Lawrence Okolie knocks out Krzysztof Glowacki to land WBO world cruiserweight title

Okolie stands with Glowacki on the canvasImage source, Mark Robinson/Matchroom
Image caption,

Okolie now has a perfect professional record of 16 wins from 16 fights

Great Britain's Lawrence Okolie delivered a punch-perfect display before landing a sixth-round knockout of Krzysztof Glowacki to become WBO world cruiserweight champion.

In just his 16th professional fight, Okolie used his height and reach to never allow Poland's Glowacki close.

He started unloading his right hand in the fourth and looked completely at ease against a former world champion.

A pinpoint right ended matters, giving Okolie, 28, his first world title.

"I think I might cry in my hotel room, but not in front of anyone. It's a blessed feeling. It's crazy," Okolie told BBC Radio 5 Live.

"It's important that I become one of Britain's best cruiserweights and I have the opportunity to do that. This was a good win but there are more tests ahead."

'So many people I can inspire'

Image source, Mark Robinson/Matchroom
Image caption,

Okolie has credited trainer Shane McGuigan (second left) for enhancing his belief he could win a world title

The Hackney fighter has come a long way in every sense. Bullied in his teenage years, he used boxing to build self-esteem and shed weight. After an Olympic appearance in 2016, his early years as a professional were the focus of harsh words and ridicule when a run of fights descended into drab, scrappy affairs.

But Okolie's work ethic in the gym and desire to improve have impressed and a run of slicker displays thrust him into a world-title fight that he dominated from start to finish.

Glowacki - 34 and only beaten twice by Oleksandr Usyk and Mairis Briedis previously - simply had no answer. Those who back Okolie speak of the awkwardness his huge frame causes opponents and believe he will go on to prove a menace at heavyweight.

Here, his size allowed him to work at distance and his power shone through when called upon.

A smart hook in the first, crisp jabs in the third and a succession of hard right hooks in the fourth left the bloodied Glowacki in no doubt that his opponent was more than capable of dealing with a gulf in experience.

And in the sixth, when Glowacki crouched in search of an opening for a second too long, a right hand to the jaw left him unable to make the count and secured the world title Okolie believes will allow him to inspire children on the estate on which he grew up.

"Doing all these interviews, realising how much this means - not just to me but to so many people that I can inspire - it feels amazing to go in and actually get it done," added Okolie.

"I'm coming into my own, starting to believe in boxing. I used to just believe in my physical strength, the fact I can hit someone hard and stop them. Now we're getting into boxing. Keeping it long, moving it fast… I'm just happy that there's progress."

Current British and Irish world champions

Men

Women

Anthony Joshua (Heavyweight - IBF, WBA, WBO)

Savannah Marshall (Middleweight - WBO)

Tyson Fury (Heavyweight - WBC)

Chantelle Cameron (Super-lightweight - WBC)

Lawrence Okolie (Cruiserweight - WBO)

Katie Taylor (Lightweight - WBA, WBO, IBF, WBC)

Billy Joe Saunders (Super-middleweight - WBO)

Terri Harper (Super-featherweight - WBC)

Josh Taylor (Super-lightweight - WBA & IBF)

Some may point to Glowacki's 21 months out of the ring - including a spell suffering with Covid-19 - as evidence of a fighter who was vulnerable.

But the poise Okolie showed, the ease with which he handled the occasion and the destructive finish served up all point to a fighter going places.

A world title seemed a distant dream when he worked in McDonalds less than a decade ago and when criticism flowed his way for ugly displays in 2018.

Not for the first time, Okolie has emerged from testing times and can now add world-champion status to the British, Commonwealth and European honours he has already collected.

'Unify and hit heavyweight' - what they said...

Image source, Mark Robinson/Matchroom
Image caption,

Okolie said promoter Eddie Hearn promised him a gold watch if he became a world champion

BBC Radio 5 Live Boxing analyst Steve Bunce: "There's one or two people in British boxing who tend to think Okolie is cocky, that he is too flash.

"He's got a touch of Naseem Hamed about him. That's confidence, not arrogance. He's a really decent man. That's pure confidence.

"We saw it in this fight - he never once took his eye off what he had to do. Every moment he was thinking, learning. He could have tried to force it but he didn't. That's what I like about him."

Promoter Eddie Hearn: "That was one of the great performances to win a world title. Krzysztof Glowacki is one of the top five cruiserweights in the world.

"He is a novice and he has stepped in tonight with 15 fights, and you just wonder if he is good enough? My goodness, that was as good a performance to beat any cruiserweight. That's what we want to do, to unify the division and then step up to heavyweight."

British heavyweight Joe Joyce on Radio 5 Live: "Okolie is improving all the time, it's only going to go strength to strength. Long range, devastating power. I'm looking forward to some big fights for him."

'As awkward as they come' - social reaction

Image source, Liam Smith
Image caption,

Former world champion Liam Smith

Image source, Chris Eubank Jr
Image caption,

British super-middleweight Chris Eubank Jr

Image source, Spencer Oliver
Image caption,

Former European champion Spencer Oliver

Image source, Lawrence Okolie

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