Oleksandr Usyk v Anthony Joshua 2: Briton loses world-title challenge by split decision

Who will win the Oleksandr Usyk v Anthony Joshua II bout?


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Venue: King Abdullah Sports City, Saudi Arabia Date: Saturday, 20 August

Britain's Anthony Joshua weighed in 23lbs heavier than champion Oleksandr Usyk for Saturday's heavyweight world title rematch in Saudi Arabia.

Ukrainian Usyk was tipped to come in at a career-heaviest weight, but just about matched the previous fight by weighing in at 15st 11lbs (100.5kg).

Joshua, 32, came in at 17st 6lbs (110.9kg) with neither man showing any sign of nerves in the final face-off.

Usyk's WBA (Super), WBO and IBF titles are on the line in Jeddah.

He is fractionally heavier than his last fight with Joshua when he weighed in at 220lbs, while Joshua is about 4lbs heavier.

Joshua cut a focused figure during the weigh-in, and the two-time world champion insisted there was nothing to glean from the final staredown.

"All this stuff - weight, face-off - none of it matters to me. I'm just looking forward to the fight," he said.

Usyk is destined to be a future hall-of-famer, but there are still critics who feel he is not a natural heavyweight and too small for the division. He has competed just three times at heavyweight.

Speculation on the 35-year-old's weight had been rife throughout fight week, with former British world champion Amir Khan - who visited Usyk in Dubai earlier this month - suggesting he may have put on as much as 30lbs since the last fight.

"You see, your expectations not every time are met," Usyk said.

Joshua is expected to be much more aggressive in the rematch after being convincingly outboxed by Usyk 11 months ago.

BBC 5 Live boxing analyst Richie Woodhall, who has spent time with Joshua in previous camps, was surprised to see added weight on the challenger.

"That just surprised me slightly," he told BBC Sport.

"Clearly in the last contest Josh's feet weren't quick enough. Nowhere near quick enough. It's common sense if you're lighter you can move a little quicker.

"And he's got to be quicker, he can't box like last time. He's got to move his feet into range with speed."

With Usyk visibly brimming with confidence, even breaking out in song at Wednesday's press conference, Woodhall felt Joshua looked apprehensive.

"I think Anthony Joshua looked a little bit nervous," he said.

"Which I think is a good thing. I think he's realised this is probably the most important fight of his career, because if he loses here there will be questions marks about where he goes."

After all the talk about Usyk's weight, it was a bit of an anti-climax. I think we can all blame Amir Khan for that. Usyk tipped the scaled at pretty much the same as the first fight. We know what to expect from the champion; speed and utilising his ring craft.

Joshua's weight gain is interesting. He was, as always, muscle bound. Although he says he is preparing for a 12-round contest, which is wise given his tendency to fatigue later in the fights, the general feeling is he will need a knockout to recapture the titles. Will those four and a half pounds give him that boost of power?

So often in the sport, the boxing world can read far too much into body language. There was a long, intense staredown which was eventually broken by a friendly fist bump from Joshua into Usyk's midriff. There is no bad blood between these two men. But they are two immense competitors.

The workout was open to the public, but global broadcasters and press made up most of the attendance. You can't help but feel a bit disappointed there is not a bigger stage for a fight of this stature, a unified heavyweight rematch between two superstars.

The next time these two go face-to-face will be in the ring, with Usyk channelling the spirit of his nation and Joshua determined to prove his worth as an elite heavyweight.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/boxing/62602133
 
Excited for this fight!

Usyk is favourite and rightly so after the first fight. He is the better boxer, moves better, quicker and very experienced going the distance.

AJ is looking huge, his biceps are massive.

No secret to victory in this fight, AJ needs a KO, Usyk will aim to take the fight to the latter rounds.
 
usyk is an atg, but he still to catch a direct hit from a real heavyweight. even in the first fight aj wobbled him in the fifth or the sixth with a short range combo, cant remember the round exactly.

too many ppl discounting AJ who fought a terrible fight in the last fight, usyk on the other hand will win a lot of rounds, and aj usually cannot sustain the pace late in a fight. usyk game plan will be more innocuous angles, not letting aj settle.

im gonna go with AJ by TKO but Usyk to counter and do the same is not completely unlikely if AJ is sloppy with his attacks.
 
