Keith Thurman is doing something most fighters avoid. He’s listing every reason people have to doubt him: age, layoffs, surgeries, and putting it all out in the open before the fight.

At 37, with only 15 rounds boxed in seven years and a history of injuries, none of those points need exaggeration. They’re already the argument against him, and Thurman isn’t disputing them. He’s repeating them himself, which is where this gets unusual.


Instead of pushing back, he’s leaning into the idea that he should be written off going into his fight with Sebastian Fundora. He’s not selling form or activity. He’s pointing at everything that says he shouldn’t be here and letting that sit.

There’s a purpose to it. If the focus stays on what he’s lost, it leaves less attention on what he still has, experience, timing, and the kind of decision-making that only comes from long fights at a high level. Thurman has been in with championship opponents before. Fundora, despite holding a title, hasn’t faced many fighters with that kind of background.

Thurman has even pushed that angle further, describing Fundora as someone who hasn’t yet dealt with a “real veteran.” It’s a way of shifting the comparison, from old versus young to seasoned versus untested in that specific sense.

There’s also an element of control in how he’s talking. By acknowledging the risks himself, he removes some of the impact when others bring them up, and the criticism loses force when it’s already been said.

None of it changes the facts. The inactivity is real. The injuries are part of his record, and fighters at this stage don’t usually return at the top level without being tested quickly.

The question is whether anyone actually believes him, because he’s laying out the case against himself and betting it won’t matter.

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Categories Keith Thurman, Sebastian Fundora

Last Updated on 2026/03/26 at 1:54 PM

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