-round knockout loss against Gerald Washington in 2019 that he described as “devastating.” However, he was ill with flu symptoms before and during the fight, which helped him make sense of the loss and maintain his confidence.

Then, after one more fight, came his renaissance.

Helenius was an afterthought going into his fight with Adam Kownacki in March 2020, just an opponent. Afterall, he had been stopped by Washington two fights earlier. And the unbeaten Kownacki was one of the hottest young heavyweights in the world.

The result? Helenius, his prodigious power on full display, stopped the Polish-American in four rounds. And then he did it again seven months later, this time in six rounds.

He was all the way back.

“He was the perfect opponent for me,” Helenius said of Kownacki. “I’ve been fighting this kind of guy all my life … shorter guys who are always coming, coming and coming. I have pretty good counterpunching and footwork. I knew I had a really good chance to prove myself.

“It was a huge relief for me,” he went on. “I knew I could get a new chance to get to the top, to keep my promise to get the belt to Finland.”

He’ll have to get past Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) to do that, which will be no easy task.

Helenius knows that first hand, having sparred with Wilder. The American’s power is as destructive as it seems to anyone paying attention, as if there are any doubts. He adds one thing, though: He can crack, too.

Indeed, the 6-foot-6½, 240-plus-pounder enters the fight with a lot of confidence after his back-to-back knockouts of Kownacki even though he acknowledges that Wilder represents his “biggest challenge yet.” He believes he has what it takes to score what would be a massive upset and then set his sights on a world title.

It goes back to grinding.

“Keep on grinding, keep on doing your thing,” he said, “and I think things will turn out good in the end no matter how bad you feel in the middle.”

Photos: Danny Garcia gives vintage performance in victory over Jose Benavidez Jr.

Photos: Danny Garcia gave a vintage performance in a majority decision victory over Jose Benavidez Jr. on Saturday in Brooklyn.

Danny Garcia defeated Jose Benavidez Jr. by a majority decision in his debut at 154 pounds Saturday at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Also, Ali Eren Demirezen outpointed Adam Kownacki in a 10-round heavyweight bout. Gary Antuanne Russell stopped Rances Barthelemy in the sixth round of a scheduled 10-round 140-pound bout.

And Sergey Derevyanchenko defeated Joshua Conley by a unanimous decision in a 10-round 160-pound fight.

Here are images from the card. All photos by Adam Hunger of Getty Images.

Ali Eren Demirezen defeats Adam Kownacki by unanimous decision

Ali Eren Demirezen defeated Adam Kownacki by a unanimous decision on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card Saturday in Brooklyn.

Adam Kownacki might be finished as an elite fighter.

Ali Eren Demirezen, a former Olympian from Turkey, outworked Kownacki to win a unanimous decision in a 10-round heavyweight fight on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card Saturday at Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, Kownacki’s hometown.

The scores were 97-93, 96-94 and 96-94. Boxing Junkie scored it 97-93 for Demirezen, seven rounds to three.

Kownacki (20-3, 15 KOs) has now lost three consecutive times after being stopped by Robert Helenius in back-to-back fights.

The Polish-American controlled the first two rounds with his volume punching. However, Demirezen (17-1, 12 KOs) picked up his pace in Round 3 and outworked Kownacki the rest of the way.

Demirezen not only threw slightly more punches than Kownacki but he also landed the cleaner, eye-catching shots, at least to the head. Kownacki had a lot of success to the body, although not enough to slow down his opponent.

Demirezen has won six consecutive fights since he lost a decision to Efe Ajagba in July 2019. He was fighting in New York for the first time.

“I truly love fighting in the U.S. and I love New York, so I said before you will see me more,” said Demirezen, who is based in Germany. “I was nervous because he’s a strong fighter and I could have been much better, but it’s my first time here and he’d fought here before.”

Kownacki implied before the fight that he might retire if he didn’t have his hand raised Saturday. However, after the fight, he said he doesn’t want to go out on a third consecutive loss.

