Rotorua Daily Post

Nyika in fourth pro bout before the Comm Games

- Christophe­r Reive

David Nyika is capitalisi­ng on the moment. Only two months ago, the 26-year-old boxer was in a long layoff from competitio­n, having not stepped into the ring since late 2021.

But after that drought, Nyika has packed his July schedule.

After returning to the ring with a unanimous decision win over Karim Maatalla in Melbourne this month, the unbeaten cruiserwei­ght will fight on July 2 on the Gold Coast.

He will then turn his attention to the Commonweal­th Games in late July, being named in the eight-strong team heading to Birmingham.

“I’m everywhere and nowhere,” Nyika told Newstalk ZB’S D’arcy Waldegrave of his schedule. “I’m enjoying my life. I’m competing here, there and everywhere. I’ve got my hands full, but I’m enjoying life.”

While he didn’t book any fights during those eight months outside the ring, Nyika was in the United Kingdom, working alongside the likes of Tyson Fury, Joseph Parker, Lawrence Okolie and Chris Billam-smith.

Working with reigning and former world champions, as well as some of the best British prospects, Nyika has been in a position to hone his craft and learn about himself as an athlete.

“As much as there was a lull in

competitio­n, I was getting some of the best work on the planet,” he said.

“I’ll keep up with anybody in sparring or in fighting. It’s been my whole approach towards the sport — I’m deadly competitiv­e and I want to make sure if I’m working with good guys, I want to be competing with them, not just giving them work.”

On the Gold Coast, Nyika will meet Australian Louis Marsters (1-2) on the undercard of the IBF cruiserwei­ght world title fight between Mairis Briedis and Jai Opetaia, and he expects Marsters to bring the fight to him with a come-forward approach in the ring.

Following the bout, which will be Nyika’s fourth in the profession­al arena, he will be back into the amateur game, looking to win his third straight Commonweal­th Games gold medal.

There are vast difference­s between profession­al and amateur boxing. In the profession­al realm, fights can be up to 12 rounds, while amateur bouts are a maximum of three three-minute rounds. Amateur gloves are significan­tly more padded than those used by pros.

That isn’t fazing Nyika, though, who says he is comfortabl­e switching between the two and is confident he will succeed.

“Why wouldn’t I be [confident]? I’ve worked really hard for it. I’ve earned everything I’ve been given.

“It comes with the territory of working hard and believing in myself. I’m really happy with where I’m at right now — how fit I am, how strong I am, how much experience I’ve gained over the last eight months being overseas.

“It’s been a mental shift, becoming more of a predator. I want to be one of the apex predators in our sport. That’s not just a matter of being the biggest and strongest, it’s having that mentality as well,” he said yesterday.

“I just really want to embody that warrior mentality. I know I have it, it’s just a matter of honing it and channellin­g it in the right direction.” — NZ Herald

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? David Nyika returned to action with a win this month.
Photo / Photosport David Nyika returned to action with a win this month.

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