Close Menu
PlayActionNews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Mike Vrabel warns Patriots against training camp fights, recalling his own rookie scuffle with Steelers

    July 28, 2025

    Aston Villa Are In The Race To Sign 25-Year-Old Austrian International: Is It A Necessary Signing?

    July 28, 2025

    Sources – Phillies’ Bryce Harper cussed out Rob Manfred in meeting

    July 28, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Daily News
    • Soccer
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Football
    • Boxing
    • UFC
    • Fantasy
    Monday, July 28
    PlayActionNews
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    PlayActionNews
    Home»Boxing»Josh Taylor and his rare career showed the privileged burden that boxing can bring
    Boxing

    Josh Taylor and his rare career showed the privileged burden that boxing can bring

    Amanda CollinsBy Amanda CollinsJuly 28, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Josh Taylor and his rare career showed the privileged burden that boxing can bring
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Sport

    Sign up to our free sport newsletter for all the latest news on everything from cycling to boxing

    Sign up to our free sport email for all the latest news

    Sign up to our free sport email for all the latest news

    Sport

    It is not going to be easy for Josh Taylor to walk off into the boxing sunset after a remarkable career inside the ropes.

    It was also a brutally short career, a rare career in British boxing; it was unusual because of the speed, the relentless hard matchmaking and the success.

    Taylor, who is now 34, is the only British boxer to have held all four of the accepted and respected belts in the modern era of a sport packed with division and false claims.

    In a business where men – it is different for the women – often have 20 or more fights before finally getting a chance at a world title, Taylor held a version of the world title after just 15 fights. He had been a professional for less than four years at that time.

    In British boxing history, the world champions have been seasoned by years of learning their trade and being used as part of a bargaining system by promoters and managers. Taylor broke with tradition, altered the expected path of boxers and in just his 18th fight, he held all four of the belts. He was Josh Taylor, undisputed champion.

    World champions like John Conteh in the Seventies, Alan Minter in the Eighties, and Lennox Lewis in the Nineties served typically extended apprenticeships, featuring for long spells on undercards and waiting for an opening, waiting for a chance.

    Josh Taylor (third from left) with the Team GB boxing squad ahead of the 2012 Olympics

    Josh Taylor (third from left) with the Team GB boxing squad ahead of the 2012 Olympics (Getty)

    Conteh won his world title in his 27th fight, Minter his 43rd fight, and Lewis in his just his 23rd. Lewis had the benefit of two Olympics as experience, including the gold in Seoul, but still danced slowly down the well-trodden and careful path. It was a path that Taylor seemed to reject; he was ready to be fast-tracked by the time he became a professional boxer.

    Taylor had two Commonwealth Games medals and had been to the Olympics in 2012 when he finally turned professional in 2015. He had stayed after the London Olympics to compete and win a gold at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. He was the unofficial mascot for the Games, used in adverts, and his face was plastered all over Glasgow and Edinburgh. It was a privileged burden and one he comfortably repaid.

    He had hard fights early on, winning the Commonwealth professional title in just his seventh fight when he stopped Dave Ryan, a noted hard man, in the fifth round in front of a devoted flock in Edinburgh. The real fights were getting closer for Taylor.

    DAZN logo

    Enjoy 185+ fights a year on DAZN, the Global Home of Boxing

    Never miss a fight from top promoters. Watch on your devices anywhere, anytime.

    Buy Now

    ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.

    DAZN logo

    Enjoy 185+ fights a year on DAZN, the Global Home of Boxing

    Never miss a fight from top promoters. Watch on your devices anywhere, anytime.

    Buy Now

    ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.

    The bigger wins followed: unbeaten Ohara Davies ruined in seven in 2017, former world champion Viktor Postol given a boxing lesson in 2018, and the unbeaten and dangerous Ryan Martin stopped in seven. All three fights were in Glasgow; Scotland had a boxing hero. Postol had just lost to the great Terrence Crawford – Taylor possibly did a better job. This was not a hype gravy train.

    Taylor during his win over Ivan Baranchyk, when he claimed the IBF super-lightweight title

    Taylor during his win over Ivan Baranchyk, when he claimed the IBF super-lightweight title (EPA)

    In 2019, also in Glasgow, Taylor met the IBF light-welterweight champion, Ivan Baranchyk, who was 19-0 with 12 knockouts; Taylor won on points, he had his first world title, but the boxing world was about to shrink.

