Sidekick Boxing

Andrew Tate Once Wanted to Give Jake Paul a Boxing Lesson

Before Andrew Tate became a name everyone on the internet seemed to have an opinion about, there was a phase where he was still trying to break through to a wider audience. Back then, Jake Paul was already a massive digital star, pulling huge numbers and turning influencer boxing into a legitimate business model.

Tate spotted an opening and didn’t hesitate. In a video that still floats around online, Andrew Tate directly called out Jake Paul and proposed an actual boxing fight. Not a joke, not a sparring session, not a content stunt. A real fight, with real money on the line.

“You put 3 million, I put 3 million, winner takes all,” Tate said.

It wasn’t playful trash talk. Tate spoke like someone who genuinely believed he was levels above Jake Paul as a fighter and wanted to prove it in the ring. The pitch was simple: no gimmicks, no judges’ favour, just two men betting on themselves.

At that point in time, Tate wasn’t the viral personality he would later become. Paul, meanwhile, was already drawing pay-per-view numbers and building a carefully planned boxing path. The fight never happened, but the clip has aged interestingly, especially considering how both careers have gone since.

Jake Paul vs Andrew Tate: Who Wins Now?

Fast forward a few years and the conversation looks very different. Jake Paul has gone from being laughed at as a YouTuber with gloves to someone who has consistently tested himself against tougher opposition. He’s shared the ring with seasoned fighters, headlined major events, and slowly forced people to admit he’s taking boxing seriously. The biggest statement of all came when Paul even stepped into the ring with Anthony Joshua, a former unified heavyweight world champion. That moment alone showed how far Paul has pushed himself beyond the influencer label.

SHOP: Kickboxing Equipment

Andrew Tate, on the other hand, never made boxing his main focus. While his background in kickboxing is legitimate, boxing is a different sport with different demands. Long gaps away from competition and limited boxing-specific experience mean the gap between the two has quietly grown over time and when he decided to return, he suffered a loss against Chase DeMoor.

If this fight happened today under boxing rules, it wouldn’t look like the “boxing lesson” Tate once imagined. Paul now has rhythm, ring IQ, conditioning, and experience against bigger, stronger opponents. Tate would still bring confidence and toughness, but those alone don’t close rounds.

The irony is hard to miss. The man who once challenged Jake Paul to a winner-takes-all showdown may now be watching from the outside as Paul becomes the more proven boxer of the two.

READ MORE: Logan Paul and Bradley Martyn’s Viral Fight Clip Exposed as Prime Drink Publicity Stunt

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