Artur Beterbiev vs. Meng Fanlong set for March 28 in Quebec City

Undefeated Artur Beterbiev is scheduled to re-appear March 28 in Quebec City against former Chinese Olympian Meng Fanlong.

There’s not much question about Artur Beterbiev’s light heavyweight supremacy. But there have been questions and some confusion about where, when and whom he’d fight next.

Finally, an answer.

Beterbiev, undefeated and No. 10 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list, is scheduled to re-appear March 28 in Quebec City against former Chinese Olympian Meng Fanlong.

Initially, it looked as if Beterbiev’s first fight since unifying the 175-pound title with a second belt by stopping Oleksandr Gvozdyk would be in China. Longjoy Sports won a purse bid with a $1.9-million offer. But Longjoy failed to make good on its offer. The deadline passed with no deposit from the Chinese promoter. The promotional rights then went to Top Rank, which had offered $1.315 million.

Top Rank then decided to move the fight to Quebec City, according to a story first reported by ESPN, which will televise the bout.

The move allayed fears that Beterbiev, a Russian, would refuse to fight in China because of the government’s anti-Muslim policy. According to media reports, Muslims have been confined in Chinese detention camps.  Beterbiev, 35, is a Muslim of Chechen descent.

Beterbiev (15-0,15 KOs) fought 10 of his first 11 fights in Quebec. Since then, he has been fighting in the United States, including an impressive 10th-round TKO of then-unbeaten Gvozdyk on Oct. 18 in Philadelphia. He knocked down Gvozydk three times.

Fanlong (16-0, 10 KOs), who represented China at the 2012 London Games, has fought in the U.S. nine times, including a second-round stoppage of Gilberto Rubio in Hockessin, Delaware on Oct. 5, 13 days before Beterbiev’s dramatic victory over Gvozydk in nearby Philadelphia.

Artur Beterbiev to fight in Quebec City instead of China on March 28

Artur Beterbiev won’t have to worry about compromising his religious beliefs, after it was announced that his next bout won’t be in China.

Artur Beterbiev won’t have to compromise his personal convictions for his next fight, it turns out. 

Originally, it appeared the two-belt light heavyweight titleholder and devout Muslim would have to travel to China to face his IBF mandatory Meng Fanlong after Fanlong’s Chinese promoter Lovejoy Sports won the Dec. 30 purse bid for the bout. But Lovejoy Sports, which co-promotes Fanlong with the American outfit Roc Nation, failed to meet the deadline for a scheduled payment. Per IBF rules, that meant rights to the fight would default to the next highest bidder, Beterbiev’s promoter, Top Rank.

Top Rank is planning to stage the bout in Quebec City on March 28, according to ESPN.com. It is a homecoming of sorts for Beterbiev, a Chechen Russian who has been living and training in the Montreal area for most of his professional career. Beterbiev unified the WBC and IBF belts on Oct. 18, when he stopped then-undefeated Oleksandr Gvozdyk by a 10th-round stoppage.

In light of the news, Beterbiev (15-0, 15 knockouts) can let out a sigh of relief.

The 34-year-old bruiser was reportedly dead set against fighting Fanlong (16-0, 10 KOs) in China, presumably because Beterbiev takes issue with China’s treatment of its Uighur, an ethnically Turkic Muslim minority group living in the westernmost province of Xinjiang. In an effort to crack down on any hint of dissent, the Chinese government has been forcing the Uighur to turn their backs on their religion and traditions, including banning the naming of any of their sons “Muhammad.” It is thought that at least a million Uighurs are being detained in re-education centers.

Rumors suggested Beterbiev was willing to vacate his IBF title rather than fight in China.

Fanlong’s promoter, Dino Duva of Roc Nation, expressed his dismay with his Chinese partners.

“(I’m) very disappointed that Longjoy Sports defaulted,” Duva told Boxing Junkie. “It would have been great for Fanlong, and an historic event for boxing and China. However, I’m confident it will be a great fight in Canada and that Fanlong can beat him anywhere.”

Duva said he doesn’t know why Longjoy Sports failed to make the payment but noted that it was not out of negligence, adding that “they didn’t forget, they knew the rules and obligations.”

Longjoy Sports initially won the rights to the Beterbiev-Menlong bout on Dec. 30 with a bid of $1.9 million, which beat out the $1.35 million offer from Top Rank.

Badou Jack refreshed, hungry: ‘I’m coming to take back my title’

Badou Jack is training for his December fight against Jean Pascal, his first bout since suffering a horrible cut in a loss to Marcus Browne.

Healing is not easy in boxing. But it’s necessary, an inevitable process as challenging as any tough opponent. Ask Badou Jack.

Jack is back, training for light heavyweight Jean Pascal on December 28 in Atlanta in his first bout since suffering the kind of cut that would make a lot of fighters think about a different line of work.

In a decision loss last January to Marcus Browne in Las Vegas, Jack was left with a huge gash across his forehead, the result of a clash of heads in the seventh round. Jack remembers the blood. He remembers the blurred vision. Remembers the aftermath, too.

Initially, it was reported that Jack needed 25 stitches. But the deep gash required a lot more surgery. He said he wound up with 136 stitches to seal a wound as deep as it was ugly

Jack, 36, took the time to reflect. He has his Badou Jack Foundation, which he started in an ongoing fight to get food to refugee kids in Jordan and Syria.

Badou Jack (wearing white shirt) and Gervonta Davis recently discussed their upcoming fights. Sean Michael Ham / Mayweather Promotions

For Jack, there is always another fight to wage. Being away from the ring for nearly a year, he says, turned into a positive.

“I feel like a young 36 years old,’’ Jack said recently in Las Vegas. “I live a clean life. I’m always in the gym training, and I try not to take any punishment. I have a couple of years left, and I’m more motivated now than ever.

“I needed that little break. I hadn’t had a break since I was an amateur 20 years ago. I took time to relax with the family and eat good food.

“Now I’m hungry.”

Hungry enough, he said, to fight anybody at 175 pounds, a division suddenly as intriguing as any. Middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez has a light heavweight belt, which he took from Sergey Kovalev in an 11th-round stoppage on November 2.

There is Dmitry Bivol and Artur Beterbiev. Beterbiev appears to be the best. He took two of the belts with a brutal stoppage of Oleksandr Gvozdyk on October 18 in Philadelphia.

“He’s a beast,’’ Jack said of Beterbiev.

Jack’s willingness to fight anybody is not a surprise. Not a cliché, either. It’s just what he does.

At super middleweight, he beat Anthony Dirrell, George Groves and Lucian Bute. At light heavy, he beat Nathan Cleverly and fought Adonis Stevenson to a draw. It’s been daunting. It’s been dangerous. But it has been – and still is – Jack.

“I’ve been ready to fight for a couple of months,’’ said Jack (22-2-3, 15 knockouts). “Everyone who saw me in my last fight could see I was flat.

“I’m excited for this fight. I actually called Pascal (34-6-1, 20 KOs) the day before his last fight and let him know I was rooting for him. But this is business at the end of the day. I’m coming to take back my title.”