That line goes against how fighters usually talk at this stage of their careers. Thurman (30-1, 22 KOs) has had long layoffs, injuries, and only one fight since 2019. The safer route would be to manage risk, pick spots carefully, and stretch out whatever time remains. He’s describing the opposite.
Thurman, 37, is choosing to step into a difficult fight with a younger, active opponent in Fundora, and he’s doing it without the usual language about rebuilding or easing back in. The message is simple. He’s not trying to preserve a record or protect a position.
He tied that mindset to how he’s always seen himself in the ring. Thurman pointed back to an early fight where he was dropped in the opening seconds, got up, and stopped his opponent within three rounds. That, to him, set the tone for everything that followed.
“If it ain’t over, it’s not over,” Thurman said.
The same idea carries into this fight. He’s treating it as a real test, not easing his way back in. That doesn’t guarantee anything against a fighter like Fundora, who brings size, activity, and a different set of problems than Thurman has dealt with in recent years. It does show how Thurman is entering the fight.
He’s risking what he built all over again, even at this stage. That approach makes the fight easier to understand. Thurman is coming back to find out if he still belongs at that level, nearly a decade after he was last there, fighting regularly and taking risks.

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