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Dave Allen considering dramatic career move after Makhmudov loss

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Dave Allen is contemplating dropping down in weight and pursuing a world title after his defeat by Arslanbek Makhmudov.

Fighting in front of a sold-out home crowd of 10,000 at the Sheffield Arena, Allen put in a spirited performance against the towering Makhmudov, only to be comfortably beaten on points.

Now with a record of 24-8-2 (19 KOs), the ‘White Rhino’ wants to continue boxing - and might even lose weight to campaign in boxing’s freshest division, bridgerweight.

Allen’s fellow Brit Lawrence Okolie briefly held the bridgerweight title in 2024, and now the ‘White Rhino’ is contemplating an assault on the embryonic weight class.

He posted on his Instagram: "Yes 16st (224lbs) is a possibility.

"Yes it would be hard work and yes it would require me making weight. But just like for all fighters at all weights who make weight, it would be difficult and it would be a first for me. It would be hard but it’s definitely on the table for me."

PIC 4 Dave Allen training camp_07082025Dave Thompson/Matchroom Boxing

The 224lb-limit bridgerweight division was implemented by the WBC to fill the gap between large heavyweights and cruiserweights, with fighters in boxing’s most glamorous division often weighing over 40lbs heavier than the cruiserweight limit of 200lbs.

Currently just the WBC and WBA recognise the fledgling division, with Kevin Lerena and Muslim Gadzhimagomedov the respective world champions of the sanctioning bodies. Allen weighed 259lbs for his fight with Makhmudov, meaning he would have to cut 35lbs in order to compete at bridgerweight. The lightest weight Allen has fought at was 232lbs for his debut against Rolandas Cesna in 2012.

Despite admitting that he was ‘not good enough’ in the immediate aftermath of his loss to Makhmudov, Allen stated that he still had the boxing bug. In fact, the 33-year-old is keen to be back in the ring before the end of 2025, looking for an immediate bounceback after the eighth loss of his career.

He continued: "After the fight I thought 'oh that might do me,' but I messaged Eddie 10 minutes ago saying 'let's get something in before the end of the year.'

"Mad isn't it? It's a hard game to leave alone. I'm in agony now, not the best at boxing but I enjoy it. I like to compete, I love it and would do it every day if I could."

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