Sports

David Price’s Sad Reminder Of Denis Boytsov’s Lost Power: “He Only Hit The Top Of My Head”

David Price didn’t post it for likes. He didn’t shove it into a promo reel. He just quietly reminded the boxing world of something brutal: the scariest puncher he ever stood in front of is now barely remembered—and barely alive.

“I sparred a Russian called Denis Boytsov in Germany once,” Price told Daily Star Sport. “He only hit the top of my head, but he was a powerful puncher.”

YouTube video

That’s all it took. Not a looping right. Not a clean uppercut. Just a glancing shot to the crown—and Price, who’s taken punches from the division’s heaviest hitters, still can’t forget it. That says everything.

Let’s not sugar-coat it. Price’s career turned into a highlight reel for other people’s rise. He got flattened by names plastered across belts, posters, and DAZN deals. But the man who left the deepest mark wasn’t any of them.

It was Boytsov.

And you barely hear his name anymore.

He was 36-1. He had the momentum. He had the hands. He was lined up for a world title shot. Then he vanished. In May 2015, he was found unconscious between two Berlin train stations. Skull fractured. Brain swollen. Medically induced coma. Seven weeks.

They said it was an “accident.”

Berlin police had the gall to call it an “accident.” Meanwhile, Boytsov’s own website said it was linked to years of threats His wife called it mob revenge.

Price didn’t mince words: “He got absolutely battered by a gang of Russian fellas and left for dead. He couldn’t fight again.”

And he never did.

Boytsov dropped over 30 kilos in hospital. Couldn’t speak. Couldn’t walk. Initially treated in Berlin, he was later transferred to a rehabilitation clinic in Hamburg. In August 2021, Boytsov was moved back to his native Russia for continued care. . He’s still under 24-hour care, unable to speak, and continues to require assistance for daily activities.

All while the sport moved on—pretending he never existed.

The hype went to safer hands. The belts went to ticket sellers. The world never saw what Boytsov could’ve been. He was buried under a system that never wanted him near a title.

No comeback story. No redemption arc. No one crying into a mic about how he “overcame adversity.” He just disappeared.

And next time someone starts listing who punched the hardest—Tyson this, Wilder that—remember who David Price named.

It wasn’t the poster boys. It was the one who never got his shot.

And we’ll never know what he could’ve done.

What a sad, sorry waste.

YouTube video

Last Updated on 04/02/2025

https://www.boxingnews24.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/IMG_4765_Boytsov.jpg

2025-04-02 07:43:35

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button