There’s a heavyweight in the amateur ranks whose record reads differently to almost anyone else. Across 239 bouts, he was never knocked out — and boxing still never got to see what he could have become.
In a division built on power, where even the very best eventually get broken down, that kind of durability is almost unheard of — and it stands out even more in a heavyweight still only 35.
That man is Erislandy Savón.
The Savón name
The Savón name already carries serious weight in boxing circles, and following in the footsteps of his uncle Félix meant expectations were always there from the moment he began making noise on the Cuban scene, with early victories and experience quickly stacking into the hundreds.
World Boxing News explored his potential beyond the vest years ago when a professional move still felt realistic and the path ahead looked far more open than it ultimately proved to be in his earlier rise.
It never happened in the way many expected, and that’s where the frustration sits.
Cuba’s missing link
Cuba remains a sore subject for pro boxing fans, who have been denied several superstars capable of altering the sport’s history over decades, and no one will ever know if legends like Teófilo Stevenson or Félix Savón would have defeated the best of their generation in the paid ranks.
They already proved themselves at amateur level, and that doesn’t take anything away from just how good they were — if anything it shows how much was left on the table.
Only Stevenson has been inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame, which still feels like a sour note when achievements in the unpaid code don’t have a category of their own for fighters like the Savóns, whose dominance came in a system that rarely allowed crossover.
For all the dominance, for all the victories, the part that matters most to the wider sport never came.
What never happened
Erislandy followed that same path, staying within the system that built him and representing Cuba at the highest level while compiling one of the most extensive résumés in modern heavyweight amateur boxing, with defining contests along the way including the narrow Olympic loss to Anthony Joshua in 2012, a result many still question given how the bout played out.
At 35, that’s still a young age for a heavyweight, yet injuries and five lost years have changed the picture completely, leaving a version of the fighter that no longer matches the one many expected to see years earlier.
His final appearances came around the disrupted Olympic cycle, and since then he has drifted out of the spotlight without any real conclusion, leaving behind a career that never crossed over despite years of expectation that it eventually would.
That lingering uncertainty remains — WBN asked the question once before, and it has never really gone away — whether the man who handled Joshua in 2012, only to be on the wrong side of the decision, could have done the same in the professional ranks, and whether that version of him would have translated when everything was on the line.
Now, it feels like one boxing will never get to answer.
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.
























