Oleksandr Usyk was granted a voluntary defense at last year’s WBC convention. The Board’s ruling states that a formal request was later submitted to apply that provision to the Verhoeven bout scheduled for May 23 in Egypt. That sequence matters because it establishes that the decision followed a written petition rather than an informal endorsement.
The clarification changes the fight’s status. The WBC heavyweight title will be on the line.
Rico Verhoeven has one professional boxing match on his record, more than a decade ago, and does not appear in the current WBC heavyweight rankings. His title opportunity is tied to the voluntary provision granted to the champion, not to placement within the division’s contender list.
Interim titleholder Agit Kabayel remains the confirmed mandatory challenger. Kabayel is next in line once this fight is out of the way.
That language keeps the order intact on paper. It does not quiet criticism over how a crossover opponent secured a sanctioned title shot ahead of ranked heavyweights who have remained active inside the division.
The WBC’s statement leaned heavily on Usyk’s recent run, pointing to consecutive wins over Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury, and Daniel Dubois. The organization described his activity as rare for a modern heavyweight champion and cited its rules permitting a voluntary defense before enforcing the mandatory.
The ruling leaves no ambiguity about title status. The next point of scrutiny will be how quickly the mandatory is enforced.
If Kabayel receives the call immediately, the process holds. If not, the debate over how sanctioning bodies balance rankings and event economics will intensify again.
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