Take it with a fistful of salt, but there are rumours Wladimir Klitschko, the former heavyweight champion of the world, could be set for a return to the ring in 2019 and that Dillian Whyte, of all people, could be in line to welcome him back.
Thatโs the word on the street according to journalist Steve Bunce, who used his BBC 5 Live boxing podcast to tease a Klitschko return and suggested it could happen as early as April 13.
Should that be the case, it would represent the end of a two-year retirement and mark the 42-year-oldโs first fight since a gallant losing effort against Anthony Joshua at Wembley Stadium in 2017.
โIโm hearing all sorts of stuff about a fight that might beโฆ can I drop it?โ Bunce said.
โWladimir Klitschkoโs coming back, heโs going to fight again and Iโm hearing him linked with a big British heavyweight.
โItโs not (Tyson) Fury and itโs not (Anthony) Joshua, and Iโm hearing that could be the fight that we see there (April 13 at Wembley).โ
Last year we saw @Tyson_Fury successfully return to the ring.@bigdaddybunce has news of another former heavyweight World Champion potentially plotting his comeback!
Download the Costello and Bunce 2019 preview Podcast @BBCSounds ๐
๐ฒ https://t.co/TUtgjgHGEw pic.twitter.com/5yUUmNj3IA
— BBC 5 Live Sport (@5liveSport) January 10, 2019
While Buncey is rarely wrong, itโs worth remembering Lennox Lewis has been rumoured to be returning to the ring at least once a year for pretty much every year that has passed since his 2003 war โ and final fight โ against Vitali Klitschko in Los Angeles. Itโs almost the done thing, especially at heavyweight. For some reason, we find it incredibly difficult to wave goodbye to our heavyweight champions, and often they find it just as hard to stay away.
Watch this space.
The last time Gennady Golovkin and Billy Joe Saunders were rumoured to be in talks about a potential middleweight fight they were both in possession of world titles.
Now, however, the landscape has changed and neither man can call themselves a world champion. Saunders, 27-0 (13), lost his WBO title following some confusion over a failed drug test in the final quarter of 2018, while Golovkin, 38-1-1 (34), lost his WBA and WBC belts in a controversial defeat to Saul โCaneloโ Alvarez in September.
This turn of events left both empty-handed. It left them in the cold. But what it hasnโt done is cooled their desire to one day share a ring.
โWe signed for the fight twice, they sent contracts and we signed them and sent them back,โ Saundersโ promoter, Frank Warren, told the Pound for Pound podcast.
โWill they want that fight with no titles on the line? Maybe money will talk. In fact, my son spoke to Tom Loeffler (Golovkinโs promoter) today, so weโre exploring that. We want to make the fight. It would be a fantastic fight.
โHeโll never fight Canelo โ they don’t want that job, not after Billy did a job on David Lemieux.โ
In his last fight, a December run-out against Charles Adamu, Saunders weighed in as a light-heavyweight โ some 18 pounds heavier than the weight at which he would have once defended his WBO middleweight title. So, whether itโs Golovkin or someone else, Saunders needs to get back in shape and back on track โ fast.