Oleksandr Usyk returns to the ring on Saturday in Egypt against Rico Verhoeven in a fight that seems more like a crossover fight than a heavyweight battle.
Usyk arrives as the established champion and one of the most complete boxers of his era, while Verhoeven steps into unfamiliar territory after spending more than a decade at the top of kickboxing.
The difference in boxing experience is what makes this fight different from the norm.
Usyk is unbeaten in 24 professional fights and has already cleared out much of the heavyweight division, including wins over Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua, and Daniel Dubois.
Verhoeven, meanwhile, has only one professional boxing bout on his record, dating back to 2014.
Most of his career has been built in Glory kickboxing, where he defended the heavyweight title 13 times across an 11-year stretch.
Even with that gap, the fight is not completely straightforward because Verhoeven is used to high-level combat competition and understands distance, timing and positioning better than a normal boxing novice would.
At 6ft 5in and around 260 pounds, he also has the size to stay physically competitive with Usyk in clinches and close exchanges.
The question is whether he can use any of those attributes effectively under boxing rules against someone with Usyk’s level of control and experience.
Usyk’s advantage comes from how consistently he steers the fight, round after round. He changes angles constantly, keeps opponents resetting their feet, and rarely gives away clean openings for long stretches.
The WBC heavyweight title is attached to the event, which makes it more than just a standard crossover bout.
The setting itself also gives the fight an unusual scale, with the event taking place near the Pyramids of Giza.
Unsurprisingly, Usyk remains the clear favourite because of the difference in boxing experience and proven success at world-title level.
Verhoeven’s reputation in kickboxing gives the matchup curiosity value, but over twelve rounds, the fight still looks like it could only go one way. It remains to be seen what way.
