TL;DR
Fabio Wardley and Daniel Dubois, both with a 95% knockout ratio, face off in a high-stakes heavyweight bout. Wardley, the WBO champion, has a unique background, while Dubois seeks redemption after previous losses.
Daniel Dubois and Fabio Wardley are very different characters but, in the ring, they share a knockout ratio of 95% in the combined 42 fights they have won. The unbeaten Wardley has knocked out 19 opponents in his 20 victories while Dubois has stopped 21 of 22 vanquished rivals. It’s an impressive statistic which belies the vulnerability at the heart of each man.
Wardley, the WBO world heavyweight champion, comes from a white-collar boxing background with minimal experience as an amateur. The only blemish on his record is a draw in March 2024 with the Olympic medallist Frazer Clarke – who he then knocked out with shocking brutality in the first round seven months later. But Wardley was also comprehensively outboxed by Justice Huni last summer before rescuing himself from a shutout defeat by separating the tricky Australian from his senses in a dramatic 10th round. The 31-year-old has often looked to be in trouble against more skilful rivals before his power obliterates the gulf in experience or ringcraft.
Dubois, meanwhile, has suffered three losses, to Joe Joyce and twice to Olekansdr Usyk, the best heavyweight on the planet. Each time he has come back from a crushing defeat with renewed determination but a fourth setback on Saturday night would be a serious blow to the complex Dubois – who, in contrast to his concussive force as a knockout merchant, cuts a strangely reticent figure outside the ring.
The 28-year-old Dubois has lived much of his life beneath the shadow of his father, Stan, who home-schooled the boxer and his siblings. Dubois still lives with his dad – known to many as Dave – and they were both criticised for holding a party in the family home hours before he was knocked out by Usyk last July.
In the messy aftermath Dubois left his trainer, Don Charles, who had been quietly sceptical of the revelry before such an important world title fight. Stan Dubois steered him towards Tony Sims’s gym but it did not take long for them to return to Charles – the one trainer who seems to understand the dynamic that exists between a supremely confident father and a shy and hesitant son.