platform

Heavyweight champ Oleksandr Usyk seeks to tokenize boxers’ careers

Olympic champion boxer Oleksandr Usyk launches a new blockchain-powered tokenized ecosystem platform aimed at supporting boxers through their careers.

IBF, WBO and WBA heavyweight boxing champion Oleksandr Usyk has put his weight behind a blockchain platform that aims to tokenize and support the boxing industry.

The Olympic gold medalist has teamed up with Ukrainian-based cryptocurrency exchange Qmall to develop the “Ready to Fight” platform. The browser-based platform makes use of blockchain technology to help boxers tokenize their brands to receive donations and investments, as well as a means to deliver exclusive content.

Ready to Fight introduces a novel means of supporting and connecting the wider boxing industry. The platform features a tokenomics ecosystem making use of its proprietary RTF tokens. Qmall is using a fork of the Ethereum blockchain to develop the in-house platform.

Boxers and promising athletes are able to register on the platform. Upon creation of their tokenized identity, a supply of 1 million name tokens with a unique ticker is created. The boxer name tokens are frozen until a specific release through an initial dex offering (IDO) or until the boxer collects a specific amount of donations. 

Boxers are also obliged to reinvest earnings from the platform back into their boxing name token within five years. Boxer tokens are traded exclusively with the ecosystem’s RTF token, as are goods and services that are offered on the Ready to Fight platform. RTF tokens will be available through the Qmall exchange.

A screenshot of the Ready to Fight web-based platform, which already features a number of boxers. Source: Ready to Fight

The Qmall team told Cointelegraph that the platform essentially gives users a stake in a chosen fighter’s prospective success. The fighter tokens’ value to RTF will depend on a fighter’s success as their careers progress and increase community interest. 

While fans and investors can help support their favorite boxers through donations and name token purchases, the ecosystem also promises to provide the functionality for fighters to access and pay for services like professional trainers, sparring partners, physiotherapists and nutritionists, and agents using accrued RTF tokens.

Cointelegraph also reached out to Usyk to find out how blockchain technology can assist boxers in funding careers in a profession with numerous hurdles.

“The problem for many aspiring boxers is that even though they’re killing themselves in the gym, they don’t have the connections or ability to find a team that can represent them, and even if they do, most importantly, few can afford it.”

The 2012 Olympic gold medallist believes blockchain-powered platforms can level the playing field, allowing boxers to build new connections through a supportive community. Fighters can focus on training while the tokenomics of the ecosystem provides an avenue to fund their careers.

Usyk explains that the cryptocurrency space is also creating new opportunities for a wide range of industries that were not possible five or 10 years ago.

“I understand and respect the philosophy behind it — democratizing how people use and move money and services; it’s changing the world and can create fairer systems, with boxing being no exception.”

Usyk said he would lean on Qmall’s expertise as a cryptocurrency exchange and nonfungible token (NFT) marketplace provider to iron out the specific tokenomics of the project and its longevity.

The Qmall team also highlighted the platform’s focus on three key pillars: social, trade and investment. The platform inherently functions as a social network, already featuring up-to-date original news, feature and evergreen content curated by its editorial team. The platform also aims to be a source of exclusive news and insider information from the boxing industry. 

A mobile application for the platform is currently in development for both Android and iOS devices.

The 36-year-old Ukrainian heavyweight has previously tapped into the cryptocurrency space, launching an NFT collection in August 2022 aimed at raising funds for the ongoing conflict with Russia in his country.

EmpiresX ‘head trader’ to face 4 years of prison over $100M crypto ‘Ponzi’

Two other associates that helped run the U.S.-based fraudulent crypto platform EmpiresX left the country early this year and are believed to be in Brazil.

One of the leading figures convicted of being behind the $100 million crypto “Ponzi” scheme, EmpiresX, has just been handed an over four-year jail sentence by a United States court.

