The Joe Rogan ExperienceJRE MMA Show #55 with Kelly Pavlik
Joe Rogan and Kelly Pavlik on kelly Pavlik Weighs Boxing Comeback, Legacy, and Combat Sports Corruption.
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Joe Rogan and Kelly Pavlik, JRE MMA Show #55 with Kelly Pavlik explores kelly Pavlik Weighs Boxing Comeback, Legacy, and Combat Sports Corruption Former middleweight boxing champion Kelly Pavlik joins Joe Rogan to reflect on his career, including the Jermaine Taylor war, the Bernard Hopkins loss, weight-cut struggles, and why he retired at 30.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Kelly Pavlik Weighs Boxing Comeback, Legacy, and Combat Sports Corruption
- Former middleweight boxing champion Kelly Pavlik joins Joe Rogan to reflect on his career, including the Jermaine Taylor war, the Bernard Hopkins loss, weight-cut struggles, and why he retired at 30.
- He openly discusses his lingering itch to return—now about 70–80% serious—while weighing health risks, family responsibilities, and the brutal realities highlighted by cases like Adonis Stevenson.
- Pavlik and Rogan dive deep into boxing’s judging controversies, promoter influence, and the business shift toward streaming platforms, while also breaking down elite technicians like Lomachenko, Canelo, Triple G, and Wilder–Fury.
- They close with Pavlik’s post‑career life: powerlifting, opening a gym, starting a live call‑in boxing podcast, and considering media work such as commentary and even Dancing With the Stars.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
7 ideasA world-class fighter’s competitive fire rarely disappears, even in retirement.
Pavlik admits he’s 70–80% serious about a comeback six years after his last fight, but insists he must balance the urge against his family’s needs, his health, and the risks illustrated by recent ring injuries.
Judging and politics remain one of boxing’s biggest threats.
They cite fights like Pacquiao–Bradley, Canelo–Golovkin I, and Wilder–Fury, arguing that poor judging, promoter influence, and cozy relationships with officials can undermine fan trust just as the sport is resurging.
Technical mastery in boxing goes far beyond flash; it’s about efficient footwork and intelligent positioning.
Pavlik praises fighters like Chavez, Lomachenko, Mikey Garcia, and Hopkins for subtle footwork—small steps, angles, and range control that keep them in position to punch while suffocating opponents’ offense.
Weight cuts and late‑career size mismatches can define or derail big fights.
He details how severe cuts at 160 affected him against Martinez, how jumping two divisions hurt him versus Hopkins, and how Canelo’s catchweight vs. Mayweather or move to 168 carry real performance costs.
Post‑career identity and environment can fuel self‑destructive habits.
Staying in Youngstown as a local star, Pavlik slid into heavy drinking and minor legal trouble, learning the hard way that a ‘big fish in a small pond’ attracts scrutiny and that fame changes what you can safely do in public.
Modern distribution (apps and streaming) is reshaping combat sports business.
They discuss ESPN+, DAZN, and UFC Fight Pass making fights cheaper and more accessible, Canelo’s massive DAZN deal, and how HBO’s boxing exit may be temporary as platforms compete for premium sports content.
Strength and conditioning must be tailored to the sport and career stage.
Pavlik favors functional strength, explosive work (sledgehammers, sleds, VertiMax), and high‑rep endurance lifting over maximal powerlifting for active boxers, and warns that over‑long camps or poorly timed heavy work can ruin fight‑night performance.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesCombat world champion athletes and fighters, mentality wise, you're always gonna have that mentality.
— Kelly Pavlik
If he wants to go around and do these sideshows, let him. The man went 50–0. He doesn’t owe the sport anything.
— Kelly Pavlik on Floyd Mayweather
There’s been thousands of fights in the last 10 years and I’ve very seldom heard anybody complain about a count. They don’t do a ten‑second count in boxing, they go by the referee’s count.
— Kelly Pavlik on the Wilder–Fury knockdown controversy
When you get a guy that hits as hard as Triple G does and a guy as good as Canelo, those kinds of fights take a lot out of you.
— Kelly Pavlik
You’re not fighting guys that are getting off work at 3:00. You’re fighting legit athletes and skilled professionals at fighting—and it’s dangerous.
— Kelly Pavlik
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsIf Pavlik does return, what weight class and opponents would make sense that balance legacy, safety, and marketability?
Former middleweight boxing champion Kelly Pavlik joins Joe Rogan to reflect on his career, including the Jermaine Taylor war, the Bernard Hopkins loss, weight-cut struggles, and why he retired at 30.
How could boxing realistically reform judging and oversight to reduce corruption and protect its current resurgence?
He openly discusses his lingering itch to return—now about 70–80% serious—while weighing health risks, family responsibilities, and the brutal realities highlighted by cases like Adonis Stevenson.
What specific training or recovery innovations would Pavlik apply now that he wishes he’d had during his prime years?
Pavlik and Rogan dive deep into boxing’s judging controversies, promoter influence, and the business shift toward streaming platforms, while also breaking down elite technicians like Lomachenko, Canelo, Triple G, and Wilder–Fury.
How much should fighters let public opinion and online backlash influence decisions about comebacks or retirement?
They close with Pavlik’s post‑career life: powerlifting, opening a gym, starting a live call‑in boxing podcast, and considering media work such as commentary and even Dancing With the Stars.
With streaming platforms taking over, what role should former champions like Pavlik play—as commentators, analysts, or promoters—in shaping how fans experience boxing?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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