“He’s like a Lotus Elise sports car; pretty fast, doesn’t have much horsepower, it’s agile on turns,” Miller said. “I’m like a big dumpster truck, and I am going to run him the f*** over.”
While he’s still a name, the 37-year-old version of Miller is fighting for survival. Since his 2023 return, his record hasn’t exactly screamed “title contender.”
For Miller, the Pero fight is his last chance to stay relevant. At 37, another loss, especially to a slicker, younger Cuban like Pero, would likely relegate him to opponent status for the rest of his career.
He’s still trying to use that same Brooklyn swagger to rattle Pero, but the stakes are completely different now. In 2019, he was the undefeated challenger with the world at his feet. In 2026, he’s a veteran trying to prove he isn’t just a “dumpster truck” with a dead battery.
The Brooklyn heavyweight has long relied on pressure, volume punching, and personality, and he promised more of the same against the Cuban contender.
“It’s not going to be pretty. He can run, but I’ll catch his ass, and when I do, his goose is going to be cooked, plain and simple,” Miller said.
Pero did not match Miller’s theatrics, but he dismissed the talk and said the real answer will come once the opening bell rings.
“He’s been rallying a lot of bullshit, but that doesn’t affect my psychology in any way,” Pero said. “I’m going to go in there and break him. I do my talking in the ring with my fists.”
Promoter Eddie Hearn described the contest as an important fight for the heavyweight division, with the winner taking a significant step toward bigger opportunities.
Miller missed out on a fight against Anthony Joshua in 2019 that would have made him a wealthy man, setting him up for life. He tested positive for a banned substance and was subsequently replaced by Andy Ruiz Jr.
It’s a massive “what if” that has to haunt him every time he looks at his bank account. That $5 million plus payday for the Joshua fight was Miller’s golden ticket to the elite tier of the sport. Instead, he watched Andy Ruiz Jr. walk into Madison Square Garden, shock the world, and become a global superstar while Miller was sidelined and serving suspensions.
If Pero can navigate the early pressure and exploit Miller’s aging gas tank, that “goose is cooked” comment might end up being prophetic for Miller’s own career.
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