AJ is in tremendous shape, and 244 lb imo is his best weight, just enough muscle to carry deep if meeded but how will he handle the mental pressure which can make you gass faster, in his early days he was a lot more confident and sure of himself, he weighed around 250 or 250+ against Wlad, ate a nasty right, got of the canvas and won. Self belief with a good corner and strategy can do you wonders, but what will he do if plan A does not work? what will do if he is caught in the storm? Usyk will not settle into a rhythm early and will be happy to drop rounds if needed, he could use both stances, circle in both directions and be defensive with his clinch, part of if may be to weather an early flurry but more so to read AJ and not allow him to make any adjustments.

Usyk is simply too skilled to allow AJ to work on the inside consistently so when AJ is in, he really needs to be efficient and make his single power punches count; especially to the body, he may need to be more courageous at times to have more success and try to trust his chin. Usyk I would expect to settle more in the second half, a master boxer constantly reads you, dependent on what Usyk is seeing he could impose a variety of angles for attack, he has a mean streak in him and if he wants to go in the pocket, he is capable of in-fighting. The biggest factor for AJ is his size advantage which makes the fight intriguing and it’s Heavyweight Boxing, I think it’s going to be a cracking fight which will end in a stoppage but I am leaning towards Usyk by KO or TKO
 
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Oleksandr Usyk will be "fighting for Ukraine" against Anthony Joshua this weekend after being encouraged to leave the war and do "something absolutely extraordinary" in the much-anticipated rematch, his promoter Alexander Krassyuk says.
 
Remember this is a poll so add your votes. Thanks
 
Anthony Joshua faces unified heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk in a must-win rematch on Saturday night.

A loss for Briton Joshua would be another massive blow to his reputation, while a win for Ukraine's Usyk could set him on a path to becoming undisputed champion, possibly even a meeting with Tyson Fury.

The fight takes place in Saudi Arabia, with live text commentary on the BBC Sport website and app from 21:30 BST.

Only a drastically improved performance will see Joshua reclaim the WBO, WBA (Super) and IBF titles he lost almost a year ago, with pundits and pros split on whether the once unbeatable heavyweight can gain revenge over the undefeated Usyk.

WBO junior-middleweight champion Natasha Jonas: "It's a fight AJ just can't lose. I think we'll see a different AJ. But Usyk is phenomenal and you can never bet against him."

Former two-weight world champion Carl Frampton: "I hope I'm wrong and AJ can do enough to win the fight, but I think he has to do it early. The issue with his engine could be a factor in the fight. The longer the fight goes on, the better chance Usyk has. AJ by knockout has to be early, but I also think Usyk can stop AJ. I think it will be difficult for AJ to beat Usyk on points."

Lightweight Adam Azim: "I'm going with AJ this time. I think he's more determined. He's training hard. It could be like [Andy] Ruiz II, but I think this time he has to push it on him rather than box him."

Super-welterweight Liam Smith: "It's a tough one but you have to edge towards Usyk. If Joshua puts it right on Usyk, I think he can win. Joshua has fought in Saudi before but I don't think the location makes a difference. The winner has to go on to fight Fury."

Boxing coach Dave Coldwell: "It's a huge ask for AJ but he has the physical attributes to turn it around. The problem is that Usyk has skills to negate that. AJ will always have the power and pop in his hand to end the fight, but he has to get off to a really quick start and stop Usyk from getting into a rhythm. If Usyk does get comfortable, he will be unshakable. I would say Usyk is the favourite but AJ is a live underdog."

Heavyweight Derek Chisora: "AJ better win. The whole nation is counting on him. We need him to win. You don't get it. We need him to win. If he don't win it means your paycheque goes down."

Middleweight Hamzah Sheeraz: "I hope and pray AJ does it because I'm a massive fan of the way he goes about it. But if you're talking from a boxing perspective, I do think Usyk is going to get the better of him again. But my support is with Joshua all the way."

Four-time world champion Carl Froch: "My prediction to be honest is a prediction that I don't even want to hear. I think Usyk beats AJ quite conclusively again - maybe even gets the stoppage."

