Fabio Wardley & Daniel Dubois Lift Lid on Sparring Each Other 6 or 7 Years Ago

Alan Dawson
Share
Fabio Wardley & Daniel Dubois Lift Lid on Sparring Each Other 6 or 7 Years Ago

“He got the better of me.”

— Fabio Wardley & Daniel Dubois describe sparring one another years before big heavyweight bout

Fabio Wardley and Daniel Dubois fight in an all-British banger for the WBO heavyweight world title at the Co-op Live Arena in Manchester atop a Queensberry Promotions card on DAZN from May 9.

It’s an unlikely battle for both men as Wardley was once a ‘white-collar (unlicensed)’ fighter, which is a completely separate scene more akin to Misfits than the amateur ranks, and Dubois has routinely been cast aside by the boxing industry, and misjudged as a quitter after he took a knee against both Joe Joyce, and Oleksandr Usyk.

But, in early May, both fighters get to prove the naysayers wrong by competing on the biggest stage, on the brightest lights, for a legitimate piece of the heavyweight championship.

For many, it could prove to be a chance at seeing fresh blood compete in an era that has been dominated for years by an older guard of Deontay Wilder, Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury, and, of course, Usyk.

But for Wardley and Dubois it will be nothing they haven’t seen before.

Particularly as they both confirmed to Ade Oladipo that they sparred long ago.

It was “a long time ago,” according to Wardley. “Seven years,” he added. “Eight years, maybe.”

“It went well but in the early days he got the better of me, I will say that.”

— Fabio Wardley

“I got no problem with that, whatsoever.”

Get Instant Fight Alerts

Join 10,000+ boxing fans on WhatsApp for breaking news, fight results, and exclusive interviews.

Join WhatsApp Channel
Discover more from Boxing Social

Add Boxing Social as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting.

Follow

Alan Dawson is Boxing Social's editor. He is also a columnist for Uncrowned at Yahoo Sports, and the founder-moderator of Boxing Twitter — a 20,000-strong community on X. A 17-year sports media veteran, Alan has enjoyed extensive stints at Business Insider as a correspondent, BT Sport as digital editor, and Give Me Sport as combat sports editor. He is a 2-time Sports Journalist of the Year finalist and has been honored six times by the Boxing Writers Association of America. Alan grew up near London but is based in Nevada with his young family. Outside boxing he plays 8-handicap golf, hikes, and rides his ebike through the Sierra mountain trails.

View all articles →

Related