The sentencing was handed to Joshua David Nicholas, the “head trader” of purported crypto platform EmpiresX, who is nowset to serve a 51-month prison sentence along with three years of supervised release for his role in the fraudulent scheme.

It follows a Sept. 8 guilty plea from Nicholas for conspiracy to commit securities fraud.

According to the Department of Justice (DOJ), over a two-year period, Nicholas made claims the platform would make daily “guaranteed” returns using a trading bot that utilized “artificial and human intelligence” to maximize returns.

In reality, the “bot” was fake, and Nicolas and his associates, Emerson Pires and Flavio Goncalves, operated a “Ponzi” scheme that paid earlier investors with money from later investors. The DOJ alleges blockchain analytics shows Pires and Goncalves, both Brazilian nationals, laundered investors’ funds through a “foreign-based” crypto exchange.

Only around $1 million of investor funds were sent to a futures trading account for EmpiresX with the majority of funds either lost or misappropriated according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) which filed civil actions against the three in June.

At the same time, fraud charges were leveled against the trio by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) which said investor money was used to “lease a Lamborghini, shop at Tiffany & Co., make a payment on a second home, and more.”

Related: HashFlare founders arrested in ‘astounding’ $575M crypto fraud scheme

Investors were also told EmpiresX was registered with the SEC as a hedge fund and that Nicholas was a licensed trader.

The SEC said the platform was never registered with the Commission and Nicholas’ was suspended from trading by the National Futures Association for misappropriating customer funds.

The scheme ran for two years, from around September 2020 until early 2022 when it fell apart as the platform refused to honor customer withdrawals who were likely wanting to leave the crypto market due to significant price drawdowns that began at the time.

Pires and Goncalves, who were residing in Florida, allegedly began winding down the operations of EmpiresX in early 2022 and left the U.S., they are now believed to be in Brazil.

EmpiresX ‘head trader’ to face 4 years of prison over $100M crypto ‘Ponzi’

Two other associates that helped run the U.S.-based fraudulent crypto platform EmpiresX left the country early this year and are believed to be in Brazil.

One of the leading figures convicted of being behind the $100 million crypto Ponzi scheme, EmpiresX, has just been handed an over four-year jail sentence by a United States court.

The sentencing was handed to Joshua David Nicholas, the head trader of purported crypto platform EmpiresX, who is now set to serve a 51-month prison sentence along with three years of supervised release for his role in the fraudulent scheme.

It follows a Sept. 8 guilty plea from Nicholas for conspiracy to commit securities fraud.

According to the Department of Justice (DOJ), over a two-year period, Nicholas made claims the platform would make daily “guaranteed” returns using a trading bot that utilized “artificial and human intelligence” to maximize returns.

In reality, the bot was fake, and Nicolas and his associates, Emerson Pires and Flavio Goncalves, operated a Ponzi scheme that paid earlier investors with money from later investors. The DOJ alleges blockchain analytics shows Pires and Goncalves, both Brazilian nationals, laundered investors’ funds through a “foreign-based” crypto exchange.

Only around $1 million of investor funds were sent to a futures trading account for EmpiresX, with the majority of funds either lost or misappropriated, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which filed civil actions against the three in June.

At the same time, fraud charges were leveled against the trio by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which said investor money was used to “lease a Lamborghini, shop at Tiffany & Co., make a payment on a second home, and more.”

Related: HashFlare founders arrested in ‘astounding’ $575M crypto fraud scheme

Investors were also told EmpiresX was registered with the SEC as a hedge fund and that Nicholas was a licensed trader.

The SEC said the platform was never registered with the Commission and Nicholas’ was suspended from trading by the National Futures Association for misappropriating customer funds.

The scheme ran for two years, from around September 2020 until early 2022, when it fell apart as the platform refused to honor customer withdrawals who were likely wanting to leave the crypto market due to significant price drawdowns that began at the time.

Pires and Goncalves, who were residing in Florida, allegedly began winding down the operations of EmpiresX in early 2022 and left the United States; they are now believed to be in Brazil.