RESULT
Pat Brown Stops Ducar in Eight — British Olympian Claims Two Cruiserweight Titles
Pat Brown extended his perfect professional record to 5-0 (5 KOs) with a dominant eighth-round stoppage of experienced Czech Vasil Ducar at Planet Ice Altrincham, winning the WBA International and IBF Intercontinental cruiserweight championships.
April 4, 2026
Boxing Lookout
- Pat Brown stopped Vasil Ducar (19-7-2) in the eighth round to win the WBA International and IBF Intercontinental cruiserweight titles at Planet Ice Altrincham
- The British Olympian remains unbeaten at 5-0 with five knockouts — a 100% stoppage rate that marks him as one of the most exciting prospects in the cruiserweight division
- Brown's step up against a seasoned European campaigner with 19 wins was his biggest test yet, and he passed it emphatically with a clinical late stoppage
Brown Announces Himself at Cruiserweight
Right then, remember the name:
Pat Brown. Five fights, five knockouts, two international titles, and a former Olympian with the kind of pedigree that tells you this lad is going places. His eighth-round stoppage of
Vasil Ducar last night at Planet Ice in Altrincham was the biggest step up of his young professional career, and he handled it like a proper professional.
Ducar came in with 19 wins, 14 of those by knockout. This wasn't a novice. This was a seasoned Czech campaigner who'd been in with decent operators across Europe. He'd been stopped before, sure, but he'd also got a draw on his record and wins over credible opposition. When you're five fights into your career, taking on a man with that much experience is a serious leap.
A Clinical Performance From Start to Finish
What impressed me most about Brown's performance was the patience. He didn't rush it. Five fights in, with a 100% knockout rate, there's always the temptation to go in swinging and look for the highlight reel finish. Brown didn't do that. He boxed smart, worked behind his jab, controlled the distance, and waited for the openings to present themselves.
When the openings came in the eighth round, Brown was ruthless. The stoppage was clinical — the kind of finish that tells you a fighter has genuine power combined with technical precision. That combination is what separates prospects from future world champions. Brown's got both.
The Cruiserweight Division Is Stacked — But Brown Has Time
Let's be realistic about where Brown is right now. Five fights. He's still learning the professional game. The cruiserweight division globally is absolutely stacked — you've got the likes of
Jai Opetaia at the top,
Richard Riakporhe rebuilding, and plenty of dangerous operators in between. Brown isn't ready for that level yet, and that's fine.
But what he is doing is ticking the right boxes at the right pace. Winning international titles five fights in is rapid progression. The WBA International and IBF Intercontinental belts aren't world titles, but they're ranking belts that open doors. They get you into the top fifteen with the sanctioning bodies. They put you in the conversation.
The Olympic Pedigree Matters
Here's what makes Brown different from most 5-0 prospects: the Olympic experience. Fighting at the Games gives you something that domestic boxing simply can't replicate. The pressure, the atmosphere, the need to perform on the biggest stage — Brown's been there, done that. That mental strength translates directly to the professional ring.
British boxing has a brilliant track record of turning Olympic talent into world champions. Anthony Joshua, Luke Campbell, Nicola Adams, Lauren Price — the pathway is proven. Brown looks like the next in that lineage at cruiserweight.
My Take — One to Watch Seriously
Make no mistake, Pat Brown is a serious prospect. Five fights, five stoppages, two international belts, and a performance last night against Ducar that showed maturity beyond his experience level. He's levels above where most fighters are at this stage of their career.
If his team manages him properly — and all signs suggest they will — Brown could be challenging for a world title within the next two years. The cruiserweight division is there for the taking for a young, hungry British fighter with an Olympic background and genuine stopping power. Pat Brown might just be that man.