Bivol’s stoppage win over Malik Zinad in Riyadh last year did little to quiet doubters. Zinad entered the fight with limited name value and no major wins over proven contenders. He was seen by many as a replacement-level opponent rather than the kind of challenge that reveals where a champion stands.
Before that, Bivol outpointed Lyndon Arthur in late 2023. Arthur is a capable fighter with solid credentials, but critics viewed that result as a good professional win rather than a statement against one of the division’s leading names.
Then came the two fights with Artur Beterbiev. Bivol lost the first meeting and officially won the rematch by majority decision, but many fans felt the second bout could have been scored a draw. That has left debate rather than certainty around where he stands at the top of the light heavyweight division.
Now Bivol faces Eifert after a lengthy spell out of the ring and following back surgery. By fight night, he will have been inactive for well over a year. For a fighter whose style depends on footwork, balance, timing, and controlled movement, inactivity can carry more risk than it would for a pure puncher.
None of this means Bivol is finished or diminished. Elite boxers have returned sharp after layoffs before. But this comeback arrives with more questions than many title defenses.
Champions can live on reputation for only so long. On May 30, Bivol gets the chance to prove his level is still present tense, not past tense.
Still, the 16-month gap is a massive hurdle for Bivol. By the time he steps into the ring in Yekaterinburg on May 30, it won’t just be the inactivity hanging over him, it’ll be the physical reality of that back surgery. A herniated disc for a movement-based fighter like Bivol is a different beast than it is for a stationary slugger.
If those lateral movements or that signature spring in his step are even 10% diminished, the “elite technician” version of Bivol might be a memory.
There is a case to be made that his resume is leaning heavily on that 2022 win over Zurdo Ramirez. Since then, the trajectory has been murky.
While he got the majority decision in February 2025, it didn’t exactly close the book. As I noted, many saw a draw or a narrow Beterbiev win.
Wins over Malik Zinad and Lyndon Arthur kept the belts warm, but they didn’t provide the resistance needed to prove he’s still the pound-for-pound threat he was when he dismantled Canelo.
Turning 36 is the traditional falling off the cliff age for lighter, speed-reliant weights. Even at light heavyweight, the reflexes are usually the first thing to go.
Michael Eifert is a curious choice for a comeback. On one hand, he’s the IBF mandatory, so Bivol has to fight him to keep the hardware. On the other, his only real claim to fame is a 2023 decision over a very faded Jean Pascal. He’s younger (28) and fresh, but he hasn’t shown the world-class gear that would normally trouble Bivol.
If Bivol struggles or looks slow against Eifert, the gifted narrative regarding the Beterbiev fight will only get louder. Fans are looking for that 2022 version of Bivol, but with a repaired back and four years of aging since his last dominant win against an elite name, we might be looking at a champion fighting on borrowed time.
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