Strictly Business Boxing
Strictly Business Boxing

How Good Is a Pro Boxer With 180 Losses?

(It’s Not What It Seems)!

(April 22nd) How good is a pro boxer with 180 losses? On paper, it looks like the end of the story. In reality, it’s where this one begins.

 

Islington, London's, 33, Jordan Grannum, known as “The Grafter,” carrying a record that would make most people look away: 15 wins, 180 losses, 7 draws is the kind of seasoned opponent every prospect needs, durable, relentless, and built to test whether a rising fighter is really ready.

 

But numbers don’t bruise, and they don’t tell you what it takes to walk into more than 200 professional fights and keep coming back. An orthodox fighter forged in the role of a journeyman, Grannum stopped only three times represents a side of boxing built on resilience, repetition, and a willingness to face anyone, anywhere.

 

Guiding the story is Anthony Hunter, whose perspective brings context beyond the stat sheet. As the questions unfold and the gloves go on, what looks like a mismatch begins to shift. The losses stop looking like failure — and start looking like experience.

 

Because in boxing, a record can mislead.

 

This isn’t just about wins and losses. It’s about survival. It’s about craft. It’s about the fighters who build others’ careers while quietly mastering their own toughness. And as the rounds play out, one thing becomes clear:

 

A fighter with 180 losses might still be far more dangerous than you think.

 

Do you have what it takes to go a minimum of four rounds with "The Grafter"?

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