Ike Ibeabuchi, 52 years old and fresh off a 26-year nap, stepped back into the ring in Lagos, beat a 40-year-old who promptly quit on his stool, and then demanded a fight with Oleksandr Usyk.
Fans were asked to fork over thirty bucks for the privilege of watching Ibeabuchi fight Idris Afinni, a 40-year-old career opponent who looked like he showed up just to keep busy until his Uber shift started. The bout was scheduled for 12 rounds. It lasted three. Afinni sat down, said “nah,” and boxing called it a night.
Of course, promoters called it a triumph. Of course, Ibeabuchi’s record is now a shiny 22-0. Of course, someone will pretend this is meaningful. Because in boxing, three rounds of a glorified spar is more than enough to resurrect a man’s career.
Who’s Next for Ike Ibeabuchi After 26-Year Comeback?
Usyk’s name is already out of Ike’s mouth, because why not aim straight for the summit after beating a guy who retired on his stool? This is boxing, where bad matchmaking is practically a tradition. So don’t be surprised if the following “serious options” get floated:
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Evander Holyfield — provided someone duct-tapes his gloves on, installs subtitles for his corner advice, and the referee agrees to stop the fight the second a stiff breeze lands clean.
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Samuel Peter — dragged out of retirement with the promise of a free buffet, complete with a special rule that both fighters can take oxygen breaks between rounds
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A rematch with prison walls — the only opponent who actually kept him down for 20+ years.
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Dick Tiger’s hologram — because if we can stream concerts with dead rappers, why not throw punches with ghosts?
Because in this sport, matchmaking isn’t about logic or rankings. It’s about who still has a pulse, a name fans vaguely recall, or a gimmick that might trend for 48 hours.
