Boxing fans saw Murat Gassiev switch Kubrat Pulev off and the talk went straight to power. Fair enough. Heavyweights still determine nights with one clean shot, and Gassiev reminded everyone of that in Dubai.
But that knockout wasn’t the true aftershock from IBA Pro 13. The actual noise began the moment the belt landed on Gassiev’s shoulder. Because from that second on, the name sitting right behind him was Moses Itauma.
Since the moment Gassiev picked up that WBA belt, the division quietly lined up one name behind him. Mandatory. No detours. No soft landings. The youngest heavyweight everyone’s been hyping is now staring straight at a bloke who doesn’t miss when he loads up.
Why Itauma Is Now Front And Centre
Itauma has been sold as the long run for a reason. Quick feet. Sharp balance. Itauma looks comfortable in there in a way that typically takes just a few scares to learn. He doesn’t rush, doesn’t throw rubbish, doesn’t lose his head when things decelerate. That form of control normally takes years to learn.
What he hasn’t faced yet is a heavyweight who can end a fight without constructing momentum.
Gassiev doesn’t need rhythm. He doesn’t need rounds to warm up. Against Pulev, he waited, read one mistake, and detonated. That left hook wasn’t flashy. It was heavy, compact, and cruel.
That’s the form of power that forces prospects to grow up fast.
Style Breakdown: Youth Versus Consequence
Itauma wins with speed and cleanliness. He touches, steps off, touches again. He makes opponents look a half-beat slow. Against most heavyweights, that’s enough.
Gassiev shrinks the ring. He doesn’t chase recklessly, but he compresses space until exchanges occur whether you would like them or not. After they do, his shots don’t rating. They damage.
If Itauma stays at range and controls distance perfectly, he can bank rounds early. If he gets greedy, even once, the fight can flip immediately. Heavyweights don’t get learning rounds against punchers like this.
That’s the chance. And that’s why people inside gyms are suddenly being attentive.
Why This Fight Is Dangerous For Everyone Involved
For Itauma, that is opportunity and danger rolled into one. Beat Gassiev and the hype turns into legitimacy overnight. Lose badly and the climb slows down whether anyone admits it or not.
For Gassiev, it’s about timing. He’s not all in favour of waiting behind politics or names that won’t sign. A compulsory against a young, unbeaten heavyweight keeps him lively and relevant. He’s already talked about Wembley. That is the way you force those conversations.
Gassiev kept it respectful after the win. Calm. Measured. No chest-thumping.
But make no mistake. This version of him isn’t here to mentor anyone.
At heavyweight, belief matters. Power matters more.
And Moses Itauma just became a part of that equation whether he desired to or not.


Last Updated on 12/13/2025