    The run continued, the darkness of Covid was coming. Taylor fought six unbeaten men in a stunning consecutive sequence, including five in world title fights; he unified the titles, fighting in front of a sold-out O2 in London when he beat the fancied Regis Prograis in late 2019. Prograis was the WBA champion. It was a stunning fight, contender for Fight of the Year.

    Prograis was shell-shocked at the end – it should have been the fight that transformed Taylor, made him a star, but his next fight was nearly a year later and behind closed doors at York Hall in front of less than 50 people; Covid hit hard and few in boxing suffered more from the fallout than Taylor. It robbed him of momentum and a chance to win all four belts in front of an outdoor crowd in Scotland. That is the harsh reality.

    Taylor travelled under too many radars during this exceptional sequence because of the Covid restrictions. It was a cruel twist, a twist as cruel as the eye injury that forced him after just 23 fights to walk away last week.

    Taylor became Britain’s first – and so far only – undisputed champion in the four-belt era

    Taylor became Britain’s first – and so far only – undisputed champion in the four-belt era (Getty Images)

    “I have certainly not had the best of luck,” he said, and he is right.

    He won his first world title in May of 2019 and lost the last of the four belts he owned in June of 2023; he fought just four times in the middle during a four-year spell when, under different circumstances, he could have become a major star.

    In 2021, he went to Las Vegas to fight Jose Ramirez; all four of the recognised belts and the Ring magazine belt were on the line; Ramirez was unbeaten in 26, but he was dropped twice and lost. Taylor had become the undisputed world champion in just his 18th fight. There were just a hundred or so in the Virgin complex on the night to witness history.

    None of Taylor’s family and friends could be there.

    Taylor’s family were unable to watch his undisputed-title win in person

    Taylor’s family were unable to watch his undisputed-title win in person (Everlast)

    The bad nights followed, including last year, when Jack Catterall avenged a heavily debated loss to Taylor from 2022. In May of this year, he lost for the third consecutive time when he was narrowly beaten by Ekow Essuman. The eye injury was there; the end was near.

    Taylor will not make an easy traveller, but he will go off into the horizon with a spectacular legacy. The first and only undisputed British world champion in modern boxing. That is, trust me, enough.

    Boxing Bring Burden Career Josh privileged rare showed Taylor
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Amanda Collins
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Boxing

    Boy, could the ‘Camden Buzzsaw’ Dwight Muhammad Qawi fight

    July 28, 2025
    Football

    Are Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson the top NFL QBs? A look at the new Madden 99 club

    July 28, 2025
    Boxing

    Crocker-Donovan: Crocker says he must be better in Windsor Park world title fight

    July 28, 2025
    Boxing

    England win Euro 2025: What will the Lionesses’ legacy hold after back-to-back European championships? | Football News

    July 28, 2025
    Boxing

    Francisco Rodriguez also failed doping test in December fight before Galal Yafai victory

    July 28, 2025
    Boxing

    Aaron Ramsdale transfer news: Newcastle in talks with Southampton for goalkeeper | Football News

    July 28, 2025
    Editors Picks

    Pacquiao wants to fight again: Can Romero or Mayweather be next?

    July 20, 2025

    July update: 2025 top 10 prospect rankings for all 30 MLB teams

    July 20, 2025

    NBA free agency 2025 – Reaction and grades for the biggest signings

    July 20, 2025

    Fantasy baseball lineup advice and betting tips for Sunday

    July 20, 2025
    Top Reviews

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Editor's Picks

    Mike Vrabel warns Patriots against training camp fights, recalling his own rookie scuffle with Steelers

    July 28, 2025

    Aston Villa Are In The Race To Sign 25-Year-Old Austrian International: Is It A Necessary Signing?

    July 28, 2025

    Sources – Phillies’ Bryce Harper cussed out Rob Manfred in meeting

    July 28, 2025

    Boy, could the ‘Camden Buzzsaw’ Dwight Muhammad Qawi fight

    July 28, 2025
    Latest Posts
    Facebook Pinterest WhatsApp Instagram

    Popular Categories

    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Fantasy
    • Boxing
    • Daily News

    Trending News

    • Football
    • Picks
    • Soccer
    • UFC

    Useful Links

    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2025 PlayActionNews .
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.