Super-bantamweight Ramla Ali: "AJ will win this one. Like when he lost to Andy Ruiz, he made some changes, and I feel like he's doing the same again - he's making changes."

Heavyweight legend Evander Holyfield: "I'm not surprised [Joshua is the underdog] but the fact of the matter is they know they're fighting a little guy. That's what he does, dodge all the time. He'll get hit by a big shot, it'll probably be hard but he's got good defence. He moves real well. If you're going to bet your money on anything, it'll [be on the] little guy unless he gets hit by a big shot."

Heavyweight Joe Joyce: "I'd say Usyk will win again, but I'm not writing off AJ. He's got a puncher's chance. Let's see what he's been working on in the gym and if he's able to beat Usyk, the better boxer."

Welterweight Conor Benn: "I might have to sit on the fence. You'd think in your head AJ should have the tools to beat him up, literally beat him up. But that's a mentality thing. He's working with Robert Garcia, but he's never worked with a heavyweight before. There's lots of question marks over him. But I will back AJ."

BBC 5 Live Boxing analyst Richie Woodhall: "I think Usyk will probably run out a winner on points. I do think Josh can win the fight. The only way Josh wins the fight is he stops him or knocks him out."

Boxing trainer Buddy McGirt: "They've both got something to prove. It's a toss-up. If I had a winner I'd let you know."

Super-middleweight Callum Smith: "I think it's a completely different fight to the first time round. I think we'll get a different Joshua, but I think we'll get a different Usyk as well. It's whoever's gameplan comes off. I think this one will be a little bit more exciting - I think Joshua will go for him a little bit more."

Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn: "I want to see a dominant performance from Anthony Joshua - I feel like he's the best heavyweight in the world. I want to see him break down and fundamentally beat up the pound-for-pound number one."

Former British super-middleweight champion Paul Smith: "If I had to put my house on someone I think the safe bet would be Usyk. But I'm hoping Anthony Joshua will pull it out and stop him mid to late rounds."

Boxing trainer Ronnie Shields: "AJ is good in second fights. I don't think he's going to knock him out, But I think he's going to win a decision."

Former European super-bantamweight champion Spencer Oliver: "I think Joshua is going to get the job done inside six, seven rounds. I think he's going to catch Usyk."

BBC
 
Oleksandr Usyk v Anthony Joshua 2: Pundits and pros make predictions for heavyweight world title fight

Anthony Joshua faces unified heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk in a must-win rematch on Saturday night.

A loss for Briton Joshua would be another massive blow to his reputation, while a win for Ukraine's Usyk could set him on a path to becoming undisputed champion, possibly even a meeting with Tyson Fury.

The fight takes place in Saudi Arabia, with live text commentary on the BBC Sport website and app from 21:30 BST.

Only a drastically improved performance will see Joshua reclaim the WBO, WBA (Super) and IBF titles he lost almost a year ago, with pundits and pros split on whether the once unbeatable heavyweight can gain revenge over the undefeated Usyk.

WBO junior-middleweight champion Natasha Jonas: "It's a fight AJ just can't lose. I think we'll see a different AJ. But Usyk is phenomenal and you can never bet against him."

Former two-weight world champion Carl Frampton: "I hope I'm wrong and AJ can do enough to win the fight, but I think he has to do it early. The issue with his engine could be a factor in the fight. The longer the fight goes on, the better chance Usyk has. AJ by knockout has to be early, but I also think Usyk can stop AJ. I think it will be difficult for AJ to beat Usyk on points."

Lightweight Adam Azim: "I'm going with AJ this time. I think he's more determined. He's training hard. It could be like [Andy] Ruiz II, but I think this time he has to push it on him rather than box him."

Super-welterweight Liam Smith: "It's a tough one but you have to edge towards Usyk. If Joshua puts it right on Usyk, I think he can win. Joshua has fought in Saudi before but I don't think the location makes a difference. The winner has to go on to fight Fury."

Boxing coach Dave Coldwell: "It's a huge ask for AJ but he has the physical attributes to turn it around. The problem is that Usyk has skills to negate that. AJ will always have the power and pop in his hand to end the fight, but he has to get off to a really quick start and stop Usyk from getting into a rhythm. If Usyk does get comfortable, he will be unshakable. I would say Usyk is the favourite but AJ is a live underdog."

