Artem Khrebet won a unanimous decision over Mykhailo Drobotenko on 12 April 2026 in Kyiv, moving him into the top two of the Ukrainian lightweight rankings and setting up a possible title eliminator later in 2026. The fight was the main event of a three-fight card broadcast to 1.2 million viewers across Eastern Europe.
Artem Khrebet defeated Mykhailo Drobotenko by unanimous decision on 12 April 2026 in Kyiv’s International Boxing Arena, securing a 10-round victory that moved him into contention for the national lightweight title. The bout headlined a three-fight card promoted by Ukrainian Fight Club, with two rising prospects from western Ukraine also on the undercard.
Khrebet used the win to tighten his hold on the third spot in the Ukrainian lightweight rankings. The result set up a likely eliminator with the number-one contender for a shot at the vacant national title, which has been open since the former champion moved up to welterweight. Drobotenko, who trains in Lviv, absorbed the loss but showed enough late fire to keep regional promoters interested in rebuilding his résumé.
Who the fighters are Khrebet is a 27-year-old Kyiv-based lightweight who turned professional in 2021 after an amateur run that included a bronze at the 2019 European Championships. He fights out of the Kyiv Sports Club and is currently ranked third among Ukrainian lightweights by the national federation.
Drobotenko, 29, turned pro in 2019 after winning the 2018 Ukrainian Open as an amateur. He is known for an aggressive pressure style and trains at the Lviv Boxing Academy. Both men entered the ring with records hovering around ten wins, though Khrebet carried a slightly higher knockout percentage.
When and where the fight happened The card went off on the Saturday night of 12 April 2026 at the International Boxing Arena in Kyiv, a venue that has staged several national title fights since opening in 2018. The show was broadcast live on the national sports channel UA-Sport and streamed on FightClub+, drawing an estimated 1.2 million viewers across Eastern Europe.
How the judges scored it Three judges rendered identical verdicts: 97–93, 96–94, and 98–92 for Khrebet, giving him a clear unanimous decision. No knockdowns were scored, and both fighters went the full ten rounds. Referee Oleksandr Petrov raised Khrebet’s hand after a brief deliberation.
"Khrebet’s jab and mid-fight volume outpointed Drobotenko’s late rally, sealing the unanimous decision."
"The victory places Khrebet inside the top two of the lightweight rankings, putting him in line for a shot at the vacant Ukrainian title."
"Drobotenko’s defeat dropped him to fifth in the lightweight order, pushing him out of immediate title contention."
"The card drew 1.2 million viewers across Eastern Europe on UA-Sport and FightClub+."
How each man fought Khrebet started with a sharp jab, averaging about four to five landed punches per round to keep Drobotenko at arm’s length. In the mid-fight he stepped up volume, mixing body shots with straight right hands that forced Drobotenko onto the back foot.
- Khrebet is a 27-year-old Kyiv-based lightweight with a 2019 European Championships bronze in amateur competition.
- Drobotenko is a 29-year-old Lviv-based fighter known for an aggressive pressure style.
- The judges scored the fight 97–93, 96–94, and 98–92 in favor of Khrebet.
- Khrebet averages four to five landed jabs per round, while Drobotenko landed more power punches in rounds seven through nine.
- The International Boxing Arena in Kyiv hosted the fight, a venue that has staged multiple national title bouts since 2018.

Drobotenko switched to a forward charge in the later rounds, trying to close the distance with hooks upstairs. He landed a higher share of power punches in rounds seven through nine, but the widening point gap proved too steep to erase.
- Khrebet’s victory moved him to the top two in the Ukrainian lightweight rankings, positioning him for a national title shot.
- Drobotenko’s loss dropped him to fifth, pushing him out of immediate title contention but keeping regional interest alive.
- The fight drew 1.2 million viewers across Eastern Europe on UA-Sport and FightClub+.
- Khrebet’s jab and mid-fight volume outpointed Drobotenko’s late rally, sealing the unanimous decision.
- The vacant national lightweight title has been open since the former champion moved up to welterweight.
What the win means for Khrebet The victory places Khrebet inside the top two of the lightweight rankings, putting him in line for a shot at the vacant Ukrainian title. His promoter has already floated a potential title eliminator against the current number-one contender, Oleksiy Makarov, later in the year. A win there would likely hand Khrebet his first national belt and open the door to European-level competition.
What the loss means for Drobotenko Drobotenko’s defeat dropped him to fifth in the lightweight order, pushing him out of immediate title contention. Still, his late rally caught the eye of regional promoters looking to rebuild his record with more high-profile matchups.
