Andy Ruiz Jr looks in shape again — but we’ve heard this story before.
The former unified heavyweight champion posted images appearing in improved condition, alongside a message about pushing through adversity.
“Chase your dreams that you want so bad. Even though there are roller coasters or bumps in the way, keep pushing and have faith. Your dreams will come true. This message is for you and me.”
Andy Ruiz Jr sends message
This week’s social post points to renewed focus, something Ruiz has hinted at several times over the past few years. It also follows a familiar pattern.
Ruiz has shown signs of getting back into condition before, only for any momentum to stall before it reaches the ring.
Each update begins with promise. Too often, it ends without a fight announcement or any real next step.
World Boxing News has tracked that pattern closely, from his reunion with Manny Robles to ongoing uncertainty around what comes next.
Linking back up with Robles was supposed to be a reset — a return to the structure that guided him to his career-defining victory over Anthony Joshua. It has yet to produce anything.
Robles admitted earlier this year that working with Ruiz had been a struggle, pointing directly to the lack of consistency that continues to hold him back.
Those concerns now follow every update. Ruiz was not working with Robles in the session he posted, but was visible on a video added a short time later.
Three fights in seven years
Since losing his titles in the rematch with Joshua, Ruiz has fought just three times in seven years.
Victories over Chris Arreola and Luis Ortiz, followed by a draw with Jarrell Miller, represent a minimal return for a fighter of his profile and ability.
For a former unified champion still operating within his prime years, that level of inactivity stands out.
Ruiz’s latest message points to another attempt to rebuild — something that has been suggested before. Given the history, it also looks like another false dawn.
Visible progress, positive words, and no movement when it matters. At this stage, Ruiz is repeating the same pattern without moving forward.
There is still no opponent, no timeline, and no clear sign that anything has changed. The difference this time is difficult to spot.
Even his absence from recent developments in the heavyweight picture raises further questions about where he fits.
Tyson Fury, Oleksandr Usyk and a trilogy with Anthony Joshua are all out of reach due to Ruiz’s lack of involvement in the title chase.

Time is becoming the story
Now, every Ruiz update arrives with the same underlying issue — time. The gap between intention and action continues to widen.
Each period of inactivity makes it harder to treat these moments as part of a real comeback.
Ruiz remains one of the most naturally gifted heavyweights of his era. On his night, he can trouble anyone — if he can find the mindset that took him to the top.
Too often, the effort looks forced — more about maintaining the image of a comeback than fully committing to one.
If that does not change, his career risks drifting further away from meaningful contention.
Boxing does not wait — and it rarely forgives lost time. Without a decisive move back into the ring, Ruiz risks seeing the window to reclaim his position close without him.
At that point, the path forward may look very different, with exhibition opportunities or one-off events replacing any realistic push toward another world title.
For now, Ruiz has shown he can get himself into shape, but until that answer comes inside the ring, every update risks sounding exactly the same.
About the Author Phil Jay is the Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a veteran boxing reporter with 15+ years of experience. He has interviewed world champions, broken international exclusives, and reported ringside since 2010. Read full bio.























