Fight Nears Completion

Wardley’s rise has followed a clear pattern. Each step has been harder than the last, and he has not backed away from any of them. He was outworked early by Justis Huni and stopped him anyway. He was expected to lose to Joseph Parker and finished him late.

Even the Frazer Clarke draw for Wardley, followed by the violent one round rematch, showed a fighter learning in public and closing the door decisively the second time around. Fabio has stayed active and taken progressively tougher fights.

Dubois’ recent path looks different. He has boxed once since losing a rematch to Oleksandr Usyk last summer. In that time, he has changed trainers, changed management, reunited with his former coach, and remained out of the ring. The names on the record still land, even if the last year hasn’t moved him forward.

Dubois’ social media call for Wardley to “sign the contract” speaks less to urgency than to timing. Wardley already has a belt, regular activity, and a domestic base that has grown with each win. Dubois has rankings and name recognition, but his standing rests on what he has done in the past rather than what he has done lately.

Where Each Man Stands Now

That contrast is the point of the fight. If Wardley beats Dubois, it confirms that his climb is real and that the belt did not land on him by accident. If Dubois beats Wardley, it becomes his first meaningful forward step since the Usyk losses and reopens a conversation that has been stalled for nearly a year.

Either way, the direction is being tested. Wardley is trying to see how far up he can go. Dubois is trying to prove he hasn’t started sliding.

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