Dereck Chisora, at 40, might have been wiser had he done like Joe Biden a few years ago and withdrawn from the heavyweight race.
The best time for this would have been when Tyson Fury gave him a brutal ten-round beating in 2022.
It was another cruel defeat, one of 13 for Chisora in his career spanning 17 years and 47 fights.
He has withstood a total of 135 rounds of bullets against a horde of brutal punches.
These include Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko, Fury (twice), Joseph Parker (twice), Kubrat Pulev (twice), David Haye and Oleksandr Usyk.
Zimbabwe-born Chisora has been one of the most successful, daring and colourful characters to grace British rings.
He has won the British, Commonwealth and European titles and was twice a World Championship challenger.
When I told Chisora that he should seriously think about hanging up his gloves, he said he would think about it.

It must have been a passing thought, as Del Boy is still working on it.
And, no doubt to the delight of his huge fans in the ring – who don’t take the punches seriously – he will face Joe Joyce at London’s O2 Arena on Saturday.
Casino Specials – Best Casino Welcome Offers
Derek said: “I don’t listen to anyone – I’m my own boss. I make my own decisions and do what I want to do.
“I just want to bring joy to those hard-working people in this beautiful country.”
Chisora is an enigmatic and aloof personality and fans love him.
He is a one-man serial killer who never shies away from chaos and controversy.
Chisora has been given a suspended sentence for attacking his girlfriend and biting an opponent.
He slapped Vitali Klitschko in the face during a weigh-in in Munich and was arrested by German police for brawling with Haye after the fight.
He was also banned for throwing a table at Dillian Whyte before the fight.
Just last week he took his two daughters to lunch in Hampstead – and there he head-on hit a motorbike delivery rider who was mad enough to attack him after an altercation outside a restaurant.
If that makes Chisora seem like a monster, nothing could be more true.
This religious, devoted father is loved by everyone who meets him.
Read more at The Scottish Sun
He fully deserves the rapturous applause he is sure to receive when he enters the ring.
But I sincerely hope that, win, lose or draw against Joyce, he has the sense to make this his last match.