“I have two kids,” he said. “I’ll have a long talk with my wife to see what I want to do. I’ve had so many fights here, so many great memories, I don’t want to go out like a loser. I would like another fight to leave my fans with a win.”

Meanwhile, the victory was the biggest of Demirezen’s career. The 2016 Olympian is now a step closer to realizing of his dream of becoming the first heavyweight champion from his country.

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Ali Eren Demirezen defeats Adam Kownacki by unanimous decision

Ali Eren Demirezen defeated Adam Kownacki by a unanimous decision on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card Saturday in Brooklyn.

Adam Kownacki might be finished as an elite fighter.

Ali Eren Demirezen, a former Olympian from Turkey, outworked Kownacki to win a unanimous decision in a 10-round heavyweight fight on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card Saturday at Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, Kownacki’s hometown.

The scores were 97-93, 96-94 and 96-94. Boxing Junkie scored it 97-93 for Demirezen, seven rounds to three.

Kownacki (20-3, 15 KOs) has now lost three consecutive times after being stopped by Robert Helenius in back-to-back fights.

The Polish-American controlled the first two rounds with his volume punching. However, Demirezen (17-1, 12 KOs) picked up his pace in Round 3 and outworked Kownacki the rest of the way.

Demirezen not only threw slightly more punches than Kownacki but he also landed the cleaner, eye-catching shots, at least to the head. Kownacki had a lot of success to the body, although not enough to slow down his opponent.

Demirezen has won six consecutive fights since he lost a decision to Efe Ajagba in July 2019. He was fighting in New York for the first time.

“I truly love fighting in the U.S. and I love New York, so I said before you will see me more,” said Demirezen, who is based in Germany. “I was nervous because he’s a strong fighter and I could have been much better, but it’s my first time here and he’d fought here before.”

Kownacki implied before the fight that he might retire if he didn’t have his hand raised Saturday. However, after the fight, he said he doesn’t want to go out on a third consecutive loss.

“I have two kids,” he said. “I’ll have a long talk with my wife to see what I want to do. I’ve had so many fights here, so many great memories, I don’t want to go out like a loser. I would like another fight to leave my fans with a win.”

Meanwhile, the victory was the biggest of Demirezen’s career. The 2016 Olympian is now a step closer to realizing of his dream of becoming the first heavyweight champion from his country.

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Danny Garcia vs. Jose Benavidez Jr.: LIVE updates and results, full coverage

Danny Garcia vs. Jose Benavidez Jr.: LIVE updates and results, full coverage.

Danny Garcia made a successful debut at 154 pounds Saturday at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

The former two-division titleholder outclassed Jose Benavidez Jr. to win a majority decision.

The scores were 114-114, 116-112 and 117-111. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110, 10 rounds to two.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Ali Eren Demirezen defeated Adam Kownacki by a unanimous decision in a 10-round heavyweight fight on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card.

Kownacki controlled the first two rounds with his volume punching but the Turk took control of the fight in Round 3 and outworked the Polish-American the rest of the way.

The scores were 97-93, 96-94 and 96-94. Boxing Junkie scored it 97-93 for Dimerezen.

***

Gary Antuanne Russell knocked out Rances Barthelemy in the sixth round on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card.

The fight was competitive for five rounds but a right from Russell to the temple of Barthelemy put the Cuban down and the fight was stopped.

***

Former two-division titleholder Danny Garcia will make his debut at 154 pounds against Jose Benavidez Jr. on Saturday at Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, New York (Showtime).

Garcia (36-3, 21 KOs) last fought in December 2020, when he was outpointed by unified welterweight champion Errol Spence Jr.

Benavidez (27-1-1, 18 KOs) will be fighting for the second time in a comeback after a three-year layoff. He’s coming off a majority draw with Francisco Torres in November.

Also on the card, Adam Kownacki will face Ali Eren Demirezen in a battle of heavyweights. And junior welterweight contender Gary Antuanne Russell will take on Rances Barthelemy.

The card begins at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the show.

