
Ruiz (33-2, 22 KOs) said he ballooned to more than 300 pounds after the loss to Joshua, a further testament to his bad habits. “Now I’m more motivated, more dedicated to the sport. I had chichis (breasts), which wouldn’t let me throw the right punches. I can do stuff I couldn’t do before because of my big gut. “Now that I’ve been dropping weight … in the right way, eating the right things, working on the right things, I feel amazing. Still, Ruiz, 31, couldn’t be happier about his conditioning program under trainer Eddy Reynoso, with whom he began to work after the loss to Joshua. weighed 283.5 for his rematch with Anthony Joshua. He likely wouldn’t hit the ring again until the fall, but that he’s not totally checked out on the sport and off farting around is a good thing for him.Andy Ruiz Jr. Otto Wallin might be a wild card to consider.Īt any rate, I do think it’s good to even see Ruiz talking about coming back so quickly. Gerald Washington and Dominic Breazeale don’t bring much to the table now, really. Adam Kownacki and Robert Helenius are still expected to rematch one another at some point, and Charles Martin seems content to sit on his IBF ranking and wait for an opportunity there. There are other PBC-affiliated heavyweights, of course. (FOX and PBC also knew, but if they want to pretend they didn’t, let’s give them the great respect of going along with it and just thinking they’re super dumb.) He hasn’t really fought since a 2019 rematch loss to Wilder, though he was paid to be in a ring last November on FOX, stopping Alexander Flores in 45 seconds of what everyone but FOX commentators and PBC knew was an absurd mismatch going in. The Cuban southpaw, 42 or so, is a veteran contender who’s never quite gotten over the hump in his career, but has always been considered dangerous. Ortiz (32-2, 27 KO) seems the more likely choice, at least between these two. Whyte (28-2, 19 KO) has only fought outside of the UK twice - once in the States in 2017, once in Saudi Arabia in 2019 - and Ruiz might not be dying to go abroad for that fight right now.


Ruiz-Whyte would certainly be doable, but would require a bit more legwork from the teams than some fights, and there’s no guarantee either of them are really all that interested in actually doing it, either. Whyte has been sharply critical of Ruiz, hurling plenty of criticism his way for the Arreola matchup and other things. That leaves two bigger candidates out there: Dillian Whyte and Luis Ortiz.

The biggest in-house name for PBC heavyweights, of course, would have been Deontay Wilder, but Wilder is slightly busy, as he’s facing Tyson Fury a third time on July 24.Ī trilogy bout with Anthony Joshua would seem appealing to some, especially now that Ruiz (34-2, 22 KO) has shown he can at least be in the shape he was for the first fight, but the demand still doesn’t really seem to be there, and at any rate Joshua is also likely busy, as he appears headed for a bout with Oleksandr Usyk in September. Andy Ruiz Jr just fought on May 1, scoring a solid if unspectacular win over Chris Arreola, and already says he’s ready to get back in the ring, asking fans whom they want to see him fight when he returns.įans will, of course, have very little say, but it’s fun to Tweet about it for him, or for us to discuss.
