Vasyl Lomachenko Leaves The Ring As The Last Of His Kind

Vasyl Lomachenko, one of the purest, most intelligent boxers to ever step in a ring, has retired. And not because he was finished. Not because the division passed him by. But because boxing chewed him up, robbed him blind, and spat him out.
He walked away with his integrity intact — because no judge, no promoter, and no ducking diva could take that from him.
“I am grateful for all the victories and defeats in the ring and in life… recognition, history, and legend are not the ultimate goal of existence.”
He says that with humility. But the rest of us? We’re mad. Because what boxing just lost… we’re not getting back.
This Wasn’t Just a Fighter — This Was a Technician, an Artist, a Master
We’re not talking about hype. We’re talking real skills.
No cherry-picking. No ducking. Just a savage amateur record (396-1), two Olympic golds, and a professional path that redefined fast-tracked greatness.
-
World champion in his third pro fight
-
Three-weight world champ by fight twelve
-
Unified lightweight king while giving up size almost every time out
Loma fought with rhythm, geometry, timing, pressure, defense, feints — things casuals can’t even spot without slow-motion replay. His feet weren’t just fast. They were surgical. His eyes read opponents like manuals. He didn’t just win fights. He solved puzzles. In real time. Against champions.
And while others padded records and played the long game, he ran straight toward the smoke — even when injured, even when undersized, even when it cost him on the cards.
A Boxing Mind We’ll Never See Again
What made Lomachenko different wasn’t just the titles. It was how he fought.
-
That footwork? From another planet.
-
Those angles? Unseen until it was too late.
-
That IQ? He was two steps ahead before the bell rang.
-
Those pivots, resets, combinations? Surgical. Ruthless. Beautiful.
He didn’t fight to win rounds — he fought to break your will.
He wasn’t just elite. He was elite without shortcuts.
No hand-picked bums. No rehydration clauses. No soft matchmaking.
He chased greatness. And boxing repaid him with silence and sabotage.
Top Rank Knew What They Had — And So Did We
“Top Rank has been privileged to promote ‘Loma’ for the entirety of his historic journey… He was a generational champion, and we will all miss his participation in the sport.” – Bob Arum
No arguments. From the moment he turned pro, Lomachenko was held to a higher standard. And he never flinched. Not once. He took risks others wouldn’t dream of — and got punished for it.
He Got Robbed. Twice.
Let’s stop dancing around it.
The Teofimo fight? Loma fought with one arm. The guy had shoulder surgery the day after. And while he gave away the early rounds, he absolutely won the second half. All Teo had to do was survive the 12th. Yet somehow the cards were wide. You know why? Because politics beats skill when there’s a promoter agenda behind the opponent.
And then came the Devin Haney disgrace.
That wasn’t close. That wasn’t debatable.
Loma beat Haney from round 2 to round 11 — clean, effective, intelligent work. Haney was getting walked down, flustered, shelled up. Round 10 was Loma’s masterpiece — he nearly had Haney out of there.
And what did the judges do? 116-112 for Haney. A joke. An insult. A theft on live TV. A political hit job.
Haney walked away with the belts. Loma walked away with dignity — but it was daylight robbery in front of the world. And real boxing fans knew it.
Anyone who knows boxing — anyone who watches boxing — saw who really won that night. And yet again, the guy who built his legacy on skill, discipline, and hard fights got screwed over in favor of someone with a marketing plan and a longer runway.

A Goodbye From the Promoter — And a Reality Check From the Fans
Top Rank released the official statement:
“Top Rank has been privileged to promote ‘Loma’ for the entirety of his historic journey, which included world titles in three weight classes and recognition as the sport’s preeminent pound-for-pound fighter.”
“He was a generational champion, and we will all miss his participation in the sport.” – Bob Arum
Nice words. But let’s not pretend that’s the whole story.
Top Rank was happy to promote Loma when he was untouchable — when he was making former champions quit and collecting belts faster than any fighter in the modern era.
But where was that energy when he was robbed blind against Haney on their watch?
Where was the outrage when their golden boy left the ring with belts he didn’t earn and Loma stood there empty-handed, having put on a masterclass?
Truth is, they probably let it happen.
They handed Loma to the system.
Because the machine always needs a new face — and when it was time to pass the torch, they sacrificed the man who made their brand look elite.
And Don’t Forget Who Never Showed Up
Loma called for Tank for years. Crickets.
He wanted that fight from 2017 on. And what did Mayweather Promotions do?
They kept Tank protected, fed him one showcase after another, and waited. Only now — after injuries, war, and the wear of real challenges — is Tank “open” to it. Why? Because they waited him out. That’s the blueprint: let Loma age, then act tough.
But had they stepped in back when he was at his best? They knew the truth.
Loma would’ve embarrassed him. Just like he embarrassed everyone else.
Boxing Didn’t Deserve Lomachenko
God bless Loma. He gave everything to this sport — and boxing gave him robbery, duckers, and silence.
He didn’t play the game. He didn’t sell nonsense. He just fought. And when he lost, he never whined. Never blamed. He took it like a man and came back harder.
To the fake champions with padded records: congrats — he’s out of your way now.
To the judges who scored politics: enjoy your checks.
To the fans who actually know boxing?
We saw the truth. We saw a master. And we’ll never forget.
Lomachenko was robbed, ducked, frozen out, and still walked away the better man every single time.
Thank you, Loma.
Boxing didn’t deserve you.
And it damn sure won’t replace you.

Last Updated on 06/05/2025
https://www.boxingnews24.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Vasiliy-Lomachenko_flag_crowd2.jpg
2025-06-05 16:27:07