Boxing Junkie will post results of all the featured bouts on the card immediately after they end. Simply return to this post when the time comes.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

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Danny Garcia vs. Jose Benavidez Jr.: LIVE updates and results, full coverage

Danny Garcia vs. Jose Benavidez Jr.: LIVE updates and results, full coverage.

Danny Garcia made a successful debut at 154 pounds Saturday at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

The former two-division titleholder outclassed Jose Benavidez Jr. to win a majority decision.

The scores were 114-114, 116-112 and 117-111. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110, 10 rounds to two.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Ali Eren Demirezen defeated Adam Kownacki by a unanimous decision in a 10-round heavyweight fight on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card.

Kownacki controlled the first two rounds with his volume punching but the Turk took control of the fight in Round 3 and outworked the Polish-American the rest of the way.

The scores were 97-93, 96-94 and 96-94. Boxing Junkie scored it 97-93 for Dimerezen.

***

Gary Antuanne Russell knocked out Rances Barthelemy in the sixth round on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card.

The fight was competitive for five rounds but a right from Russell to the temple of Barthelemy put the Cuban down and the fight was stopped.

***

Former two-division titleholder Danny Garcia will make his debut at 154 pounds against Jose Benavidez Jr. on Saturday at Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, New York (Showtime).

Garcia (36-3, 21 KOs) last fought in December 2020, when he was outpointed by unified welterweight champion Errol Spence Jr.

Benavidez (27-1-1, 18 KOs) will be fighting for the second time in a comeback after a three-year layoff. He’s coming off a majority draw with Francisco Torres in November.

Also on the card, Adam Kownacki will face Ali Eren Demirezen in a battle of heavyweights. And junior welterweight contender Gary Antuanne Russell will take on Rances Barthelemy.

The card begins at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the show.

Boxing Junkie will post results of all the featured bouts on the card immediately after they end. Simply return to this post when the time comes.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

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Adam Kownacki promises to rebound, Ali Eren Demirezen also confident

Adam Kownacki promises to rebound against Ali Eren Demirezen on the Andy Ruiz Jr.-Luis Ortiz card

Adam Kownacki is hoping to remain a relevant heavyweight. Ali Eren Demirezen is trying to get there.

Kownacki, who faces Demirezen on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card Saturday in Brooklyn (Showtime), had been a hot contender but his momentum was crushed as a result of back-to-back knockout losses to Robert Helenius in 2020 and last year.

If there were ever a must-win fight, this one is it for the offense-minded Kownacki (20-2, 15 KOs).

“I’m looking to come forward, attack the body and get him out of there,” the Polish-American said. “I’m trying to show the whole division that I’m back. The last couple fights didn’t go my way, but I’m going to show that it was just a bump in the road.”

Kownacki’s style has been to attack with reckless abandon, which worked in his first 20 fights but might’ve played a role in his demise against the hard-punching Helenius.

He said he and his team have worked on attacking aggressively but more methodically, keeping defense in mind to protect him from unnecessary punishment.

The chunky heavyweight added that he’s never been in better condition than he is now.

“I lost six percent body fat and turned it into muscle, so I’m feeling great,” he said. “I want to be the old Adam and take no more steps backwards.”

And the Brooklynite’s goal hasn’t changed in spite of his setbacks.

“I’m trying to win the title for Brooklyn,” he said. “There’s still a lot I want to accomplish in the sport, including one day fighting back home in Poland.”

Meanwhile, Demirezen (16-1, 12 KOs) has won five consecutive fights since he was outpointed by Efe Ajagba in June 2019.

That includes an eighth-round TKO of Gerald Washington last January and a one-sided decision over Kevin Johnson in May. The 2016 Olympian for his native Turkey is on a roll.

He expects to make a big statement on Saturday.

“This is a big moment in my career,” he said. “… I’m going to do everything I can to have my hand raised. I know how important this fight is for my career. I said before the Gerald Washington fight that I’m here to stay.

“I want to achieve my dreams in the U.S. After this fight, the fans will know my name even better than before.”

