Even though unified heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk completed a dramatic rally to save his unbeaten record with a come-from-behind TKO of kickboxing legend Rico Verhoeven in Round 11, it was a performance that created more questions than answers. Usyk (25-0, 16 KOs), a two-division undisputed champion and future first-ballot Hall of Famer, looked anything but one of the pound-for-pound best in the game when he showed up heavy and presumably out of shape for his novelty title defense outdoors and in front of The Pyramids of Giza in Egypt. Boxing pundits are left debating whether Usyk has firmly lost a step at age 39 or whether he simply looked past his 37-year-old opponent in Verhoeven (1-1), who owns GLORY kickboxing records for most wins and most heavyweight title defenses yet hadn’t boxed professionally in 12 years. While Verhoeven, a native of the Netherlands, deserves credit for overachieving by outworking Usyk in a surprising performance, it was hard to ignore just how old the recognized heavyweight king looked. Usyk looked so flat and lackadaisical that it fueled rumors as to whether he was hiding an injury as he was largely limited to singular counter shots until he rallied late to hurt Verhoeven in Round 10 and drop him the following round until a highly controversial stoppage by referee Mark Lyson saved Usyk at 2:59 of Round 11 (even though replays showed Lyson couldn’t hear the bell and technically stopped the bout after the round concluded).
The ringside view of Oleksandr Usyk’s victory over Rico Verhoeven in Giza 💥 pic.twitter.com/GvuM3YWdyH
— Ring Magazine (@ringmagazine) May 25, 2026