Heavyweight Derek Chisora: "AJ better win. The whole nation is counting on him. We need him to win. You don't get it. We need him to win. If he don't win it means your paycheque goes down."

Middleweight Hamzah Sheeraz: "I hope and pray AJ does it because I'm a massive fan of the way he goes about it. But if you're talking from a boxing perspective, I do think Usyk is going to get the better of him again. But my support is with Joshua all the way."

Four-time world champion Carl Froch: "My prediction to be honest is a prediction that I don't even want to hear. I think Usyk beats AJ quite conclusively again - maybe even gets the stoppage."

Super-bantamweight Ramla Ali: "AJ will win this one. Like when he lost to Andy Ruiz, he made some changes, and I feel like he's doing the same again - he's making changes."

Heavyweight legend Evander Holyfield: "I'm not surprised [Joshua is the underdog] but the fact of the matter is they know they're fighting a little guy. That's what he does, dodge all the time. He'll get hit by a big shot, it'll probably be hard but he's got good defence. He moves real well. If you're going to bet your money on anything, it'll [be on the] little guy unless he gets hit by a big shot."

Heavyweight Joe Joyce: "I'd say Usyk will win again, but I'm not writing off AJ. He's got a puncher's chance. Let's see what he's been working on in the gym and if he's able to beat Usyk, the better boxer."

Welterweight Conor Benn: "I might have to sit on the fence. You'd think in your head AJ should have the tools to beat him up, literally beat him up. But that's a mentality thing. He's working with Robert Garcia, but he's never worked with a heavyweight before. There's lots of question marks over him. But I will back AJ."

BBC 5 Live Boxing analyst Richie Woodhall: "I think Usyk will probably run out a winner on points. I do think Josh can win the fight. The only way Josh wins the fight is he stops him or knocks him out."

Boxing trainer Buddy McGirt: "They've both got something to prove. It's a toss-up. If I had a winner I'd let you know."

Super-middleweight Callum Smith: "I think it's a completely different fight to the first time round. I think we'll get a different Joshua, but I think we'll get a different Usyk as well. It's whoever's gameplan comes off. I think this one will be a little bit more exciting - I think Joshua will go for him a little bit more."

Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn: "I want to see a dominant performance from Anthony Joshua - I feel like he's the best heavyweight in the world. I want to see him break down and fundamentally beat up the pound-for-pound number one."

Former British super-middleweight champion Paul Smith: "If I had to put my house on someone I think the safe bet would be Usyk. But I'm hoping Anthony Joshua will pull it out and stop him mid to late rounds."

Boxing trainer Ronnie Shields: "AJ is good in second fights. I don't think he's going to knock him out, But I think he's going to win a decision."

Former European super-bantamweight champion Spencer Oliver: "I think Joshua is going to get the job done inside six, seven rounds. I think he's going to catch Usyk."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/boxing/62570082
 
Leaning towards Usyk, but anyone who thinks AJ has no chance doesn't know anything about boxing.
 
I want Alexander to win because i don't like that Anthony Joshua guy i don't know but there's something about him and i don't even watch boxing apart from Artur beterbiev's last few bouts.

I wish artur beterbiev was in this weight class and knock this Anthony Joshua out.
 
Usyk by late stoppage in round 10 or 11.

Then joshua can fight chisora or hughie fury going forward after tonight.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Oleksandr Usyk has arrived ahead of his blockbuster heavyweight rematch with Anthony Joshua &#55357;&#57000;<a href="https://t.co/uiZTwyjKw3">pic.twitter.com/uiZTwyjKw3</a></p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1561060714042859522?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 20, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Four rounds down. Listening on radio. Sounds like AJ is doing well so far.
 
Seven down. Sounds like AJ is gassing out. He’s not letting his hands go.
 
One round to go, Usyk seems to be ahead on points.
 
Usyk just too good

Will be scandal if its anything other than a unanimous vrdict for Usyk
 
Happy to see Joshua humbled. Always believed he avoided Wilder and Tyson Fury due to fear of losing
 
no way that was a split decision. Usyk won that 117-111 or 116-112 with ease.

