(Interview by Declan Warrington)
BN: Where does Dan Azeez rank among your toughest opponents?ย
JB: As this is the biggest fight, and a lotโs at stake, this is going to be number one. Weโve shared a ring many times as well, so itโs going to be number one, man.
โSpiderโ [Craig Richards, in 2022] was a different type of opponent. A taller man; someone I hadnโt sparred before, so that was a different threat. [In 2021 Ricards] Bolotniks was different because heโd come to England and knocked out a lot of the light-heavies, so that posed a threat in itself. But again, somebody I hadnโt shared the ring with. Dan Iโve shared the ring with; weโve seen him also beat a lot of the light heavies in England as well. Heโs been on a good spin; I havenโt got in a [competitive] ring yet with him, but this is going to be the toughest one. Iโve had to prepare very hard for this.
He comes forward. He wants to get in there; he wants to make his presence known. He imposes himself on you.
BN: Youโve often been described as โfriendsโ. How well do you know each other?ย
JB: I know Dan outside boxing as well. For the Spider fight they were like, โThese two know each other; theyโre friends; they live in the same areaโ. Yes, we know the same people and everything, but Danโs a lot more than that. Iโve known Dan for a very long time. My close friends have birthday gatherings and dinners; they invite myself and guess whoโs there? Dan. So itโs a very familiar face. As familiar as me even sparring Dan last year, in February. If I knew I was going to box him [so soon afterwards] I definitely wouldnโt have sparred him. Yeah, weโre the same weight, but this wasnโt something that was anticipated at all. Not for myself, anyway. Danโs been to my amateur club [The South Norwood & Victory amateur boxing club] as well, and thatโs way, way back โ 10 years [ago].
BN: What can you remember from your most recent sparring session?ย
JB: Somebody asked me this the other day. I donโt remember it. If I had known I was gonna fight him Iโd have made a conscious effort to remember it. Weโve sparred so much that when I sparred him I was like, โOh yeah, weโre gonna spar againโ. Itโs a very familiar sparring partner. When youโre sparring someone all the time youโre not really trying to remember all the sessions because youโve got another 1,000 rounds to spar them โ thatโs the assumption youโre under. Now the tableโs turned and youโve got to fight. Hundreds of rounds, man. Thereโs a lot of days we sparred 10.
Inevitably thereโs things that you can learn, but spars can be different from the fight, so Iโm not going in with that in mind at all. Iโm predominantly just treating it as a very good opponent that I have to fight for a final eliminator.
BN: How much of a talking point has Saturdayโs fight been among your mutual friends?ย
JB: Not that itโs been a talking point, but itโs been very interesting because Iโm not caught up in it. Iโm like, โGuys, I donโt even care who youโre supporting, just show up to the fightโ. Iโm not caught up in the bubble at all. Iโve kind of taken myself out of it.
Itโs just opinions. Someone might say, โI know them both, but if I had to choose, I take Dan, or Buatsiโ. Itโs just opinions and I canโt take it personal at all.
Iโm sure thereโs group chats and other conversations people are having outside of myself and Dan. Opinions are split, so they donโt want to come across like theyโre choosing sides so theyโre having off-the-record conversations, and thatโs natural, man. Itโs meant to be like that. If two of my mates were fighting, I wouldnโt appear in a group chat if both of them happened to be in it. Iโd be out of the group chat ringing my other mates. โI think this [mate] is gonna win, you know.โ These things are very, very natural. Iโm not taking it too personal.
I was at home [when I was told just days before that the original date of October 21 was being postponed]. Breakfast was being made for me so I was sat in the kitchen waiting. I had a phone call. โIโve got some very bad news for you โย can you go somewhere youโre alone?โ When I was told to go somewhere alone, I knew what it was. I was very disappointed. So far [thatโs the worst feeling Iโve known in boxing], being that close to the fight. Definitely. I wish Iโd found out earlier.
BN: Does that add extra pressure and an extra incentive to win?
JB: No pressure. The incentive to win is that itโs a final eliminator [for the WBA light-heavyweight title]. Thatโs my incentive, and just that when I get in there I want to come out as the winner. Thereโs no second place in boxing.
Danโs a cool guy. Iโd be lying if I was badmouthing him and talking bad about him. It just happens to be that itโs somebody that Iโm gonna fight that I know.
Weโd have to ask him [if thatโs mutual], because we always make assumptions about things, and then you find out that other person is not reading the same scripts that youโre reading. To an extent [I think itโs mutual].
BN: On reflection, do you think thereโs been an awareness that this day could come and that youโve been holding back from each other?ย
JB: Asking me, no. If Iโd thought it I wouldnโt have sparred Dan last year. Why would I? It was never in the back of my mind that I could fight Dan one day.
