GEROME WARBURTON goes by the ring monicker of โThe Bread Makerโ, but he might more accurately be called โThe Fortune Tellerโ.
However you slice it, you canโt argue when he claims โall the things I spoke about have happenedโ.
Warburton is harking back to our first meeting, more than five years ago, when he was a novice pro saying all the things youโd expect of a young 5-0 fighter.
He told me he was going to win a Welsh championship, that he would one day fight for a British title, and most of all, that he was bound for the biggest stages.
โImagine me fighting for Eddie Hearn on DAZN,โ he said at the time. โJust watch me go!โ
We can do exactly that on Saturday. Warburton has also, as predicted, won a Welsh title and will fulfil the prophecy of fighting for a British championship when he meets Kieron Conway for the vacant middleweight honours (and Conwayโs Commonwealth crown) on the Johnny Fisher-Dave Allen II card at Londonโs Copper Box Arena, live on DAZN.
But should he triumph and take two more belts back to Colwyn Bay on the North Wales coast, it will not be a case of mission complete. Now, the goals are bigger. Never mind Wales โ Warburton wants the world.
โAnybody can talk about world titles,โ he says, โbut I could be two fights away.
โConway is European mandatory, so if I beat him, I assume that position. [European champion] Denzel Bentley is gonna fight Zhanibek [Alimkhanuly, the IBF and WBO ruler], so I could pick up the vacant European title โ and that gives you a world rating.โ
Bold talk from a man who, for now at least, is relatively little known on the wider boxing scene, and who comes from an area with a minimal pro boxing presence. Only two fighters from North Wales have contested a British championship, neither of them successfully (Rhyl heavyweight Carl Gizzi in 1969, and Connahโs Quay middleweight Tom Doran in 2016). Warburton has spent his entire career boxing away from home, but believes this leaves him well prepared.
โIโve always boxed away,โ he says. โIโve always been one whoโll take my chances. I ainโt got nothing to lose.
โLook at Shakiel Thompson โ he was offered a title shot [against Alimkhanuly] and 300 grand, and he refused. Why? When opportunities arise, thereโs no turning back. You might not get another chance.โ
โThe Bread Makerโ turned pro in 2019 to precisely no fanfare.
โIt got to the point in the amateurs where I was positive I was gonna win Welsh championships, but I was beating my opponents and not getting the decision,โ he says. โ[Then-stablemate] Sion [Yaxley] was turning over, so I thought to myself, โjust go and do it; I may as well give it a tryโ.โ
Warburtonโs willingness to accept a challenge was immediately obvious. His first pro fight was in the away corner, against a ticket-selling local, in the iconic setting of Londonโs York Hall.
โI was in the gym when I got a message from Chris [Sanigar], โdo you want this fight?โ I thought it was a joke!โ he says. โGoing to York Hall for your first fight is something in itself; something to tell everyone. Itโs such a historic place.
โHe [Celal Ozturk of Hackney] was also 0-0 but he had bear fans, and nobody knew me. But I ended up stopping him in two rounds.โ
If Warburton thought spoiling Ozturkโs pro plans at the first hurdle would kickstart his own, he was mistaken. He did occupy the โhomeโ corner for the next couple of years (with the exception of a lockdown-era trip to Spain), albeit in Manchester, where he boxed for Kieran Farrellโs Vicious Promotions, but was far from enthused by the competition.
He had talked with Boxing News in 2022 about his frustrations when facing journeymen, trying to find a finish against men seeking to โsurvive like wounded animalsโ, the grind of selling tickets while โtelling your fans youโre boxing someone with a hundred lossesโ, and of the comedown of following a Welsh title win with a four-rounder against a serial loser.
Accordingly, Warburton hasnโt had to be asked twice when offered more meaningful fights โ even if he wasnโt supposed to win them.
โThe Welsh title at four weeksโ notice [w pts 10 Morgan Jones, May 2022]; British title eliminator at six weeksโ notice [w pts 10 Aaron Sutton, February 2024]; a massive jump up against Ryan Kelly on Channel 5 [d pts 10, June 2024]; Spain on two weeksโ notice against a good, rated kid [l pts 6 Jhon Jader Obregon in Spain in December 2021]; I was thrown into York Hall on my debut against a big ticket seller and won.
โNo one ever thought I was meant to win them fights. Taking a fight on a few weeksโ notice, people usually do that for money โ I did it โcos I believe in myself.โ
And he believes in himself against Conway.
โI ainโt putting pressure on myself, โcos I already know Iโll win,โ he says. โAm I favourite? No. But Iโve always proved people wrong. Everyone from here [North Wales] whoโs tried [to win the British title] has lost โ but not me.โ
โHeโs only fought two southpaws,โ adds Warburton, a converted lefty, โand itโs well known he struggles with the weight. Whatโs he going to do in a hard 12-rounder with someone who makes the weight easily? Iโve never had trouble with weight. I used to eat KFC outside the gym before it opened.โ
That was when he was an amateur at Colwyn Bayโs Dyffryn Boxing Club, where he remained for several years into his pro journey, retaining Dyffrynโs founder Wesley Jones as his head coach.
But the 29-year-old eventually conceded he would have to look further afield if he was to push on, settling on former Team GB Olympic coach Paul Walmsley in Liverpool, an hourโs drive away.
Leaving Dyffryn late last year was a tough decision, but it was made with Jonesโ blessing.
โWes agreed I needed to get out of my comfort zone,โ Warburton says. โAt Dyffryn, itโs all about the fundamentals, and the fitness is probably the best in all of Wales, but the technical side isnโt quite there. And in North Wales, the sparring, the contacts, arenโt very high. Youโve got to move to the city.
โAnd Paulโs got no other pros, so Iโm getting the time I need. I feel like Iโve improved and people I spar with say Iโve improved.
โIt will be a shame to not have Wes in my corner for the British, but the beltโs coming back to the [Dyffryn] gym, not to Liverpool. Dyffrynโs always going to be my home, no matter what I go on to.โ
Heโs already gone on to more than most pro boxers from his region, and if Warburton beats Conway, heโll do what none before him have.
Winning the British title would be a โfantastic, life-changing eventโ, he says, โbut itโs more about showing people you can do it; showing the kids that if you believe in yourself and do things right, the opportunities are there.
โJust โcos youโre not from the city doesnโt mean you canโt do something.โ