Dillian Whyte
The Body Snatcher
Bio
Right then, Dillian Whyte is a proper warhorse of the heavyweight division. The Body Snatcher has been a fixture at the top end of the sport for the best part of a decade, carrying a record of 31-4 with 21 knockouts and a CV that reads like a who's who of modern heavyweight boxing. Make no mistake, this is a man who has been in with the very best.
Whyte has shared rings with Tyson Fury, Alexander Povetkin, Joseph Parker and Derek Chisora twice, and for years was the perennial WBC mandatory who could never quite get the world title shot he craved. When he finally did, against Fury at Wembley, he came up short — but the credibility of being there at all is something few can claim.
Now 38, the questions are about the miles on the clock. His most recent outing ended in a stoppage defeat to the young phenom Moses Itauma in August 2025, a result that had many wondering whether the end was near. Whyte, typically stubborn, made it clear he has no intention of retiring and wants to fight on.
That defiance is exactly why a domestic clash with rising star Johnny Fisher makes so much sense — a big-money night against a fresh face that keeps the Body Snatcher relevant. Whyte has always been one of the toughest, most awkward operators in the division, and even at this stage he remains a dangerous night's work for anyone.