Mobile header

The prospect of the month, May edition: Moses Itauma

Laurent Poulin - Boxingtown Québec

Photo: The Sun – Moses Itauma (9-0, 7 KOs), 19 years old and already in search of world titles.

I am still in shock from having witnessed the fight between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk. Our expectations were high for this duel and the fight was even better than expected. The momentum turned in Fury’s favor from the 4th round, with Usyk coming back and beating the giant in round 8 to then earn the decision from the judges. I was over the moon to have seen history being written before my eyes. The Ukrainian unifies a second weight category and all this in fights abroad… it will be necessary to question whether he is the greatest heavyweight of all time.

On the same card, there was a 19-year-old boxer who claims to be on his way to becoming the youngest heavyweight champion of all time and is doing his best to get there. Yesterday, he demolished Ilja Mezencev in 2 very short rounds during the preliminary fights.

I am part of this generation of Montreal Canadiens fans who, failing to win rounds in the playoffs, encourage themselves by studying the prospects available in the next draft. And so with the return of my famous column about the champions of tomorrow, you will know here in advance who will be champion in 5 years.

Who is Moses Itauma?

The 19-year-old boxer represents the town of Chatham in England. As you already know, it is a city known for its Military Engineering School, its barracks and its forts.

Moses Itauma aims for Mike Tyson’s record.

18-year-old left-hander and junior amateur world champion. After school in secondary 4, he served as a sparring partner to Lawrence Okolie and Joseph Joyce.

Born to a Slovak mother and a Nigerian father, his brother Karol Itauma has a 9-0 record at 175 pounds. Moses wants to become world heavyweight champion before he is 20 years, 4 months and 22 days old to beat Mike Tyson’s record.

A race against the clock

To achieve this, he signed with Frank Warren who’s already in business with his brother Karol Itauma. The plan was simple: Moses would box often and against very good boxers quickly to break the record.

“I’m tired of fighting against bums that I knock out in 1 round. I told Frank to put me in 50/50 fights, I even want to be the underdog and show everyone my true value,” says the main person involved.

He has been training with Dan Woledge Jr since he was 10 years old.

It’s difficult to analyze a boxer who wins his fights so easily. At the moment he is providing spectacular knockouts in every outing. We even wonder about the fact that he will perhaps have one last growth spurt because he is so young. Moses Itauma is already 6 feet and 6 inches tall.

In England, it is forbidden to fight over 10 rounds before the age of 20. This is why we are going to increase the number of 10-round fights for the moment.

The deadline to break the record is May 2025, so it feels more like a sprint than a marathon here. I’m curious to see how Frank Warren will manage to place him in the world championship… if he succeeds. Usyk is not Canelo Alvarez, I doubt the 4 associations will let him hold all the belts forever. He now owes fights to Filip Hrgovic who is waiting for his fight from Matusalem and Agit Kabayel who shocked the whole world by beating Frank Sanchez by knockout.

Good luck Frank… the clock is running.

VOUS POURRIEZ AIMER:

Sergiy Derevyanchenko: the Technician arrives in Quebec City

Mbilli-Heffron: 10 Ways to See the Conquest

Simon Kean Deserves his Tribute

PG’s International : Oleksandr Usyk is a Living Legend

Christopher Guerrero promises to be ‘himself’ on May 25

Albert Ramirez in 4 questions : ‘hard work will pay off on May 25’

PG’s International: Loma’s back on top, Charlo hits rock bottom

The second chance of Adam Deines

Appreciate The Greatness of Canelo And Inoue In Real Time

Cornerman, Part V: Stéphane Joanisse’s School of Life

Avery Martin Duval: the future antihero?

More than just a win for Thomas Chabot

Bazinyan-Phinn and the art to promote

“We Want More”: 10 Local Fights to Make

Christian Mbilli Against British Boxing

The new life of Mehmet Unal

Mark Heffron: “I Want To Beat The Best Mbilli”

Erik Bazinyan and the new Super 6

Lani Daniels would like to unify with Lepage-Joanisse

Erik Bazinyan: better than we think?

Shakeel Phinn: The Jamaican Juggernaut

Two Riyadh giants square off in Shawinigan

Mark Heffron: a british knockout artist against Mbilli

The Ghost Chabot is back with a new coach

Cornerman, part IV: the rise of Jessy Ross Thompson

When third time’s the charm to become world champion

Matchmaking: the art of creating the perfect storm

Who’s next for Vany?

This time it’s true

Butler-Rolls recap: Two KOs and a Champion

Butler-Rolls: Will Lou DiBella Get His Revenge?

Abril Vidal: more than just an opponent

Predictions: the experts divided by Butler-Rolls

Cornerman, part III: Samuel Décarie-Drolet, the boxing teacher

2024: the Dragon year?

Cornerman, Part II: The “Mike Moffa” way

Editorial: Arthur Biyarslanov is the best super-lightweight in the country

Bazinyan vs. Phinn: between bragging rights and world title aspirations

Shakeel Phinn: Now or Never

Steven Butler: still chasing the dream

168 Reasons to Smile

Cornerman, Part I: the 12 tasks of Marc Ramsay

Shamil Khataev joins his brother with the tigers

Chabot 2024: “smarter, but still spectacular”

Luis Santana’s looking to build momentum

Seven years later: Vany aims to seize her second chance

The Grizzly hangs up his gloves

Here comes Artur again

Bazinyan-Godoy: analysis and predictions for January 25

Back to the future for Avery Martin-Duval

Orobio-Fendero: brother in arms

Mary Spencer: “Losing motivates me more than winning”

Wilkens Mathieu’s aiming for a “Tyson” year

Rohan Murdock : ‘you picked the wrong guy’

Wilkens Mathieu: a rookie year in five acts

Firecrackers in 2023, Explosion in 2024

Artur Beterbiev’s eternal quest

A new tiger: get to know Osleys Iglesias

Steve Claggett: from road warrior to fan favorite

Christian Mbilli: the world-class Canadian

Fendero and Khataev : two unique recruits

Bazinyan and Mbilli : two tigers, one objective

Wilkens Mathieu: Youth, Talent, and Wisdom

Christopher Guerrero : ‘Like in a video game’

Christopher Guerrero : The Tiger Finally Roars

Mbilli : Resilience embedded in DNA