BN: Then, how did you feel when the fight was first put to you?ย
JB: I said, โGuys, no, I wonโt fight Dan. Danโs a good mate of mine. Is there anyone else that I could fight?โ โOkay, weโll come back to you.โ They came back with Dan again. I said, โGuys, Iโm quite strict on it, I wonโt fight Dan unless itโs for something very importantโ. So, what was at stake? A final eliminator to fight for a title. That being the case, I said, โThis is definitely something worth fighting for.โ โCool. Iโm happy to put the friendship on pause to fight.โ
BN: Has reaching 30 made you feel you need to accelerate your progress?ย
JB: Most importantly, I need to win. Winning is one thing and how you win is another. Iโd love to win in a glamorous way; in a magnifying way; in a dominant way; all of that. But letโs not forget, the main thing here is to win.
You could say, โYeah, heโs 30โ. Then you could say, โHas he had any hard fights?โ No, I havenโt. I havenโt been in wars. My bodyโs still very young. Itโs a final eliminator. โOkay, heading in the right direction.โ Weโre not just having another aimless fight. Before you ask me, let me talk to you about this one โ they keep mentioning the [Anthony] Yarde fight. Itโs gonna be a good fight, and it will happen this year for sure. But if I win this, why would I then let the opportunity pass to have that attempt at the title, as Yarde has had too? I have to correct myself. I said โIfโ I win this. When I win this Iโm looking forward.

BN: Your fellow 2016 Olympians Joe Joyce and Lawrence Okolie have recently lost their way. As a group have you been nurtured less effectively than those from 2012?ย
JB: I hadnโt even thought about this. Yes, Covid made everyone have a break, and yes, other Olympic years, they didnโt have such a thing as Covid. But, really, itโs just what it is ยญโ working with what you have at the moment. Yeah, Covid interrupted things and we lost maybe just over a year when some ground could have been covered. But if I look at where Iโm at, am I saying Iโve had 17 [fights] and lost eight? No. Iโm sitting here with a clean slate fighting in a final eliminator. Itโs all about perspective.
BN: Through your trainer Virgil Hunter have you had access to the great Andre Ward?ย
JB: It was mainly when I first was out in the States. It was just him passing by the gym, and, of course, someone whoโs achieved what he has, Iโm asking a lot of questions. To hear from the experience, and everything. Iโm not saying itโs a constant relationship where thereโs constant communication. But if I do see him I will definitely ask away, as I will with other boxers. It doesnโt even necessarily have to be Ward.
How you deal with some of the fights that heโs been involved in at that level; just the training; the technical parts; such things as resting, sometimes youโre not experienced in knowing when to rest or when not to rest. Itโs the whole mindset of boxing as well. Itโs been very interesting.
The things heโs achieved, and obviously Iโm in the same gym with the same coaches. That says enough [about my respect for him].
BN: Approaching a year on, how do you reflect on your move from Matchroom to BOXXER?ย
JB: It was a move that I felt was going to be right for me at that time, and to now Iโm happy about that. Here I am again, in a big domestic fight, but for a final eliminator, so what can I complain about?
[I expect more] big fights like this. Bigger and bigger and bigger. Bigger and better, man. Itโs up from here, and of course, them being in partnership with Sky Sports means it will be on platforms where the most eyeballs are on. As an athlete, what more could you want?
Things not going [Matchroomโs] way, I didnโt expect to hear any positive comments. [The negative reaction was] not surprising.
Iโd like to think Iโm quite fair. Everything came to an end and it was time for me to move on. Yeah, it didnโt favour my previous promoter because they want to keep you and do this and do that, but as fighters you have to put yourself first. You have to position yourself where itโs going to benefit you. Your career is once; the promoter has many, many, many boxersโ careers in the palm of his hands. I donโt like to be on bad terms with anyone โ Iโm not saying Iโm on bad terms with Matchroom, because however they feel towards me, thatโs on them. I have no feelings towards them. This [BOXXER] is where Iโm at now.
BN: Who do you think is the best in the world at 175lbs?ย
JB: Both [Bivol and Artur Beterbiev], because not one person has got all the belts. Itโs an easy way out. But Iโd say both. Beterbiev has a 100 per cent knockout ratio but Bivol is technically sound, and everything. So, yeah, itโs just โ Iโm aiming to get in and take the belts too. Theyโre both good fighters, man.
BN: What about in Britain?ย
JB: Everyoneโs got a say โ why they are the best. Until someone gets a title to separate themselves, weโve all got arguments, really and truly. Unless I box all of the top five and I beat them and Iโm like, โGuys Iโve beaten all of you, so you all need to be quietโ, weโve all got arguments. Iโve boxed Spider; Iโm boxing Azeez. Azeez has boxed Shakan Pitters; Yarde has boxed Lyndon Arthur, so weโre getting there, and hopefully more of these domestic fights can happen with bigger things at stake.
BN: How do you reflect on Beterbievโs fights with Anthony Yarde and Callum Smith?
JB: Yarde showed a lot of heart in that fight, definitely. He had his moments. Beterbiev did what champions are meant to do, but yeah, massive respect to Yarde after that fight. I definitely have more respect for him. Iโm not saying I didnโt respect him prior, but in that fight he definitely showed heart.
It was a very, very good performance from Beterbiev [against Smith]. A lot of people questioned Beterbiev but he proved us all wrong โย it was a very, very smart performance. People talk about the power, but the tactics and the strategy and the technique that he showed was outstanding.