Joshua needs to go back to british level.

cant believe people posted on this thread for joshua to win by KO :)))
 
usyk is a legendary fighter, aj's after match "speech" hinting that might be it for him.
 
no way that was a split decision. Usyk won that 117-111 or 116-112 with ease.

Joshua needs to go back to british level.

cant believe people posted on this thread for joshua to win by KO :)))

I haven't been enamoured by AJ, ever, clearly padded given his recent results..
 
Usayk was amazing. I thought he was going to be in for a hard time in the last 3 rounds after that explosive 9th round from AJ.

AJ isn't a good boxer. He just has a insane knockout power.

It was a bit awkward after the fight. AJ acted like a sore loser. He started talking about how he was about to go prison and buss case and how he shouldn't even be dancing in the ring with Usayk bla bla.

Came across as a proper drama queen :))
 
no way that was a split decision. Usyk won that 117-111 or 116-112 with ease.

Joshua needs to go back to british level.

cant believe people posted on this thread for joshua to win by KO :)))

This fight reminded me of how Odegaard pounded Bournemouth earlier :))
 
AJ put on the best performance he possibly could, but Usyk is simply on another level in terms of his boxing ability and guts, he is a personified all time great and future hall of famer, history has been made with him being the first CW and HW Ring Magazine champion ever.

I know people are going to complain about AJ’s (it may have been part concussion due to the beating) outburst after the fight but this is who he truly is, he was exceptionally media trained throughout his career and he wore a mask over his true nature, this is the real AJ, the stay humble AJ was a gimmick which gullible casuals ate up and worshipped. It was in poor taste that Usyk never got to speak first, after what’s happened in his homeland whatever your view that was pathetic to say the least, but it’s great to see the real AJ come out the closet.

Ignoring the above, it was a great fight. Usyk deserves to be mentioned with the very best in the division.
 
throwing his belts was a bit of a liberty, usyk just looked a bit confused at what exactly was going on. he barely speaks English, doubt he could make much more of AJs roadman talk.
 
Having said that, those overly criticising his performance are misguided. He improved on the first fight and was relentless with his body attack, aggressive but not overzealous and more composed with his feet. Usyk is simply on another level, and with all his ability, there were times when he really had to grit his teeth and weather the body attack, it amazes me he was able to stay up after giving away a 20 lb advantage. You can’t say AJ belongs in the same class as Chisora or Hughie because he lost to Usyk, it is foolish to spew such high level ignorance, as nice as it is to see the casual bandwagon get exposed.
 
throwing his belts was a bit of a liberty, usyk just looked a bit confused at what exactly was going on. he barely speaks English, doubt he could make much more of AJs roadman talk.

He appeared to want to calm things down a bit, and was saying ok ok ok before taking the flag of AJ realising his disrespect, but you know AJ got beaten black and blue, and was really hurt on every level plus was fed up of containing his real persona, the road man finally came out
 
A good HW fight overall, AJ tried hard, hurt Uysk many times but couldnt land the killer blow.

Uysk fought how it was expected, move and counter with great precision.

I sat watching thinking HW boxing has deteriorated to a level never seen before in history. Imagine Iron Mike up against Uysk , it would be a demolition job. Uysk is this eras great but isnt even in the top 20 of HW's in history.

He has called out Tyson Fury, which I expect he will accept. Should be a better contest with Fury winning on points imo.
 
Having said that, those overly criticising his performance are misguided. He improved on the first fight and was relentless with his body attack, aggressive but not overzealous and more composed with his feet. Usyk is simply on another level, and with all his ability, there were times when he really had to grit his teeth and weather the body attack, it amazes me he was able to stay up after giving away a 20 lb advantage. You can’t say AJ belongs in the same class as Chisora or Hughie because he lost to Usyk, it is foolish to spew such high level ignorance, as nice as it is to see the casual bandwagon get exposed.

usyk in the 10th was like a demon possessed, to come out that aggressive after the beating he took in the ninth was proper mind over matter. theres not many who can move like usyk, but to do that after getting pounded in the body is crazy. i think the beating in the tenth not only broke josh physically, but mentally and spiritually too.
 
usyk in the 10th was like a demon possessed, to come out that aggressive after the beating he took in the ninth was proper mind over matter. theres not many who can move like usyk, but to do that after getting pounded in the body is crazy. i think the beating in the tenth not only broke josh physically, but mentally and spiritually too.

