Moses Itauma is becoming accustomed to the huge event. The 19-year-old heavyweight wonder walked down honorary pathway at Tuesday’s stupendous appearance occasion looking each inch the future star. Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk likely could be battling for the undisputed heavyweight title on Saturday night, yet their presumptive successor may very well be battling on the undercard.
Itauma, 8-0 (6 KOs), has been boxing expertly for under year and a half yet this is as of now the second time that he has been highlighted on a Saudi super card. Up until this point, all proof – be it narrative or physical – recommends that it will not have a place before he begins edging increasingly close to the highest point of the bill.
Itauma – who battles Germany based Kazakh, Ilja Mezencev, 25-3 (21 KOs) – acknowledges that he is an individual from an elegant supporting cast this end of the week and isn’t the slightest bit flustered by the prospect of boxing on such a major stage.
Moses Itauma Plotting A Performance That Will Live Long In The Memory
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“Actually no, not actually. I feel like on the off chance that I view at it as, ‘Goodness, I’m on a major stage’ it very well may be the keep going time I’m on a major stage so I need to push it to the rear of the room and afterward subsequently think, ‘No doubt, I’ve accomplished something significant.’
“It’s a gift to be back. I was hanging around for the last Tyson battle and how could I want anything more? It’s a dynamite occasion. I can hardly sit tight for Saturday night,” he told Queensberry.
Regardless of his delicate years, Chatham’s Itauma has been fighting with the best names in heavyweight boxing for quite a while. He has invested energy working with Rage and as of late joined Ben Davison’s capable stable where he brushes shoulders with double cross bound together heavyweight champion, Anthony Joshua, consistently.
Should Itauma really do true to form and beat Mezencev, the southpaw will leave the ring with his most memorable piece of equipment threw behind him. A definite sign that the initial segment of his apprenticeship is finished and his apparently unavoidable walk towards world title level has started.
“Ideally, it’s the first of many,” he said. “I simply need to be on huge cards like this and enormous stages and bring home championships for my country, for my family and for everybody. Perhaps I can put on an act that everybody will appreciate and think, ‘I saw him right off the bat in his vocation.’
“I’m honored to be in the position I’m. There are a ton of contenders all over the planet who don’t get the open door I have so I’ve certainly snatching it with two hands and giving a valiant effort to capitalize on it.”
