Bosque Farms boxer Kat Lindenmuth eyes quick return after Denmark draw
Kat Lindenmuth left Denmark with a majority draw, not a setback, and the Bosque Farms boxer is already targeting a return later this summer.

Katherine “Kat” Lindenmuth came home from Brøndby, Denmark, with her momentum intact after a 10-round majority draw against Linn Sandstrom for the vacant interim WBA flyweight title. The result on May 16 left the belt unclaimed, but it did not change the larger picture for the Bosque Farms fighter: Lindenmuth remains in the middle of a high-level run that has taken her far beyond Valencia County and back into another title hunt.
The draw fits into a career that has been built on movement, not pause. Lindenmuth entered the Denmark bout as a pressure fighter against Sandstrom, whom the World Boxing Association described as a technical long-range boxer, and that contrast made the matchup a meaningful test at the world level. A majority draw after 10 rounds meant neither boxer could separate herself on the scorecards, and the title stayed vacant. FightNews reported the official cards as 98-92 for Lindenmuth and 95-95 twice.

For readers in Bosque Farms and across Valencia County, the bigger story is that Lindenmuth is no longer just a local name with a promising record. BoxRec lists her at 7-5-1 after the Denmark fight, and the bout added another chapter to a career that has already stretched through Albuquerque, Bangkok and Cairo. In March, the Albuquerque Journal reported that she was headed to Denmark for a fourth foreign country and a fourth weight class in pursuit of a third professional title belt, a sign of how quickly her profile has grown in women’s boxing.
That growth has been backed by results. Lindenmuth won the WIBA minimum-weight title in Bangkok on May 31, 2025, stopping Pornpimon Pongpaew in the second round. She also beat Angelina Lukas in Cairo on Nov. 14, 2025, and the WBA later confirmed that victory after the fight became tangled in a dispute. Those wins established her as a fighter who can travel, adjust and compete under pressure in unfamiliar settings.
The draw in Denmark did not break that pattern. News-Bulletin reported that Lindenmuth expects to return to the ring later this summer, a timeline that keeps her career on the move and frames the Denmark result as a checkpoint rather than a reset. For a mother of three with a master’s degree in criminal justice who has also talked about a law-enforcement career, the path ahead is still about balancing ambition, discipline and opportunity. In boxing terms, the next bout matters as much as the last one, and Lindenmuth’s resume still points upward.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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