“The Mountain” Hafthor Björnsson has won his first professional boxing match. On Sept. 18, 2021, Hafthor Björnsson advanced his professional boxing record to 1-0 after defeating Devon Larratt via a first-round technical knockout. The bout was the main event of Fight Night 3 presented by CoreSports.
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The boxing match took place in Dubai, UAE, with the ticket including eight undercard bouts featuring CrossFit Games veterans Josh Bridges vs. Jacob Heppner, and powerlifter Stefi Cohen‘s return to the ring to box Marcela Nieto. The main event of the evening was the highly anticipated professional boxing debut of 2018 World’s Strongest Man (WSM) Hafthor Björnsson and Canadian arm-wrestler Devon “No Limits” Larratt.
Hafthor Björnsson Vs. Devon Larratt Recap
The fight was scheduled for six three-minute rounds, with both men wearing 12-ounce gloves. Björnsson stands at 6’9″ and weighed in at 146.5 kilograms (322 pounds). Devon Larratt is 6’5″ and officially weighed in at 124 kilograms (273.4 pounds).
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To sum up the bout, Thor’s year and a half of training greatly overshadowed Larratt’s six weeks of preparation. It was a courageous showing from Larratt, but Björnsson’s size, training experience, and comfort level in the ring gave him the clear upper hand.
The Round One (And Only) Breakdown
From the onset, both fighters’ size was apparent, and they met in the center of the ring swinging. After throwing a few punches each, Björnsson and Larratt locked up and tumbled into the ropes within seconds.
Larratt was the first to land a solid punch, connecting a right hook to the head of Björnsson about 30 seconds into the round. However, Thor absorbed the punch well and looked unfazed. After the early showing by Larratt, Björnsson took control of the match, immediately responding with a strong punch to the head of Larratt.
While Larratt’s courage was on full display, his balance was clearly his weakest link. The champion arm wrestler ducked a left-handed punch from Björnsson, but fell back into the ropes, causing the official to call for a pause as he checked Larratt.
Thor commanded the center of the ring after fighting allowed to resume, with Larratt skirting along the edges. Larratt never fought defensively, consistently leaning into Björnsson’s punches as well as his own.
As the final minute set in, Björnsson landed more punches, wearing Larratt down. Larratt fought back, accenting his punches with audible shouts. But Thor was dialed into his opponent, and after landing a few more blows as the 30-second mark was crossed, the referee called the match for Björnsson.
Before the Bout
Björnsson was the odds-on favorite heading into the fight. After all, he trained exclusively for a year and a half as a boxer to fight 2017 WSM champion Eddie Hall. However, a biceps injury compelled Hall to pull out of the fight, and Larratt was tapped as his replacement with only six weeks to prepare.
There was speculation by the commentators about how well Björnsson’s training would apply to Larratt, and that perhaps there was a surprise to be had in the match. But the upset was not to be for Larratt as Björnsson’s training advantage was evident throughout the fight.
Forward to Björnsson vs. Hall
After the fight, Thor called out Hall in his post-match interview, stating:
Enjoy your life, buddy. I’m going to knock you out soon.
The bout between Björnsson and Hall — marketed as “The Heaviest Boxing Match in History” — is expected to occur in early 2022. Current speculation is that Hall will fully recover from his biceps surgery and be medically cleared to enter the ring by March 2022. No specific date or location has yet been announced, nor have the fights that will be featured on the undercard.
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Björnsson’s bout against Larratt marks the third time he has stepped in the boxing ring outside of training. His first two bouts were exhibition fights against Steven Ward and Simon Vallily.
Hall has not participated in any exhibition fights, stating on his YouTube channel that he does not intend to. We’ll see, come 2022, if Björnsson can continue his newfound winning streak by wrangling “The Beast” or if Hall’s first trip back to the squared circle will involve a toppling of “The Mountain.”
Feature image: @thorbjornsson on Instagram