Its cardio mainly then mindset. He trained like an animal, even in the heat in Saudi. Along with experience of many rounds in the amateur days.
 
All the talk off AJ using his strength, size, power, fighting a big man fight, Robert Garcia just proved to be all talk in the end.

Yes he improved on the first fight, had a better game plan with the body punches vs the first fight but he ultimately yet again froze and shut down in the key moments of the fight. He again didn't look like a fighter who would go for broke and risk it all
 
Oleksandr Usyk v Anthony Joshua 2: Briton loses world-title challenge by split decision

Anthony Joshua's bid to recapture the unified heavyweight titles ended in disappointment as Oleksandr Usyk produced a terrific performance to win by split decision in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

In a clash billed as the Rage on the Red Sea, a spirited Joshua, 32, showed some aggressiveness and intent - a vast improvement from their first fight - but could not match the brilliance and ring savviness of the Ukrainian.

Two judges scored the fight 115-113 and 116-112 to Usyk, while a third judge gave it 115-113 to the challenger. While there were some close rounds, Usyk was the deserved winner.

At the end of the fight, a furious Joshua - quite bizarrely - picked up two of Usyk's belts, dropped them on the floor and strode towards the dressing room, before turning round and getting back into the ring to give an impassioned speech.

"Usyk is one hell of a fighter. That's just emotion," he said. "If you knew my story, you'd understand the passion. I'm not an amateur boxer. I was going to jail and I got bail and I started training.

"It shows the passion we put into this. For this guy to beat me tonight, it shows the levels of hard work he must have put in, so please give him a round of applause as heavyweight champion of world.

"They said that I'm not a 12-round fighter. I ain't 14 stone, I'm 18 stone, I'm heavy. It's hard work. This guy here is phenomenal."

Joshua has now suffered back-to-back defeats against Usyk, with the Ukrainian retaining the WBA (Super), WBO and IBF titles he won in London last September.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/boxing/62612531
 
I want Alexander to win because i don't like that Anthony Joshua guy i don't know but there's something about him and i don't even watch boxing apart from Artur beterbiev's last few bouts.

I wish artur beterbiev was in this weight class and knock this Anthony Joshua out.

Lol Anthony Joshua is extremely unlikeable guy.

The way he behaved after the fight was just pathetic and awful.
I m happy he lost.
 
A good HW fight overall, AJ tried hard, hurt Uysk many times but couldnt land the killer blow.

Uysk fought how it was expected, move and counter with great precision.

I sat watching thinking HW boxing has deteriorated to a level never seen before in history. Imagine Iron Mike up against Uysk , it would be a demolition job. Uysk is this eras great but isnt even in the top 20 of HW's in history.

He has called out Tyson Fury, which I expect he will accept. Should be a better contest with Fury winning on points imo.

Mike Tyson could not handle Evander Holyfield. No way he can beat Usyk
 
Anthony Joshua should have been 'saved' from emotional outburst after Oleksandr Usyk loss, says Frazer Clarke

Anthony Joshua's emotional outburst after his rematch defeat by Oleksandr Usyk should have been prevented by his team, according to the Sky Sports experts.

Joshua threw Usyk's world title belts out of the ring following his defeat and then launched into a remarkable speech in the aftermath of his split decision loss to Usyk in Jeddah.

But Clarke, a close friend of Joshua, felt that the British heavyweight star should have been given time to retain his composure.

"As a gym friend and a friend in general, for anyone that is offended by what happened, I think I can just apologise on his behalf for the outburst," Clarke told Sky Sports.

"He might be mad at me for saying this and the whole team might be mad at me for saying this, but I feel like he was left out to dry by the team. I feel like someone should have saved him.

"It's words but in the true reflection of boxing, that was Oleksandr Usyk's time to celebrate that victory and he didn't get to do it straight away. I just don't think that was right but once again, Anthony is a great person, he does a lot for a lot of people, he's done a lot for me, but I feel like he had a bit of a bad one there and it was out of character. There were no excuses, that was Oleksandr Usyk's time.

