Dmitry Bivol, Murat Gassiev eye returns to ring this year

Matchroom Boxing chief Eddie Hearn hopes to have Russian-based clients Murat Gassiev and Dmitry Bivol back in the ring this year.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

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Matchroom Boxing chief Eddie Hearn hopes to have Russian-based clients Murat Gassiev and Dmitry Bivol back in the ring this year.

The 26-year-old Gassiev (26-1, 19 KOs) suffered his first professional defeat in his most recent outing, a 12-round unanimous decision against Oleksandr Usyk on July 21, 2018, at Moscow’s Olympic stadium.

Gassiev joined Matchroom and made the decision to move from cruiserweight to heavyweight after that, but a string of bad luck followed by the lockdown have stretched his ring absence to more than two years.

“Murat Gassiev is training in Russia,” Hearn told DAZN recently. “He’s had so many withdrawals of fights in the last year, I’ve lost count.

“But he’s ready to make his return, at heavyweight, hopefully later this year.”

The 29-year-old Bivol (17-0, 11 KOs), meanwhile, is fast approaching a year out of the ring after taking all three scorecards against Dominican challenger Gilbert Lenin Castillo in a successful defense of his light heavyweight strap on Oct. 12.

“Dmitry Bivol is in a tough spot,” Hearn said. “He’s one of the most avoided fighters, and I believe he may be the best light heavyweight in the world.”

Nothing was mentioned regarding Gassiev and Bivol’s expected next opponents, but with the aim being to simply end their in-ring absences before 2020 concludes, a pair of low-risk tune-ups are likely before high-profile bouts in front of crowds in 2021 follow.

“For all of these top names, it’s just a case of getting them out just once this year,” the promoter said. “Letting them get out there, letting them progress their career, letting them get paid, keeping their profile bubbling.

“And that’s the tough job for us now, coming through Fight Camp, trying to schedule all these major names and world champions without crowds. It’s going to be a tough task over the next couple of months.”

[lawrence-related id=8109,1176,308]

Dmitry Bivol, Murat Gassiev eye returns to ring this year

Matchroom Boxing chief Eddie Hearn hopes to have Russian-based clients Murat Gassiev and Dmitry Bivol back in the ring this year.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Matchroom Boxing chief Eddie Hearn hopes to have Russian-based clients Murat Gassiev and Dmitry Bivol back in the ring this year.

The 26-year-old Gassiev (26-1, 19 KOs) suffered his first professional defeat in his most recent outing, a 12-round unanimous decision against Oleksandr Usyk on July 21, 2018, at Moscow’s Olympic stadium.

Gassiev joined Matchroom and made the decision to move from cruiserweight to heavyweight after that, but a string of bad luck followed by the lockdown have stretched his ring absence to more than two years.

“Murat Gassiev is training in Russia,” Hearn told DAZN recently. “He’s had so many withdrawals of fights in the last year, I’ve lost count.

“But he’s ready to make his return, at heavyweight, hopefully later this year.”

The 29-year-old Bivol (17-0, 11 KOs), meanwhile, is fast approaching a year out of the ring after taking all three scorecards against Dominican challenger Gilbert Lenin Castillo in a successful defense of his light heavyweight strap on Oct. 12.

“Dmitry Bivol is in a tough spot,” Hearn said. “He’s one of the most avoided fighters, and I believe he may be the best light heavyweight in the world.”

Nothing was mentioned regarding Gassiev and Bivol’s expected next opponents, but with the aim being to simply end their in-ring absences before 2020 concludes, a pair of low-risk tune-ups are likely before high-profile bouts in front of crowds in 2021 follow.

“For all of these top names, it’s just a case of getting them out just once this year,” the promoter said. “Letting them get out there, letting them progress their career, letting them get paid, keeping their profile bubbling.

“And that’s the tough job for us now, coming through Fight Camp, trying to schedule all these major names and world champions without crowds. It’s going to be a tough task over the next couple of months.”

[lawrence-related id=8109,1176,308]

Abel Sanchez on Deontay Wilder: ‘His secret weapon is Mark Breland’

Trainer Abel Sanchez believes the secret to Deontay Wilder’s success in the ring isn’t just the devastating right hand…

What is the secret to Deontay Wilder’s success in the ring? Forget the bomb of a right hand. For trainer Abel Sanchez, it’s the man in Wilder’s corner.

