Interview: Shaun Brown
BN: Can you believe itโs been just over a year since you fought Artur Beterbiev?
AY: Time flies. Something I tell people all the time. Looking at life around me it feels like only yesterday my niece was turning one and now sheโs four. It shows you time flies. It donโt feel like a year already. It just shows you that in this sport it can be a short but exciting career and youโve got to make the most of it.
BN: How would you assess your own career so far?
AY: I would assess my career so far asโฆ unexpected. That would be a good word for it. There are loads of boxers but thereโs none with my story. Iโm talking about in terms of having 12 amateur fights, coming from London having had no fighting experience or background. No one in my family had boxed before. Again, having very limited amateur experience, I took a risk turning professional. And made it to the very top of the sport getting a world title shot twice. When I fought [Sergey] Kovalev in Russia I got offered step-aside money for that fight, but because of my mentality and my belief I just thought, you know what, itโs an opportunity. I have to prove to myself that Iโm at that level. I want to prove to myself that Iโm able to do this. Itโs all fun and games talking about it. And money comes and goes but because of my belief in myself moneyโs going to come anyway. I believed that I was gonna win that fight. It wasnโt my time yet. With the Beterbiev fight it wasnโt my time yet, but in both fights I gave a good account of myself, and I was a heavy underdog in both fights. It shows me something. It shows me Iโve taken on the hardest challenges, and I think Iโve earned that spot to be paid well and to have future big fights. Thatโs what itโs about in the sport, entertaining the fans, the people that are paying. I see other people taking other routes and they get credit for it. In my opinion itโs about entertaining the fans and giving them the best experience. Time will tell.
BN: Have you ever thought about life after boxing?
AY: Most definitely. Iโm very calculated in my mind because Iโve been through a lot in my life. Iโve come from having absolutely nothing. I remember there was a period of time when me and my friends used to share a ยฃ2 chicken and chips meal. We used to go halves because at one point we had no money. To see what Iโve come from and what Iโve done with my life. Yes, Iโve done well, but things like money can come and go. When youโre in a career you realise you have to pay tax and thereโs other things to pay. I pay attention to life, and I realise that time goes quick. Iโm 32 now. I want to retire within six years. Itโs about planning. Iโve invested in property and other bits. I think of the here and now because thatโs what can make my future better.
BN: Some fighters say after a defeat they find out who their true friends are. Is that true?
AY: A hundred per cent. Iโve always known what it is. They call them bandwagon people, or leeches. Iโve never allowed myself to be surrounded by them people. Humans in general use each other in some way, shape or form. But at the same time there has to be a genuine intention behind the usage. Me and my coaches, people that I train with, are all benefitting from each other. With family youโre closest to those in your family that you get along with or those that can help you or be beneficial to you and your life. The friends you become closest to are the ones that stay in your life the longest. The ones with good intentions, that you gel with the best. Iโve had the same friends since I was very, very young. I am always open to making new friends, I have made new friends, but at the same time I donโt force anything and itโs understanding that my position today is different than before and how would that person act if I wasnโt who I was. And how do some people feel when Iโve taken a loss? They think my career might not be the same, they lose faith in you. Theyโre the people you have to look at because you see it. When someone loses faith in you, you actually see it and look at it and think, thank you for seeing it now rather than later.
BN: What advice would you give to a young fighter about to make their professional debut?
AY: The same thing I told myself. โDo what makes you happy.โ You canโt please boxing fans, you canโt please your friends, you canโt please anyone but yourself. To please a person, you have to disappoint another person, thatโs just the way it goes. Itโs like football, everyone supports different teams and itโs okay. The difference with boxing is people support the winner and you have to understand that and be thick-skinned. People change all the time. At one point in time everyone loved Adrien Broner. If he does one thing that people donโt like theyโre like, I donโt like him no more. The culture of football is: It donโt matter. Iโm an Arsenal fan (laughs). You can understand that. We stay loyal. Iโm the same with everything in my life. Whether itโs friends, whether itโs boxingโฆ if I like a boxer, I like them. There was a period when people started criticising Anthony Joshua. I donโt forget what heโs done for British boxing, and he is still selling out arenas. They supported him when he was winning and when he beat [Wladimir] Klitschko he was on top of the world. Things donโt go his way people start trying to put him down. What about supporting someone through their rough patches? How can you forget all the entertainment he gave us before? The advice I would give the young fighter is: โRemember, you have to do this for yourself because even family can turn on you. Do what makes you happy. Make decisions for yourself.โ Thatโs my advice. Always make decisions for yourself.
BN: What was your reaction to the Buatsi-Azeez and how it played out?
AY: After round six it ended up being a very good fight. They were feeling each other out for the first four rounds. There was a good few exchanges in there, they both boxed very well and put on a show for the fans and thatโs what boxing needs.
BN: When you were watching the fight were you thinking about your own future and a fight against Buatsi?
AY: When Iโm watching boxing sometimes, Iโm watching as a fan. I try to take my emotions out of it. I try to take myself out of the equation. After watching the fight, I couldnโt help but think to myself if Bivolโs fighting Beterbiev and after that the belts get scattered it would make me and Buatsi for one of the vacant titles the icing on the cake. The reward would be the magnitude of the bout. That would be a sell-out, blockbuster fight. Itโs really up to the governing bodies. Surely, they understand what fights make the most sense. Iโm fighting February 10, get a good win and then it depends how it all plays out, but it looks like an interesting future.