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Adam Kownacki promises to rebound, Ali Eren Demirezen also confident

Adam Kownacki promises to rebound against Ali Eren Demirezen on the Andy Ruiz Jr.-Luis Ortiz card

Adam Kownacki is hoping to remain a relevant heavyweight. Ali Eren Demirezen is trying to get there.

Kownacki, who faces Demirezen on the Danny Garcia-Jose Benavidez Jr. card Saturday in Brooklyn (Showtime), had been a hot contender but his momentum was crushed as a result of back-to-back knockout losses to Robert Helenius in 2020 and last year.

If there were ever a must-win fight, this one is it for the offense-minded Kownacki (20-2, 15 KOs).

“I’m looking to come forward, attack the body and get him out of there,” the Polish-American said. “I’m trying to show the whole division that I’m back. The last couple fights didn’t go my way, but I’m going to show that it was just a bump in the road.”

Kownacki’s style has been to attack with reckless abandon, which worked in his first 20 fights but might’ve played a role in his demise against the hard-punching Helenius.

He said he and his team have worked on attacking aggressively but more methodically, keeping defense in mind to protect him from unnecessary punishment.

The chunky heavyweight added that he’s never been in better condition than he is now.

“I lost six percent body fat and turned it into muscle, so I’m feeling great,” he said. “I want to be the old Adam and take no more steps backwards.”

And the Brooklynite’s goal hasn’t changed in spite of his setbacks.

“I’m trying to win the title for Brooklyn,” he said. “There’s still a lot I want to accomplish in the sport, including one day fighting back home in Poland.”

Meanwhile, Demirezen (16-1, 12 KOs) has won five consecutive fights since he was outpointed by Efe Ajagba in June 2019.

That includes an eighth-round TKO of Gerald Washington last January and a one-sided decision over Kevin Johnson in May. The 2016 Olympian for his native Turkey is on a roll.

He expects to make a big statement on Saturday.

“This is a big moment in my career,” he said. “… I’m going to do everything I can to have my hand raised. I know how important this fight is for my career. I said before the Gerald Washington fight that I’m here to stay.

“I want to achieve my dreams in the U.S. After this fight, the fans will know my name even better than before.”

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Adam Kownacki expects to get it right against Ali Eren Demirezen

Adam Kownacki promises he’ll get it right when he faces Ali Eren Demirezen on July 30.

Adam Kownacki hopes to get back to winning on July 30.

That’s when the former heavyweight contender faces Ali Eren Demirezen at Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, where the Polish-born fighter grew up (Showtime).

Kownacki (20-2, 15 KOs) was undefeated and apparently heading toward a shot at a world title when he ran into a 6-foot-6 brick wall named Robert Helenius, who stopped Kownacki in back-to-back fights in 2020 and last year.

Kownacki’s aggressive style, which had served him well, exposed him to undue risks that the big-punching Helenius took advantage of. He said fans will see a better fighter in a few weeks.

“I just have had to work on my footwork and keeping my hands up,” he said. “I have to be smart. One shot can change everything. It was some bad luck getting caught in each fight. I tried to make the best out of it and leave everything in the ring. It was a life lesson.

“I’m coming back stronger. I’ve been sparring with no issues to the broken orbital bone. I’m feeling great and I can’t wait to return.”

Kownacki, 33, is still young enough to rebuild. And his name still carries some weight, which could help him get another big fight soon.

However, the last thing he can afford is another setback. That’s why his focus is on Demirezen (16-1, 12 KOs), a 2016 Turkish-German Olympian with some power and good size. He’s 6-foot-3, around 260 pounds.

He stopped Gerald Washington in January and followed that by outpointing Kevin Johnson in May.

“I want to be active again,” Kownacki said. “I’m focused on this win, and then we can talk about getting back in the ring early next year. It’s tunnel-vision on July 30. Right now I’m just focused on Demirezen. That’s the man in front of me. I have to tear down that wall that’s in front of me. That’s all I’m focused on.

“I’m facing a strong Olympian who’s got good size, so I’m expecting a great fight. It’s going to be a good test for me, but I’m looking to ace it and move on to better things.”

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