Gachau Njoroge Boxing Future Ends After Painful Vurugu Loss

Gachau Njoroge has confirmed that he will step away from the ring after suffering a tough defeat at Vurugu 2. The Kenyan entertainer and athlete shared the decision during a recent interview, saying the boxing future he once pursued no longer appeals to him after painful body shots left a lasting mark.
The final bell had already rung, but the effects lingered. Days after his defeat at Vurugu 2, Gachau Njoroge opened up about the punishment he absorbed inside the ring and revealed that he has no plans to lace up his gloves again.
Speaking during a conversation with media personality Oga Obinna, the athlete offered a candid look at what he endured during the bout. His message was clear. He is done with boxing.
The fight took place during the second edition of the Vurugu event, a competition that drew attention from sports fans and online audiences eager to watch high-profile personalities test themselves in combat sports. While the contest delivered excitement for spectators, Njoroge said the experience came at a steep personal cost.
During the interview, he addressed the physical damage he sustained and pointed directly to repeated attacks to his midsection.
“I’m not going to fight again,” he said. The statement landed with force.
Many fighters speak about coming back stronger after defeat. Njoroge took a different path. Instead of talking about redemption or another match, he described the pain that followed the contest and explained why he believes his time in the sport has come to an end.
Why is Gachau Njoroge leaving boxing?
He says repeated liver punches during his Vurugu 2 defeat convinced him to stop fighting. Njoroge did not hide the source of his frustration. In his remarks, he pointed to the body shots he absorbed throughout the bout.
“I took too many liver punches,” he said. Anyone familiar with combat sports understands how damaging those blows can be. A clean shot to the liver can instantly drain energy, disrupt breathing, and leave even experienced fighters struggling to remain upright. Fans often focus on punches to the head, but body attacks can be just as devastating.
For Njoroge, the damage appears to have reshaped his plans. The athlete spoke openly. There was no attempt to soften the reality of what happened.
His words painted a picture of a competitor who tested himself in a demanding environment and came away with a new appreciation for the punishment boxing demands.
That honesty resonated. Many supporters praised him online for speaking frankly about both defeat and physical pain rather than creating excuses.
What will Gachau Njoroge do after boxing?
He plans to return to competitive bodybuilding. While one chapter appears closed, another may soon reopen.
Njoroge revealed that he wants to shift his focus back to bodybuilding, a sport he previously embraced before stepping into the boxing spotlight. During the interview, he joked about returning to the stage and competing again.
“Wacha nirudi kuvaa thong nicompete bodybuilding,” he said. The light-hearted remark drew laughs, but it also carried a serious message. His future now appears tied to physique competition rather than combat sports.
Bodybuilding demands discipline of a different kind. Athletes spend months refining nutrition plans, managing training schedules, and building muscle symmetry. The challenges remain intense, but they do not involve absorbing punches from an opponent.
