Mike Perez remains one of boxing’s great enigmas. Eight years unbeaten, fifty pounds lighter, and somehow still going nowhere.
At 40 years old, Perez should be slowing down physically. Most fighters his age are desperately trying to keep weight off and squeeze out one last payday before retirement.
Perez is doing the opposite.
Mike Perez keeps losing weight
The former heavyweight contender and Prizefighter winner stepped into the ring again on Saturday night in Manchester looking slimmer than ever at under 195 pounds.
Perez moved to 31-3-1 with an eight-round points victory over previously unbeaten Franklin Arinze on the Daniel Dubois vs Fabio Wardley undercard at Co-op Live Arena.
That means the Cuban is now barely twenty pounds away from the light-heavyweight limit despite once competing above 240 pounds during his heavyweight years.
It is one of the strangest physical transformations in modern boxing. But the bigger mystery is where any of it is leading.
Perez has not lost a fight since a 2017 world title shot against the 200-pound divisional number one Mairis Briedis. He has rebuilt his body completely, stayed active, won regional belts, and even positioned himself around the bridgerweight scene.
Yet somehow, he still appears trapped in boxing limbo.
Saturday’s appearance came at around 6pm on a UK undercard against another relatively unknown opponent. No major push. No serious title conversation. No real sign that anybody in boxing knows what to do with him anymore.
That is what makes Perez such a fascinating case.
The Magomed Abdusalamov fight changed everything
The talent was never the problem. Mike Perez is a superbly skilled boxer who can punch. So what’s the problem?
Anyone who watched him blast through Prizefighter in 2011 or trade bombs with Magomed Abdusalamov at Madison Square Garden knows Perez once looked destined for the very top of the heavyweight division.
But the Abdusalamov fight changed everything.
Mago suffered life-altering injuries following their brutal war in New York, and while Perez escaped physically intact, his career never truly recovered afterward.
Whether it was psychological, emotional, or simply the natural aftermath of a horrific night inside the ring, something undeniably changed in Perez from that point on.
Now, at 40, he exists in one of the strangest positions in boxing.
Too old to be considered a serious long-term investment. Too talented to be ignored completely. Too experienced for prospects to risk unnecessarily. Yet still good enough to make people wonder what might happen if somebody finally gave him a genuine opportunity.
Whether his obvious ability will ever be rewarded, or whether that reward will come too late, are both impossible to ignore whenever his name resurfaces.
The Mago fight will always loom over Perez’s career no matter what “The Rebel” does from here.
But if he could somehow still capture a world title before walking away, perhaps that shadow would dim a little at last.
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.























