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The saying goes that comparison is the thief of joy, but you wouldn’t know that from the look on Galal Yafai’s face this week.

The fresh-faced, beaming 32-year-old looked relaxed and composed at his final press conference on Thursday afternoon, edging closer to his 10th outing in a fast-moving professional boxing career. On Saturday night, live on DAZN, Yafai (9-0, 7 KOs) defends his WBC interim flyweight title against the experienced Mexican Francisco Rodriguez Jr. (39-6-1, 27 KOs) in front of a home Birmingham crowd. He does so while eyeing the next step in writing his own history as a fully fledged world champion.

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Since winning gold at the 2020 Olympic Games, Yafai has been compared to a litany of others in the sport. That list includes his older brothers Kal and Gamal, the stylistic technician that was the now-retired Vasiliy Lomachenko, as well as fellow British Olympic gold medalists turned world champions Anthony Joshua and James DeGale.

You could argue, easily, that it’s a humbling group of fighters to be grouped with, but Yafai seems uninterested in such yardsticks.

“I don’t want to be compared with anyone,” Yafai stated upon turning over into the pro ranks in 2022. Thrown into the relative deep end in a 10-rounder for his debut, the similarities between him and Lomachenko started, and they gained momentum when his southpaw style — accompanied by eye-catching front-footed flurries — started paying dividends against a plethora of challengers.

“I don’t want to jump the gun too much and put myself in the same brackets as Lomachenko,” he claimed. “To even be put in them brackets is so humbling, he’s an unbelievable fighter that I’ve watched for years.

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“When I won the gold medal, I had people telling me I’ve joined greats who aren’t even from Great Britain like Oscar De La Hoya, Pernell Whittaker, Muhammad Ali and all these fighters who have won Olympic gold. I’m not as good as them, but one thing we’ve all got in common is we’re all Olympic champions and that’s one thing that will live with me forever.”

Fast-forward three years and Yafai is now just two fights away from becoming just the third male Briton to be crowned a world champion after winning an Olympic gold. Japanese star Kenshiro Teraji (25-1, 16 KOs) holds the full title at 112 pounds, and Yafai is targeting a return later this year to Japan — the site of his Olympic triumph — to challenge the champion monikered “The Amazing Boy.”

But Rodriguez Jr. is the man that stands in the way of Yafai and that dream, and Saturday’s blend of styles suggests that we could be in for a memorable dust-up between two offensive protagonists.

“He’s a great fighter, Rodriguez,” Yafai explained on Thursday. “Anyone that knows him, he comes forward, I come forward. It should make for a great fight for the fans, not so good for myself and him.

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“Rodriguez should be my hardest fight, on paper. Let’s hope it’s not in reality on Saturday. I’ve had to fight Sunny [Edwards], who was No. 1 with the Ring Magazine, then I’ve had to fight the WBC No. 1 Rodriguez, and then I’ll have to go to Japan probably and fight the pound-for-pound fighter who’s got the WBC and WBA belts in Teraji. I’ve not had it easy, have I?”

If Yafai is longing to be recognized by his own achievements in the sport, then a fire-fight victory over Rodriguez this weekend could go some way to laying those foundations. The further down the weight classes you ply your trade, the more pressure that is (unfairly) put on you to make sure you “entertain’” — and Yafai’s smooth attacks crafted by heavy hands appear up to the task.

He claims not to have had it the easy way, but fighters like Yafai wouldn’t want it any other way.

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