Frank Sanchez is fighting for a heavyweight title shot, but the immediate question is whether 13 months away from the ring restored what broke against Agit Kabayel.
The 33-year-old Sanchez built his standing on balance and restraint. He controlled distance, slid just outside range, and countered in straight, efficient lines. That foundation collapsed in May 2024 on the undercard of Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk, when Agit Kabayel dropped him twice and forced a seventh-round stoppage. Sanchez’s right knee appeared unstable early in the fight. His balance shifted. His stance narrowed. Once his base weakened, exchanges that once looked measured began to look hurried, and the calm that defined him disappeared.
Sanchez returned the following February and stopped Ramon Olivas Echeverria inside three rounds, but the outing revealed little. The opponent applied no sustained pressure and did not force extended movement or defensive reads. Since that night, Sanchez has not fought. The layoff now reaches 13 months, which is a long pause for a heavyweight trying to reassert himself in a division that punishes hesitation.
That question follows him into March 28 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, where he meets Richard Torrez Jr. in an IBF eliminator on the undercard of Sebastian Fundora vs Keith Thurman. The setting is significant, but the examination is personal.
Time away after a stoppage loss can help repair damaged joints and restore physical strength, yet it can also dull instincts that only live competition maintains. Heavyweight timing is tied to positioning and reaction. A step taken too late, a stance set too square, or a delayed counter can change the tone of a round quickly. These are not dramatic shifts, but they are decisive ones when heavyweights start landing clean.
Torrez did not spend the last year waiting. He fought several times in 2024 and again in 2025 against a range of opponents, logging rounds in different types of fights. That level of activity keeps a fighter familiar with the speed and pressure of live competition, so there is little need for adjustment once the bell rings and exchanges begin. Against someone coming off a long break, that familiarity can show up quickly, especially if the fight becomes physical.
The ranking attached to this eliminator is important, but the more revealing answer is about Sanchez. If the knee was the main reason he unraveled against Kabayel, the difference should be visible in how he moves and sets his feet when the pace rises. If the loss affected more than his balance, that will show too once Torrez starts pressing and the exchanges stop being comfortable. Heavyweight fights have a way of forcing those answers early.
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Last Updated on 2026/03/01 at 3:21 PM
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