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Jake Paul celebrates after knocking out Andre August in the first round of their on December 15 in Orlando, Florida. Photo: Getty Images

Boxing influencer Jake Paul and UFC star Francis Ngannou pack a punch as heavyweight logjam finally set to break

  • The sport finds itself in rude health thanks in no small part to the influx of social media stars into the ring
  • Paul’s influence is now stretching to the Olympics with the celebrity turned boxer mentoring and promoting US fighters ahead of the 2024 Games
Boxing

Boxing enjoyed a bumper 2023 powered by the likes of crossover stars such as YouTuber Jake Paul and former UFC champion Francis Ngannou with things very much looking up for the sport.

Not all of the recent developments will be to the taste of the purists but for a sport whose demise is regularly predicted, boxing finds itself in rude health thanks in no small part to the influx of influencers into the ring.

Together with his older brother Logan, 28, Jake Paul has led the charge to introduce the sport to a new generation of fans.

Jake Paul’s influence is now stretching to the Olympics too, with the celebrity turned boxer will help mentor and promote US fighters in the run-up to the 2024 Games in Paris.

Cynics might say it is just another vehicle for the Paul brothers to sell the various products they endorse, but they have undoubtedly caught the attention of the younger generations.

Francis Ngannou stunned boxing when he knocked down Tyson Fury during their heavyweight fight in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in October. Photo: Getty Images

The fact that the younger Paul, 26, suffered the first defeat of his professional career against boxer and reality television star Tommy Fury, half-brother of world heavyweight champion Tyson, has done little to dampen the enthusiasm of the new fans.

Paul bounced back from that loss to defeat fellow American Nate Diaz, an iconic figure in mixed martial arts, and scored a crushing victory over Andre August on December 15, and will now be looking to ramp things up again early in the New Year.

If he does, Paul is likely to make a return to Saudi Arabia, where he lost to Fury last February, as the kingdom seeks to gain more influence in boxing in the same manner as it has done in soccer, Formula One and golf – by pumping money into it.

For years fans have been begging to see the world’s top heavyweights clash and it seems all that was needed to get it to happen was the infusion of vast amounts of Saudi money.

Tyson Fury was slated to meet Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk to decide the undisputed heavyweight champion on that date but the Briton’s sluggish performance in beating Ngannou, who was making his pro boxing debut, saw that fight pushed back to February.

In a moment that shocked the boxing world, Cameroonian-French fighter Ngannou floored Fury with a thunderous left hook, illustrating that even a novice can have a puncher’s chance against the best if he has enough power in his hands.

But given the impossibility of boxers crossing over into MMA – the skill set is too broad for them to bridge the gap without years of training – their sport looks set to remain the realm in which the title of the “baddest on the planet” is decided.

Some will be athletes who have boxed all their lives, some will be new arrivals whose reputations have been built on social media fame or MMA titles, but all have one thing in common – the ability to attract a paying audience to keep the tills ringing.

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