Boxing isn't just about strength – this is a sport closely acquainted with showmanship, and no showman worth his salt would go near a stage without the right song to soundtrack his exploits.
For a boxer, the perfect ring entrance song should do a few things. It should hype up the crowd. It should intimidate your opponent. And it should say something about you, too. Here are eight of the all-time best -- plus one that's destined to become a future classic.
01
Survivor – Eye Of The Tiger
Used by: Manny Pacquiao
You probably can’t name any other songs by Chicago hard rock group Survivor, but Eye Of The Tiger is perhaps the boxing anthem to end all boxing anthems. Written as the theme tune to Rocky III, it was seized upon by Filipino boxer and eight-division world champion Manny Pacquiao.
02
Stormzy – Shut Up
Used by: Anthony Joshua
Stormzy was already a name on the grime scene when he took to the ring to perform Shut Up at the O2 before Anthony Joshua’s clash with Dillian Whyte – but this was one of the performances that solidified his place as one of the nation’s favourite MCs. “Man try say that he’s better than AJ… tell my man shut up!”
03
Ini Kamoze – Here Comes The Hotstepper
Used by: Prince Naseem Hamed
One of the true showmen of the ring, ‘90s featherweight “Prince” Naseem Hamed was known for his elaborate entrances – flying into the ring on a flying carpet, carried in in a palanquin, and so on. This extremely swag 1994 single by Jamaican dancehall artist Ini Kamoze captured his vibe perfectly.
04
2Pac – Road To Glory
Used by: Mike Tyson
2Pac wrote this song specifically for his friend Mike Tyson, and Tyson walked out to it in his 1996 fight with British heavyweight Frank Bruno. The lyrics address the fight directly – and Pac isn’t beating around the bush: “Throw your hands up, Mr Bruno, ride/Big Mike Tyson 'bout to brutalize that ass tonight”.
05
Tina Turner – The Best
Used by: Chris Eubank
Let’s call this one a guilty pleasure? British boxing’s great eccentric called himself “Simply The Best”, and he got it from this glossy ‘80s anthem – first a hit for Bonnie Tyler, then covered by Tina Turner. Eubank would carefully synchronise his entrance to the song, leaping into the ring at the start of the second chorus.
06
Kanye West – All Of The Lights
Used by: Kell Brook
He's nicknamed "The Special One", and Sheffield's Kell Brook has the skills to back it up – last year The Ring magazine called him he world's best active welterweight. He's also something of a showman in the old-school mode – watch his hugely dramatic ring walk, which makes rousing use of Yeezy's Rihanna-featuring All Of The Lights. If you're not waving your mobile phone around like a madman by the time he hits the ring, you've got no soul.
07
AC/DC – Thunderstruck
Used by: Arturo Gatti
It comes with the territory that boxers are not nervous sorts overly concerned with their personal safety, but watch Arturo "Thunder" Gatti approach the ring amidst explosive pyrotechnics, wearing a extremely flammable-looking robe, and you see a true daredevil. His choice of music is equally bombastic – the excellent riff to AC/DC's Thunderstruck. "I guess part of the plan is to puncture Floyd Mayweather's eardrums," exclaims the commentator.
08
Meek Mill ft. Rick Ross – Ima Boss
Used by: Floyd Mayweather
Few rappers spit with as much intensity as Meek Mill, and so it’s no surprise the Philadelphia artist's high-octane track Ima Boss – featuring Maybach Music labelhead Rick Ross – was in Floyd Mayweather’s Hard Work & Dedication Playlist, which he shared ahead of his hotly-debated fight with MMA star Conor McGregor in August 2017. For entering the ring at the fight and for the press-baiting face-off that preceded it, Mayweather made Ima Boss his entrance music, looping Meek’s lyric “At the fight we watchin’ Floyd we on the floor” for ego-boosting effect.
09
Mulalo - Red Bull 64 Bars
3 min
Mulalo Red Bull 64 Bars
Australian Hip Hop artist Mulalo steps up in the booth for Red Bull 64 Bars
Used by: TBC
Mulalo’s confidence is infectious. The Melbourne-based rapper grew up on a steady diet of Nicki Minaj and that influence shines through in her music, which bubbles with fierce energy and charm.
But nothing swings a punch quite like Mulalo’s Red Bull 64 Bars, in which she raps about feeling herself, stepping into her power and asserting her dominance over a breathless three minutes. It’s exactly the sort of track you’d listen to before hopping into the ring.
As Mulalo tells it, the Red Bull 64 Bars flips the middle finger to the haters who have tried to bring her down.
“If I allowed words to affect me, I wouldn’t be doing this,” she says. “That’s what I talked about in my bars. I’m really being like, wow, I am the best.”
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