“You and I know who Moses Itauma is. Most people don’t,” said promoter DiBella to Ariel Helwani. “A little bit, yeah, but not here [U.S] at all,” said DiBella, reacting to Helwani saying that Itauma is known in the UK.
“Here, people don’t know Joshua. Do you think people here care about Joshua and Fury?”
Joshua is the easiest example. He was built as a global star, sold out stadiums, carried belts, and still never took hold in the U.S. in a lasting way. His first real appearance there ended in a stoppage loss to Andy Ruiz Jr., and that became the reference point. For American fans seeing him for the first time, the introduction wasn’t dominance. It was vulnerability. That stuck.
That alone doesn’t explain the problem. The structure around it does.
U.S. fans are used to a different standard now. Regular shows in familiar markets. Fights that appear to carry consequences. Opponents that at least look like they belong. When they don’t get that, they move on quickly. There’s less patience for development fights that feel one-sided and less tolerance for opponents who arrive without credibility.
That’s where prospects like Itauma run into resistance. The talent is obvious. The knockouts are real. But the opposition has been limited, often older or brought in to lose. That slows belief outside the core audience. It doesn’t build it. Casual viewers see a mismatch and treat it as something to skip rather than something to follow.
There’s also a visibility issue that compounds it. Fighters built in the UK system often stay there. They fight on cards aimed at a domestic audience, against opponents from the same circuit, with limited crossover exposure. By the time they reach the U.S., they are already formed in the eyes of their home market but still unfamiliar abroad. One-off night, as Joshua had, carries more weight because there is no cushion.
The result is a split audience. A fighter can be a major attraction in Britain and still feel unproven in America. That wasn’t always the case. Heavyweights used to travel, and their reputations traveled with them. Now the routes are separate.
DiBella didn’t break all that down. He didn’t need to. The reaction to his comment fills in the rest.
American fans don’t ignore these fighters by accident. They’re reacting to what they’re shown. If the fights don’t look competitive and the names don’t connect, they tune out. That pattern has repeated often enough that it’s no longer a coincidence.
Boxing can still produce stars on both sides of the Atlantic. The issue is getting them to mean the same thing in both places. Right now, they don’t.

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