That position has become familiar. Kabayel sits outside the money circle while holding the most dangerous label in the division. He is not pursued by Anthony Joshua, ignored by Tyson Fury, and functionally invisible to Oleksandr Usyk. The belt he holds is real. The opportunity it is supposed to guarantee has not been.
That disconnect is the story of Kabayel’s career phase. He has not stalled competitively. His recent run includes stoppage wins over Zhilei Zhang, Frank Sanchez, and Arslanbek Makhmudov, three heavyweights who entered those fights with size, momentum, or reputations that Kabayel systematically dismantled. The common thread was body work. He did not overwhelm them with speed or theatrics. He wore them down and closed the show.
What that run produced was credibility without leverage. Kabayel has the look of a mandatory problem rather than a chosen opponent. When Usyk vacated, the path did not clear. When the belts shuffled, Kabayel stayed where he was. The WBO title now sits with Fabio Wardley, and Kabayel remains in holding space.
Knyba, at 6 feet 8 and unbeaten, represents activity more than advancement. His record has been built without meaningful tests, and he enters unranked across the major sanctioning bodies. There is nothing improper about the matchup. It simply answers none of the questions Kabayel is actually asking.
The fight takes place in Oberhausen and streams on DAZN. Kabayel has said the world title remains the goal. That has been true for years.
At some point, staying ready stops looking like progress and starts looking like exile.





















