Oleksandr Gvozdyk


Oleksandr Serhiyovych Gvozdyk is a Ukrainian professional boxer. He held the WBC and lineal light-heavyweight titles from 2018 to 2019. As an amateur, Gvozdyk won a bronze medal at the [Boxing at the Boxing at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's light heavyweight|2012 Summer Olympics – Men's light heavyweight|2012 Olympics] and a gold at the 2013 Summer Universiade.
Gvozdyk has stated he is nicknamed "The Nail" because his surname in Russian translates to 'nail'. He is considered part of the Ukrainian golden generation of boxing along with other 2012 Olympic medallists Denys Berinchyk, Vasiliy Lomachenko, Taras Shelestyuk, and Oleksandr Usyk.

Amateur career

Gvozdyk was introduced to boxing at the age of 8, when his father, an amateur boxer, gave him a set of boxing gloves. Prior to this, Gvozdyk was more interested in kickboxing and karate. He also received the encouragement of his friends to begin boxing. As an amateur, he won gold in the light-heavyweight division at the 2008 World University Boxing Championship. He was a three-time national Ukrainian amateur champion, winning the title for the first time in 2009, beating Vyacheslav Shabranskyy in the final. He won the national title again in 2010, against Ivan Senay, and 2011, against Dmytro Bulgakov.
At the 2009 World Amateur Boxing Championships, Gvozdyk beat two opponents before being edged out by German boxer Rene Krause. He was eliminated in the preliminary bouts at the 2010 European Amateur Boxing Championships by Ainar Karlson of Estonia. Gvozdyk won the EUBC Europe Cup in 2011, defeating Karlson by stoppage in the final.
At the 2011 World Amateur Boxing Championships Gvozdyk beat three fighters before falling to the 2009 world champion Egor Mekhontsev of Russia. By reaching the quarterfinals, Gvozdyk qualified for the 2012 Summer Olympics. He was a bronze medallist at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He defeated Belarusian Mikhail Dauhaliavets 18–10, Nicaraguan Osmar Bravo 18–6, and Algerian Abdelhafid Benchabla 19–17 before losing controversially to Kazakh Adilbek Niyazymbetov on countback in the semifinals.
Gvozdyk participated in the World Series of Boxing between 2011 and 2013, winning 9 bouts and losing none. Gvozdyk rounded out his amateur career by winning gold at the 2013 Summer Universiade. He won by walkover in the final as Dmitry Bivol injured his hand in the semi-final and could not compete. Gvozdyk's exact amateur record is unknown, but he has said he had around 255 bouts and lost 30 of which, so he finished with a record of about 225–30.

Professional career

Rise up the ranks

Gvozdyk turned professional in 2014, signing with Top Rank. He won his debut, defeating Mike Montoya via first-round KO on the undercard of Manny Pacquiao vs. Timothy Bradley II on 12 April 2014. In 2016, Gvozdyk challenged for the NABF light-heavyweight title against former world title challenger Nadjib Mohammedi, on the undercard of Manny Pacquiao vs. Timothy Bradley III. Gvozdyk dropped Mohammedi in the second round with a right hook. Mohammedi fell face first on the canvas and the referee waved the fight immediately, giving Gvozdyk his tenth straight win and his first professional title.
Gvozdyk made his first title defence against three-time world-title challenger Tommy Karpency on 23 July 2016. After Karpency dropped Gvozdyk in the first round with an inside shot, Gvozdyk rallied and knocked Karpency out in the sixth round with a hook to the body. He then faced off against Isaac Chilemba on 19 November 2016, on the undercard of Sergey Kovalev vs. Andre Ward. Gvozdyk started strong after Chilemba suffered an injury to his right hand. Chilemba started to increase the pace, but decided to retire at the end of the eight round due to his hand injury, giving Gvozdyk the win.
On 8 April 2017, Gvozdyk won a second regional title, claiming the NABO title with a round 3 TKO win over Yunieski Gonzalez. Later that year, the WBC ordered a world title eliminator between Gvozdyk and Marcus Browne, but Browne declined the fight. On 19 August, Gvozdyk defeated Craig Baker by a 6th-round knockout on the undercard of Terence Crawford vs. Julius Indongo at the Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska. Baker was coming off a year-long layoff to take the fight with Gvozdyk.
Gvozdyk won the WBC interim light-heavyweight title by dominating a 12-round bout on 17 March 2018 against former European light-heavyweight champion Mehdi Amar, and put himself in position to challenge Adonis Stevenson for the full WBC title. According to CompuBox, Gvozdyk landed 256 of 960 total punches, including 176 of 492 of his power shots. Amar landed 135 of 536 of his total shots, including 92 of 337 power shots.

