In the second fight of his comeback after a four-year layoff, former five-time world champion Felix Sturm will engage in a true battle of the generations.

At the age of 42 and with 50 professional fights under his belt, Sturm is scheduled to battle up- and coming prospect James Kraft on Saturday night over ten rounds at the Universum Gym in Hamburg, Germany. Kraft is 18 years younger than Sturm and holds a spotless record of 19-0-1 with ten knockouts. But can his youth prevail against the experience of the veteran Sturm, who has had more world title fights (23) over the course of a 20-year professional career than Kraft had fights in total (20)?

No, says Maurice Weber, one of Sturm’s closest friends and new head coach. After Weber successfully filled in for Barry Robinson, who could not get a work visa to be in Sturm’s corner for his comeback ten-round-shutout of Timo Rost in Germany last December, the duo decided to work together from now on, sharing the common goal of a sixth world title for Sturm.

“At first, of course, you have doubts to work with a great friend“, Weber said. “But Felix and I just clicked. We communicate well, and we both try to learn new things each and every day. He fought a great fight against Rost, but the layoff did show a little. I expect him to be much stronger, much sharper on Saturday. We had a great training camp and he made a lot of progress. Saturday night is another step towards winning another world title, Felix’ sixth as a fighter and my first as a trainer.“

Sturm himself could not agree more: “I think trust plays an important role in sports, in life, and I trust Mo. Outside of trust, it is important to have someone in your corner who loves the sport of boxing, who works hard to improve his skills every day. Mo is a young trainer, yes, but boxing was always his passion and will always be his passion. Coaching is his passion now, and he does it like no one else I have worked with.

"Honestly, I am always surprised about the new things and ideas he brings to the gym. I didn’t believe I could learn so much more about boxing at my age, I really didn’t. That’s all because of Mo. I strongly believe that he has a long and very successful career ahead of him. Our ultimate goal is to win the world title together.“

In order to offer each and every one of his pupils the best guidance possible, Weber has decided to keep his stable of fighters small: “Communication is the most important thing. If I don’t connect with a fighter, why should we work together? I wouldn’t make sense for either one of us. If I have too many fighters, I won’t be able to offer them the effort each fighter deserves. I experienced that first-hand myself. Communication would suffer, training would suffer, the results would suffer. That’s why I decided to only work with a select few.“