“[Wilder’s] secret weapon is [co-trainer] Mark Breland,” Sanchez told Boxing Junkie. “Oh yes, absolutely. Mark is his coach, and he never gets mentioned.”

Breland, a 1984 Olympic gold medalist who was touted as the next Sugar Ray Leonard, was known for his length and devastating right hand as a welterweight in the professional ranks. Along with head trainer Jay Deas, Breland has been instructing Wilder since he turned professional in 2008, shortly after he won a bronze medal at the Beijing Olympics.  

Sanchez, best known for his work with Terry Norris and Gennadiy Golovkin, got a close up look at the Wilder camp several years ago, when his fighter Murat Gassiev received an invitation to come spar. 

“When I was there for one week and they were shadow boxing, I could see Mark was constantly talking to Deontay,” Sanchez said. “Now that I see his fights more … it’s more evident to me that Mark had a really big influence on that part of his game.”

It was something like a match made in heaven, according to Sanchez. Wilder’s seemingly rudimentary skill set is a source of agony for some aficionados, but Sanchez recognizes that Wilder has been brought up to maximize his greatest attributes: power and length.

“Sometimes we as coaches don’t develop everything as a fighter,” Sanchez said. “There’s very few coaches that can teach you everything at 100%. There are defensive coaches and there are offensive coaches. Mark may not have been able to develop that with other fighters, but with Wilder being as long and lanky as Mark was, it was a perfect fit.”

Case in point is Wilder’s right hand. There is nothing rudimentary about it.

“When you look at Deontay’s right hand, that thing is totally extended,” Sanchez said. “And I think that is one of the reasons why he punches so hard. He gets so much leverage on his punch, he just extends it so well.”

Contrast that to Tyson Fury, the equally tall and long heavyweight giant whom Wilder faces in a rematch this Saturday at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

“All these heavyweights today are 6-foot whatever, but if you look at Tyson Fury, Tyson Fury is a different kind of fighter,” Sanchez said. “He has the height and length, too, but he doesn’t use it like Deontay does. He wants to dance, and his arms are bent when he punches, so he doesn’t get that additional explosion off of his punches as Deontay has been able to do.” 

Oleksandr Usyk ring return stalled again because of old injury

Oleksandr Usyk’s second fight at heavyweight, against Derek Chisora, has once again been delayed out of concern for an old injury.

Oleksandr Usyk may want to think about trying to get on the good side of the boxing gods: Pour out some libations, sacrifice a lamb, say a prayer, something.

The former unified cruiserweight champion has had his share of bad luck since he moved up to the heavyweight ranks. A right biceps injury ruined his debut, delaying it for 11 months before he eventually returned to stop Chazz Witherspoon in seven rounds last October. Now, in his sophomore attempt at heavyweight, reportedly against British contender Derek Chisora, the Ukrainian finds himself facing yet another setback.

Usyk (17-0, 13 KOs) requested a six-to-eight-week postponement of his bout against Chisora (32-9, 23 KOs) to allow for the proper rehabilitation of an old injury to his left below, according to BoxingScene. Usyk had sustained it ahead of his match against Murat Gassiev in the 2018 World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight final.

This means that his bout against Chisora, originally penciled in for March 28 on a card headlined by a potential heavyweight showdown between Anthony Joshua and Kubrat Pulev, will have to wait.

“We expect him fighting in May versus Chisora,” Usyk co-promoter Alex Krassyuk told BoxingScene.

Krassyuk also clarified that Usyk did not sustain another injury, as has been reported by several outlets; the delay is a precautionary measure.

“Usyk is not injured,” Krassyuk said. “He is 33 and as the professional sportsman has some issues about his body. Normally he does his recovery routine once a year. This year, his doctor emphasized some rehab measures on his elbow and [the full recovery] took a bit [longer] than usual.”

Usyk was originally in the running to face Joshua as one of his mandatories, but the nod went to Pulev under the condition that Usyk is guaranteed an opportunity to face the winner.