WBC and lineal champion

On 1 December 2018, Gvozdyk knocked out Adonis Stevenson at 2:49 of the 11th round to win the WBC and lineal championship, ending a reign that began in 2013. Gvozdyk knocked Stevenson down in the third round, but the referee called it as a slip. Stevenson hurt Gvozdyk with a few strong shots in the 9th and 10th rounds, particularly a left hand in the 10th which almost dropped Gvozdyk. But Gvozdyk rallied and after a 10-punch combination finished with a straight right he put Stevenson down hard in the 11th round. The referee waved the fight without a count as Stevenson was clearly unconscious. Stevenson was hospitalised after the bout with a life-threatening brain injury, and was put in an induced coma for three weeks. Gvozdyk said he did not want to be "known as a killer" and wished Stevenson a strong recovery.
On 30 March 2019, Gvozdyk faced Doudou Ngumbu in his first defense of his WBC and lineal titles. Gvozdyk started the bout as the aggressor by peppering Ngumbu with short right and left hands, before landing a punishing overhand right. By the third round, Gvozdyk appeared to be in a rhythm, as he connected on a straight right hand followed by a left hook. Ngumbu fought back, firing off a hard combination of his own to the body. Near the end of the fourth round, Gvozdyk upped the work rate on his jab to set up a three-punch combination. Early In the fifth round, Ngumbu suffered a right calf injury. Despite the injury not being the result of a foul, the referee gave Ngumbu five minutes to try to recover. Ngumbu tried to walk around the ring, but continued to have a limp, and the bout was called off as a TKO victory for Gvozdyk.

Unification fight vs. Beterbiev, retirement

After the Ngumbu bout, Top Rank set to work on a unification fight between Gvozdyk and IBF light-heavyweight champion Artur Beterbiev for some time in Autumn 2019 on ESPN. The winner of Gvozdyk vs. Beterbiev would hold two of the four world titles at 175, and set up further unification matches. Beterbiev, a two-time Russian Olympian, had arguably been avoided by the other top fighters in the 175-pound division due to being a fearsome opponent who did not have name recognition among most fans. In July it was announced that the fight would take place on 18 October, at the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia.
The fight was competitive, with Gvozdyk's accurate punching countering Beterbiev's pressure, but Gvozdyk began to fade as the fight went on. In the 9th round, Beterbiev took control of the fight, and had Gvozdyk struggling to stay on his feet. Gvozdyk survived the round but was visibly fatigued coming into the 10th. Beterbiev applied the pressure in the 10th and Gvozdyk took a knee early in the round. He got up but soon went down again after another flurry from Beterbiev, and the referee warned that another knockdown would mean the end of the fight. After another exchange where Beterbiev came out on top, Gvozdyk took a knee once more, resulting in a TKO victory for Beterbiev. Gvozdyk was leading on the scorecards at the time of stoppage, with two judges seeing the fight 87–83, 86–85 for Gvozdyk, and one judge seeing it 83–87 for Beterbiev. CompuBox showed Beterbiev was busier and sharper, landing 161 of 515 punches thrown and Gvozdyk landed with 118 of 614 thrown. Both boxers were guaranteed a $1.5 million purse for their efforts. The fight averaged of 635,000 viewers.
After the bout, Gvozdyk was hospitalised due to a pain in the back of his head. It was feared that he had suffered a brain bleed, but testing revealed it was only a mild concussion due to the strikes to the back of the head he experienced during the fight. He was released from hospital after two days.
Eight months afterwards, Gvozdyk retired from professional boxing. He stated in 2024 that there was a perception he retired due to the loss to Beterbiev, but stated that his decision to retire was instead due to the COVID-19 pandemic inhibiting his ability to have a training camp. He also stated he had business and investment opportunities in Ukraine, so he did not need to box any longer. The war in Ukraine disrupted his business activities and around the same time he was contacted by Canelo Álvarez to be a sparring partner in the lead up to Canelo's fight against Dmitry Bivol in May 2022. During the training camp with Canelo, Gvozdyk realised his boxing ability had not diminished much, so he decided to make a comeback to competition.

