Earned it compared to whom? If the benchmark is Sugar Ray Robinson, the answer is simple: he hasn’t. Robinson remains the gold standard for how an all-time great built a career. He didn’t stop after defeating a handful of elite opponents and decide there was nothing left to prove.
Sugar Ray fought relentlessly, took on leading contenders year after year, and finished with more than 200 professional fights. He built a resume so deep that generations later he is still considered by many historians to be the greatest boxer who ever lived. Modern boxing is different, but greatness shouldn’t come with a discount.
Holding modern fighters to that legendary standard is exactly how we prevent the dilution of what “all-time great” truly means. Robinson frequently gave dangerous contenders their shot instead of looking for an exit strategy.
By that standard, walking away with fewer than 30 fights while young, hungry lions are circling definitely leaves a lot of unfinished business on the table. It is easy to see why skipping over a newly elevated champion like Agit Kabayel or an absolute powerhouse prospect like Moses Itauma looks like a safe exit rather than a legendary one.
Forcing the public to watch a matchup with a faded big name, like Deontay Wilder, instead of the true competitive threats is exactly what frustrates purists who miss the era when champions cleared out the entire division.
If Usyk chooses the comfortable route, it absolutely cements the argument that he didn’t want to risk everything against the next generation.
Champions today operate like high-value corporations. When a fighter achieves everything Usyk has, the business side often takes over the competitive fire. Vacating all the belts just to stage a “last dance” against a faded Deontay Wilder or a crossover opponent is about a 39-year-old fighter recognizing that the modern landscape allows him to take the maximum reward for the minimum risk.
Usyk’s professional record stands at just 23 fights. His victories over Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury and Daniel Dubois are impressive, yet they don’t automatically mean there are no meaningful challenges remaining. There are.
Agit Kabayel has earned his opportunity through a string of quality victories and has developed into one of the division’s most complete heavyweights. Meanwhile, Moses Itauma is widely viewed as the sport’s brightest young heavyweight talent. If he defeats Filip Hrgović, his case for fighting Usyk becomes even stronger. Those are the fights that would add to Usyk’s legacy.
A bout with Deontay Wilder would do the opposite. Wilder remains one of the biggest names in the division, but he is no longer the destructive force who ruled the WBC heavyweight title for years. At this stage, the attraction is built more on recognition than on competitive merit.
The financial argument isn’t especially convincing either. With Saudi Arabia investing heavily in boxing, it’s difficult to believe Usyk would have to sacrifice life-changing money to face Itauma or Kabayel instead. Those fights would still command enormous purses while offering far greater sporting value.
That’s what separates good careers from legendary ones. The greatest fighters didn’t spend their final years looking for the safest or most marketable exit. They kept chasing the toughest available challenges because that’s how lasting legacies are built.
Usyk has had a remarkable career, but if he’s going to be compared with Robinson and the other immortals, he should be held to the same standard. There are still dangerous contenders waiting for their chance. If he retires after beating them, nobody could question his decision.
To the old-school purist, that calculated business move looks indistinguishable from avoidance. Robinson fought the baddest men alive because that was the only way to eat and stay relevant. Usyk can walk away having cleared out the division’s top tier, Joshua, Fury and Dubois of his specific generation, leaving the next crop to scramble for his discarded titles while he pursues a lucrative, low-risk exit.
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