A 91 percent knockout heavyweight is forcing his way into the title picture — and becoming a problem few champions will be eager to solve.
Nelson Hysa continues to move forward without the kind of defining test that usually confirms a contender. He has momentum, activity, and a knockout ratio that forces attention whether the division likes it or not.
At 24-0 with 22 stoppages, the Albanian has built pressure through consistency rather than one standout win. It’s not the traditional route to contention, but it’s one that becomes harder to ignore with every fight.
He’s knocked out 20 opponents within three rounds.
Belts without answers
Hysa has picked up two world title-sounding belts as he bulldozes his way through the division without a real test to speak of.
Having gained the WBO Global and WBA Gold belts, he’s now a problem that needs to be addressed by one of the champions in the near future.
Those titles don’t make him a world champion, but they keep him close enough to become unavoidable — especially in a division where the rankings and pathways have already raised questions.
The current heavyweight structure has contenders circling without direction, creating space for fighters like Hysa to force their way into relevance through activity alone.
Stalled paths, moving targets
Whether that opportunity comes against Oleksandr Usyk, Murat Gassiev, Fabio Wardley or Daniel Dubois remains unclear, as the backed-up mandatory situation continues to stall.
Usyk is tied to a crossover bout, while Wardley and Dubois move ahead on their own track within the same fortnight, leaving the wider picture as crowded as it is unclear.
That uncertainty is exactly what allows Hysa to keep advancing unchecked. Heavyweights who keep winning — and keep knocking opponents out — tend to become unavoidable, regardless of how they arrived at the door.
As his standing within the WBA rankings has already shown, the secondary title route may offer the most realistic path forward rather than waiting for a direct shot at the main belt.
Now aligned with Frank Warren’s Queensberry Promotions, Hysa is positioned closer to the kind of opportunities that could turn momentum into a real title push.
Sparring with Tyson Fury has only strengthened that sense that Hysa is closing in. Time in the ring with the division’s elite gives a clearer idea of where he stands — and how ready he might be when the opportunity comes.
A problem waiting for a test
For now, Hysa has to remain patient, stay busy, and keep the streak going. That has been the pattern so far, building activity and knockouts while waiting for the door to open.
Soon enough, the situation forces a correction.
Someone will have to say yes.
At some point, the run demands a real test against a recognised contender, and the unanswered questions will have to be addressed inside the ring.
Until then, the risk remains clear. A 91 percent knockout heavyweight hovering just outside the elite level is not an easy voluntary for any champion to accept.
The division will find out soon enough whether the ‘Albanian Eagle’ is the real thing — or just another sledgehammer heavyweight myth.
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.
























