Fabio Wardley will put his WBO heavyweight title on the line against Daniel Dubois in Manchester this weekend in a fight that strips the division back to its most basic question: who holds up when the pressure bites.
Wardley arrives unbeaten and full of momentum after a statement win over Joseph Parker, a result that elevated him from one-to-watch into genuine world-level operator.
Dubois, meanwhile, comes in carrying the contradictions of his career – brilliant highs, brutal setbacks – still trying to fully stabilise after losing his world title to Oleksandr Usyk, but with the memory of his shock stoppage win over Anthony Joshua still hanging over the division as proof of what he can do at his best.
For Wardley, though, the fight is as much about internal standards as external stakes. Speaking ahead of fight week, he made clear that even at world level, taking the easier path has never really been an option.
‘I could have done the easy route, or the easier option, or picked an easier fight and got through someone in a few rounds, got my hand raised and all the rest of it. But I’d have known in myself that I chose that. I’d have known I chose the path of least resistance, that I picked the easy way, the easy route and I would have respected myself less,’ he exclusively tells Daily Mail Sport.
‘Definitely as a fighter, but probably as a person as well. Because at the end of the day, when you lay in bed, the only person you’re talking to is yourself. And I’d have laid there thinking, “That’s not really you, Fabio. You gave yourself the easy way out there.”
Fabio Wardley will put his heavyweight title on the line against Daniel Dubois in Manchester
Wardley and Dubois pictured facing off during their announcement press conference
‘I’d have respected myself less coming off that victory than I probably would even if, in the absolute worst-case scenario, I come off a loss against Daniel Dubois. At least then I can lay in bed at night and go, “You know what? You rolled the dice. At least I can respect you for that.”
It is that same refusal to take the comfortable option that Wardley believes will be tested most violently once the fight inevitably turns messy. He expects moments where everything narrows down to instinct, survival, and will.
‘Will surviving in deep waters be the difference maker? Who knows, but I do think it will play a factor in the fight at some point. I think there will be a moment in the fight where it’s obviously going to get tasty, and it’s going to come down to who can still stand up on their own two feet and look the other one dead straight in the eye and nod and say, “No, come on, let’s keep going.”
‘Don’t look away, don’t look for a corner, don’t look for your dad, don’t look for your friends. I’m here in front of you, I’m the only one you should be focused on. So yeah, I do think it’s going to play some form of factor. How much, and everything else, is a different question but we’ll see on the night.’
That emphasis on self-reliance carries through into how Wardley views Dubois’ corner setup, particularly the influence of his father, who has remained a constant presence throughout his career.
‘I think it’s a yes and no answer as to whether his relationship with his father helps or hinders his career. I think, like you say, if he gets it right, if he gets the right nod of approval, the right word of advice, or the right bit of encouragement from his dad and that builds him up, then yeah, of course it works.
‘But if you’re always looking externally and you need that – whether it’s from your dad, your team, or Don Charles or whoever else – and they’re not able to give you what you need to get yourself over the line, that’s when it becomes a problem. It becomes a problem when you’re relying on someone on the outside, or someone else, when you’re not able to find it in yourself.’
Dubois’ reputation for folding under pressure in certain moments has followed him for years, something Wardley addresses with a mix of respect and cold realism about how opponents will view it.
Wardley arrives unbeaten and full of momentum after a statement win over Joseph Parker, a result that elevated him from one-to-watch into genuine world-level operator
Dubois, meanwhile, is still trying to fully stabilise after losing his world title to Oleksandr Usyk, but with the memory of his shock stoppage win over AJ still hangs over the division
‘Yeah, it is harsh, but it’s not untrue. It’s a really difficult one, because I’ll never want to disrespect someone who steps into the ring, has a fire, and puts themselves in harm’s way. And you do have a right to look after yourself and protect yourself, especially now with Daniel – I think he’s a dad now as well – so there’s more consideration there.
‘But the boxing community as a whole, they want you to live by the sword and die by the sword, to go out on your shield kind of thing. And if you deviate from that in the slightest, they’re quick on you and, like you say, they call you a quitter. But it also doesn’t bode well going into fights, because if you’re an opponent lining up for Fabio Wardley, you look at him and think, “Make him quit.”
‘One, I don’t know if it’s possible, and two, if it is, it’s going to be one hell of a challenge. With Daniel, you’ll go into a fight thinking, “If I do certain things right here, I’ve seen it not once, not twice, but three, maybe even four times where he’s kind of tapped out of the situation.”
‘So if that’s in there, that’s in there, you can get it, you can pull it out of someone, you just need to go about the right things to get it. So you’re already giving your opponent a psychological advantage going into the fight. Because whether you say, “I’m over it now,” or “I’m past it,” or “I’m not going to do it,” the evidence suggests the opposite. So yeah, it could be problematic for him.’
Outside the ring, Wardley is also adjusting to the demands of elite boxing alongside fatherhood, something he admits only really registers emotionally after the work is done.
‘I’ve still got that separation. It’s probably more of an after consideration, an afterthought, but I’m still fully focused on the job and doing whatever needs to be done at the time to get the job done, because normally it’s for them – my family, for my daughter – to provide a good life for them. So yes and no.
‘I think the concerns come in, or maybe I call them concerns, but the extra thoughts come into my head like after a fight I’ll come home, maybe I’ve got some bumps, bruises, a bit of swelling and I’ll look at my baby and I’ll just hope she doesn’t immediately look at me and cry or something like that, because that would really hurt me and that’s probably where the extra consideration comes in. But in the moment, at the time, while I’m fighting, it’s not in my brain.’
And then there is Usyk, the division’s defining figure, and the wider question of whether Wardley ever becomes part of that conversation at all. Wardley, for his part, is unconvinced the Ukrainian would ultimately step into the ring with him, despite public claims otherwise.
Dubois pictured with his father Dave – who has been incredibly influential during his career
‘I think after this fight we’ll have a clearer answer to whether he is avoiding me because once OK, it happens. Twice, then you have to go OK maybe it’s a me problem. Maybe he has a problem with me. That’s when you’re ducking me.
‘Like, there’s a reason behind it. Because once, maybe, you go and do your kind of money-grab kickboxing fight and fair play to you, you’ve done a lot for the sport over the last few years and you’ve been in some incredible fights so full credit there. You can go and do that if you want. But if you then find a way to swerve me twice in a row, questions are going to be asked, yeah.’
He also believes, stylistically, he brings something awkward enough to trouble anyone.
‘I think, as I’ve proven, I’m quite an anomaly in the division. I’m a bit different for a number of reasons. I fight a bit differently, my style is a bit different. It’s quite unorthodox, and I do some things that are very different, so they can be problematic for more conventional fighters to fight against, work against, or plan for.
‘And like I say, in no way am I saying that Oleksandr Usyk wouldn’t be able to come up with a game plan to fight me or anything like that, but I probably am more problematic than the other people he has faced and I back my self to beat him.’
For now, though, all roads lead back to Manchester, where Dubois offers the most immediate threat to Wardley’s unbeaten rise and the clearest test yet of whether conviction alone can carry a champion through chaos.