Return from retirement

In late 2022, Gvozdyk announced that he would be returning to competition. In his first fight back he faced Mexican journeyman Josue Obando on 11 February 2023 in Pomona, California in a cruiserweight bout. Gvozdyk had a measured performance, notching a clear unanimous decision. All three judges scored the bout 60–54 for Gvozdyk.
In a quick step up from his first fight back Gvozdyk fought WBC #4 ranked contender Ričards Bolotņiks back at his normal weightclass of light-heavyweight. This fight was put on the undercard of Canelo Álvarez vs. John Ryder on 6 May 2023. Gvozdyk had a listless start to the fight, landing mostly ineffectively in the first 5 rounds of the fight. Midway through the sixth round, Gvozdyk found a clean left hook that dropped Bolotniks, who returned to his feet but was deemed unfit to continue fighting by the referee.

Gvozdyk vs. Benavidez

Gvozdyk challenged David Benavidez for the interim WBC light-heavyweight title at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on 15 June 2024. Gvozdyk lost via unanimous decision, with scores of 119–109, 117–111, and 116–112 for Benavidez.

Personal life

Gvozdyk was born in Kharkiv, then part of the Ukrainian SSR in the Soviet Union, as an only child. His father was an amateur boxer.
Gvozdyk is married and has three children, two sons and a daughter. As of 2017, he lived and trained in Oxnard, California. He stated in 2019 that he speaks Ukrainian and Russian fluently, and has proficiency in English. He added that, "In Ukraine, one half of people speak Ukrainian and one half, in eastern part, speak Russian. I am from eastern part and speak Russian when I’m in Ukraine. Officially, in my passport, I’m Oleksandr – with ‘o’ – but speaking, I’m Alexander." He said in a 2024 interview that he never had problems with the Russians he knew in Kharkiv, and said the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 felt "like a betrayal." After the war began, Gvozdyk invited his father to live with him in California, but his father ultimately decided to return to Kharkiv.

Professional boxing record

No.ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
23Win21–2Anthony HollowayTKO3 1:3819 Apr 2025Frontwave Arena, Oceanside, California, U.S.
22Loss20–2David BenavidezUD1215 Jun 2024MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, USFor vacant WBC interim light heavyweight title
21Win20–1Isaac RodriguesKO2, 0:5430 Sep 2023T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, US
20Win19–1Ričards BolotņiksTKO6, 1:566 May 2023Estadio Akron, Zapopan, Mexico
19Win18–1Josue ObandoUD611 Feb 2023The Derby Room Pomona at Fairplex, Pomona, California, US
18Loss17–1Artur BeterbievTKO10, 2:4918 Oct 2019Liacouras Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USLost WBC light-heavyweight title;
For IBF light-heavyweight title
17Win17–0Doudou NgumbuTKO5, 0:5830 Mar 20192300 Arena, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USRetained WBC light-heavyweight title
16Win16–0Adonis StevensonKO11, 2:491 Dec 2018Videotron Centre, Montreal, Quebec, CanadaWon WBC light-heavyweight title
15Win15–0Mehdi AmarUD1217 Mar 2018The Theater at Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, USWon vacant WBC interim light-heavyweight title
14Win14–0Craig BakerTKO6, 2:0419 Aug 2017Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska, USRetained WBC-NABF and WBO–NABO light-heavyweight titles
13Win13–0Yunieski GonzalezTKO3, 2:558 Apr 2017MGM National Harbor, Oxon Hill, Maryland, USRetained WBC-NABF light-heavyweight title;
Won vacant WBONABO light-heavyweight title
12Win12–0Isaac ChilembaRTD8, 3:0019 Nov 2016T-Mobile Arena, Paradise, Nevada, USRetained WBC-NABF light-heavyweight title
11Win11–0Tommy KarpencyKO6, 2:2123 Jul 2016MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, USRetained WBC-NABF light-heavyweight title
10Win10–0Nadjib MohammediKO2, 2:069 Apr 2016MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, USWon vacant WBC-NABF light-heavyweight title
9Win9–0Mike SniderKO1, 2:5813 Feb 2016Sportsmen's Lodge, Studio City, California, US
8Win8–0Cleiton ConceiçãoTKO3, 0:5020 Nov 2015Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, Paradise, Nevada, US
7Win7–0Francisco Sierra5, 3:0019 Sep 2015Sportsmen's Lodge, Studio City, California, US
6Win6–0Michael GbengaUD613 Jun 2015Florentine Gardens, Los Angeles, California, US
5Win5–0Cory CummingsKO2, 1:1024 Jan 20151stBank Center, Broomfield, Colorado, US
4Win4–0Otis Griffin6, 1:5115 Nov 2014Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas, US
3Win3–0Lamont WilliamsKO5, 1:3820 Sep 2014Celebrity Theatre, Phoenix, Arizona, US
2Win2–0Michael Gbenga617 May 2014Selland Arena, Fresno, California, US
1Win1–0Mike Montoya1, 2:5512 Apr 2014MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, US