The perfect Wladimir Klitschko farewell fight may have just opened up, even if the dream of breaking George Foreman’s heavyweight record has slipped away forever.
For years, the former heavyweight king spoke openly about one final goal of breaking what has become an invincible benchmark.
It was never about exhibitions or nostalgia. Klitschko wanted to break Foreman’s record as the oldest heavyweight champion in history until circumstances outside boxing ultimately got in the way.
That chapter now appears closed, but the farewell chapter may have only just opened up.
One Last Walk
Even if Klitschko cannot overhaul Foreman, a one-off bout to give him career closure would be the perfect send-off for a champion who has clearly had itchy knuckles he could not scratch for the last nine years.
The heavyweight division suddenly looks capable of delivering exactly that.
Oleksandr Usyk is approaching the final stage of his own remarkable career and has repeatedly stated he does not intend to fight forever.
At the same time, plans continue to gather momentum for a massive Usyk vs Agit Kabayel event in Germany, a fight that would bring heavyweight championship boxing back to a country that embraced Klitschko for more than a decade.
Klitschko walking into a packed German stadium to the familiar sound of the Red Hot Chili Peppers would instantly transport boxing fans back to one of the sport’s most dominant eras.
For years, Germany was heavyweight boxing’s home away from home for Klitschko, and he was the reason.
The Timing Feels Right
Germany hosts more than 1.5 million Ukrainians displaced by the war, making it the natural location for one final celebration of two generations of Ukrainian heavyweight greatness.
Usyk would undoubtedly be on board, as he was when reports resurfaced of Klitschko eyeing one more run in January.
The unified heavyweight champion offered personal support, making clear he would do everything possible to help his countryman step back into the ring.
Instead of chasing records, titles, or rankings, the focus could simply be on giving one of boxing’s modern greats the farewell he never received.
That is something very different from a comeback.
Building the Perfect Card
If sentiment takes over and the event becomes reality, with Usyk defending his title against Kabayel in Germany, the supporting cast almost writes itself.
Vasiliy Lomachenko could return in a featured attraction, while Oleksandr Gvozdyk could also be drafted onto the card.
The event would become more than a title fight, turning into a celebration of Ukrainian boxing at the highest level.
Usyk defending his championship against Germany’s leading heavyweight contender, with Klitschko making one final appearance.
A stadium packed with German fans alongside thousands of Ukrainians who have made Germany their temporary base.
The sport rarely gets opportunities to create nights that mean more than rankings and belts.
This feels like one of them, but it is now up to organizers to get it right.
The conversation is now less about records and more about giving one of the greatest heavyweight champions of the modern era the farewell he deserves.
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.























