Anthony Joshua finds himself fighting a three-front war in pursuit of heavyweight boxing history
Joshua is determined to become the first man in heavyweight history to unify the IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO belts but to do so he faces three exceptionally testing fights
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Your support makes all the difference.The heavyweight horizon has not looked this convoluted in years, with a clutch of world titles in play, several astronomical egos all jockeying for position and a slew of social media call-outs propelling boxing back into the big time.
But the heavyweight champion that matters the most has been unequivocal about his plans all along.
Anthony Joshua wants to fight three times in 2018. Once against the WBC champion Deontay Wilder. Once against the WBO champion Joseph Parker. And once again, either against a mandatory challenger or perhaps even Tyson Fury, the absent champion of the world who has been inactive since his outstanding victory over Wladimir Klitschko in November 2015.
Joshua’s goal? To become the first heavyweight in history to unify the IBF, WBA, WBC, WBO and IBO belts. “I want to unify all the titles and fight all the champions by the end of 2018,” he proclaimed in November. It has never been done before, not even by the great Klitschko. Not even by that other great British champion, Lennox Lewis, denied the WBO strap through no fault of his own.
And yet while his ambition is simple – even noble – Joshua and his promoter, Eddie Hearn of Matchroom Boxing, now have a series of difficult negotiations ahead of them, locked in boardrooms with a collection of bruisers with the brittlest of egos. “Our job to deliver, but it doesn’t happen over night,” Hearn commented while on a trip to New York to meet with some suits. The wrangling starts here.
The most obvious fight, and the one that the majority of the British public is currently clamouring for, is a showdown with the WBC champion, Wilder. Undefeated, unusual and – crucially – untested against genuine world-class opposition, Wilder is a brash 32-year-old from Alabama with a penchant for talking smack outside the ring and throwing wild, windmill power punches in it, the kind that would earn kids a clip round the ear from their despairing trainer at the local ABC.
On paper then, it sounds perfect. The UK vs the USA. Undefeated champ vs undefeated champ. Ice vs fire. And yet there are a few factors that could prevent the contest from obtaining bona fide “super fight” status – certainly over in the States.
For one thing, Wilder is one-tenth of the star in the USA as Joshua is in the UK. Joshua’s most recent title defence against late replacement Carlos Takam attracted 78,000 paying punters to Cardiff’s Principality Stadium. The official attendance for Wilder’s most recent victory over the big lump Bermane Stiverne was an optimistic 10,924. And who can blame them: Stiverne was the WBA’s mandatory challenger and yet failed to land a single punch. But that’s another story.
To further hammer home this disparity in popularity between Joshua and his transatlantic rival, Hearn was recently recorded by iFL TV larking around Madison Avenue asking the hapless New Yorkers who shuffled by if they had ever heard of a fella called Deontay Wilder. “No, who’s that?” one smiles. “Deon who?” another repeats quizzically, before replying: “an NFL player?”
Clearly then, there needs to be some fairly intensive promotional work ahead of the fight. Hearn floated the idea of Wilder coming to the UK for a test fight – perhaps against Dillian Whyte – to “prove” he is worthy of a unification bout with Joshua, although that was quickly shot down by the American after his one-round demolition of Stiverne.
“A king don’t chase the peasants. A king takes kings. I want Joshua,” Wilder rasped. Although it is worth bearing in mind the last American boxer to head for these shores talking merrily of pomp and pageantry was Charles Martin, who arrived at the O2 Arena resplendent in a purple cloak and crown before Joshua left him flat on his arse some four-and-a-half minutes later. The king is dead, long live the king.
Money is another sticking point; Joshua thinks Wilder has overestimated his worth. Which is quite the opposite of his hot take on the big-hitting, if rather one-dimensional, Joseph Parker, who was effectively accused of attempting to cash in his WBO bauble by Joshua.
“You hear like Parker saying ‘oh they offered like 20 per cent of the pot and I’m not happy with that – I’m not fighting him for 20 per cent’,” Joshua grumbled. “Are you trying to sell yourself to fight? Are you trying to sell your belt? Some people contradict what they’re saying.”
Perhaps they are trying to sell both: two days after Christmas, Parker’s fast-talking promoter David Higgins confirmed they had accepted a gift from Joshua’s team. “This fight has never been closer. And we’re a lot closer to a deal now because we’ve had a major breakthrough, which is that the two camps have formally agreed on the split,” he said. “The Joshua side made a small concession and the Parker side has made a small concession.”
If Joshua is the king of the heavyweight division then Fury is the court jester, a man with the talent to beat all three reigning world champions if not necessarily the inclination. His strange, sublime victory over Klitschko on a cold night in Dusseldorf just under two years ago remains one of the biggest upsets in boxing history, although little has gone his way since.
The capricious champion, who still holds The Ring magazine heavyweight title, has battled with depression and has readily admitted to “taking lots of cocaine”. He has been inactive for two-years while UK Anti-Doping investigated a failed drugs test in February 2015, only receiving clearance to resume his career in December. His excuse for the elevated levels of nandrolone in his system? A weekly habit of eating a whole boar, entrails and all.
In late 2017, Fury began appearing with increasing regularity on the boxing circuit, and was in Monaco to watch his old foe and new friend Dereck Chisora lose on points to the European champion Agit Kabayel. In the casino afterwards, with an iPhone shoved in his face, a slightly trimmer Fury revealed that he was back in training and wanted to reclaim what is his.
The sniping started from there. “I’m gonna stop you inside eight rounds, watch me go,” Fury tweeted before promising his fans he would fight three times in 2018, replicating his rival’s plan of attack. “Get fit you fat fuck,” Joshua shot back, in a rare lack of civility. Needless to say, Fury was delighted. “That’s a new one because he usually doesn’t swear, he tries not to be himself,” the self-styled Gypsy King crowed in the back seat of a taxi. “But to be honest mate I don’t need to get fit for you – I could come over and punch your face in even at 25 stone.”
And so, in his pursuit of history, Joshua finds himself fighting a three-front war, with his adoring public demanding a hat-trick of record-breaking super fights. But this is boxing. Joshua could yet be forced to fight an intermittent mandatory challenger – or he could yet lose. That tends to happen in this sport. There is a good reason why no man has ever unified the heavyweight titles before.
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