After four tough stages, Brandon Mejia, Muhamet Qamili, Carlos Utria, Mujibillo Tursunov, Derek Pomerleau, Dylan Biggs, Ahmed Krnjic and Kevin Ramirez are the fighters who will try to take home the José Sulaimán Trophy and earn a shot at the Silver title in their respective divisions at the WBC Boxing Grand Prix Final on Saturday, December 20, 2025 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Card
- Featherweight Final: Brandon Mejía vs Muhamet Qamili
- Super Lightweight Final: Carlos Utria vs Mujibillo Tursunov
- Middleweight Final: Derek Pomerleau vs Dylan Biggs
- Heavyweight Final: Ahmed Krnjic vs Kevin Ramirez
When and where is the fight?
The final will take place Saturday, December 20, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Where to watch the fight?
The event will be broadcast on DAZN: http://dazn.com/wbc.
Schedule
Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras: 9:00 am CT
United States: 10:00 am ET
Canada: 10:00 am
Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Panama: 10:00 am
Puerto Rico, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Bolivia and Venezuela: 11:00 am
Argentina, Uruguay and Chile: 12:00 pm
Spain: 4:00 pm
Bosnia and Herzegovina: 4:00 pm
Saudi Arabia: 6:00 pm
Uzbekistan: 8:00 pm
Australia: 2:00 am on December 21

The WBC Boxing Grand Prix finals: A tournament formed by statistics and survival
The WBC Grand Prix semifinals not only left eight names advancing; they left a much clearer map of the type of tournament being built.
One that follows no simple patterns, distributing close decisions in some weight classes and violent explosions in others, and one that is slowly shaping a narrative where every continent, every style, and every division tells its own version of the same story: survival.
Tournament Geography: Who is Still Standing
The global map of the Grand Prix started wide and diverse:
Europe lined up fighters from 17 countries; the Americas, from 9; Asia, from 6; Africa, from 8; and Oceania with Australia as the sole representative. It was a planetary boxing cross-section.
But as the competition progressed, the balance shifted.
Qualified Fighters (relative to the previous phase):
- The Americas advanced 4 fighters (66.7%): Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, and Canada.
- Europe placed 2 (40%): Italy and Bosnia.
- Asia maintained 100% of its survivors: Uzbekistan.
- Oceania did the same: Australia.
Now, looking at who started the tournament, the reality is much more starkly evident:
- Only 4 out of 45 Americans remain (8.9%).
- A mere 2 out of 43 Europeans (4.7%).
- 1 out of 19 Asians (20%).
- 1 out of 5 Oceanians (20%).
Being a global event, boxers from all countries and all continents participated:
- Europe: Germany, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Denmark, Spain, France, Ireland, Italy, England, Netherlands, Poland, United Kingdom, Czech Republic, Romania, Turkey, and Ukraine.
- The Americas: Argentina, Canada, Colombia, United States, Guatemala, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Panama, and Venezuela.
- Asia: China, Philippines, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Thailand, and Uzbekistan.
- Africa: Congo, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tanzania.
- Oceania: Australia.
Thus, the Grand Prix reaches its next stage with eight distinct flags still flying: Argentina, Uzbekistan, Bosnia, Italy, Colombia, Canada, Mexico, and Australia. Eight styles, eight schools, and eight stories that now carry not only the weight of their own careers but also all the statistics the tournament has been drawing with every punch.
And as the phases progress, the overall Grand Prix statistics – totaling the entire tournament so far – serve as a reminder that this format is a grinder:
66 unanimous decisions, 6 split decisions, 13 majority decisions, 6 under Enhanced Scoring, 24 TKO, and 8 KO.
This entire numerical puzzle ultimately shows something beyond just the count: the tournament is purifying styles, geographies, and generations. Those who remain didn’t just win fights: they survived a system designed to measure fighters in their rawest form.
This is no longer just a list of semifinalists: it is an X-ray of contemporary world boxing.