"To the people around him, where were you? Someone should have jumped in there. Someone should have stopped him and saved him from himself. It was only words, but it was the wrong time."

https://www.skysports.com/boxing/ne...-after-oleksandr-usyk-loss-says-frazer-clarke
 
Oleksandr Usyk calls for Tyson Fury undisputed heavyweight clash after beating Anthony Joshua

Oleksandr Usyk has called for an undisputed heavyweight world championship clash with Tyson Fury after retaining his WBO, WBA and IBF titles with a spectacular split decision rematch victory over Anthony Joshua.

Usyk delivered a boxing masterclass in Jeddah on Saturday night to repeat last year's victory over two-time world champion Joshua, who put up a courageous and improved display against the Ukrainian.

Fury, whose last fight was a knockout victory over Dillian Whyte in April, recently reaffirmed his intention to retire from boxing, but appeared to suggest in a social media post immediately after Usyk's victory that he would return to the ring.

"I'm sure that Tyson Fury is not retired yet," Usyk said in the ring after his split decision win.

"I'm sure, I'm convinced he wants to fight me. I want to fight him and if I'm not fighting Tyson Fury, I'm not fighting at all."

Moments later, Fury posted a video on Instagram in which he criticised both Joshua and Usyk, before suggesting he could be persuaded to come out of a short-lived retirement.

"It was one of the worst heavyweight title fights l have ever seen," Fury said.

"I would annihilate both of them on the same night. Get your chequebook out because the Gypsy King is here to stay forever."

https://www.skysports.com/boxing/ne...eavyweight-clash-after-beating-anthony-joshua
 
Anthony Joshua broke down in tears at the post-fight press conference after losing his decisive rematch with Oleksandr Usyk.
 
Anthony Joshua's bid to recapture the unified heavyweight titles ended in disappointment as Oleksandr Usyk produced a terrific performance to win by split decision in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

In a clash billed as the Rage on the Red Sea, a spirited Joshua, 32, showed some aggressiveness and intent - a vast improvement from their first fight - but could not match the brilliance and ring savviness of the Ukrainian.

Two judges scored the fight 115-113 and 116-112 to Usyk, while a third judge gave it 115-113 to the challenger. While there were some close rounds, Usyk was the deserved winner.

At the end of the fight, a furious Joshua - quite bizarrely - picked up two of Usyk's belts, dropped them on the floor and strode towards the dressing room, before turning round and getting back into the ring to give an impassioned speech.

"Usyk is one hell of a fighter. That's just emotion," he said. "If you knew my story, you'd understand the passion. I'm not an amateur boxer. I was going to jail and I got bail and I started training.

"It shows the passion we put into this. For this guy to beat me tonight, it shows the levels of hard work he must have put in, so please give him a round of applause as heavyweight champion of world.

"They said that I'm not a 12-round fighter. I ain't 14 stone, I'm 18 stone, I'm heavy. It's hard work. This guy here is phenomenal."

Joshua has now suffered back-to-back defeats against Usyk, with the champion retaining the WBA (Super), WBO and IBF titles he won in London last September.

Joshua had some success in the fight - and enjoyed his best round in the ninth, charging Usyk down and unloading a flurry of punches, reminiscent of the AJ of old.

But such is the brilliance of Usyk, he came back fighting in the 10th round and was landing clean blow after blow. Usyk landed a five-punch combination, and Joshua became a sitting duck.

Joshua fatigued and Usyk - who just a few months ago was defending his nation against the Russian invasion - took full advantage in the championship rounds.

"I devote this victory to my family, my country, my team, to all the military defending this country - thank you so much," he said, before calling out WBC champion Tyson Fury.

"I'm sure that Tyson Fury is not retired yet. I'm convinced he wants to fight me. I want to fight him. If I'm not fighting Fury, I'm not fighting at all.

"Only God knows whether I will fight him or not but all these gentlemen here around me, my team, they are going to help me."

Fury recently announced his retirement but has until 26 August to decide on whether he will relinquish the belt.

The Gypsy King took to social media to criticise both fighters, and may not yet be done with boxing. The carrot of a clash with Usyk - one which would certainly cement the winner's legacy as an all-time great - is dangling.

The boxers made their ring walks at approximately 01:00 local time. Even in those early hours, there were temperatures of 30C, as approximately 12,000 fans filled out the air-conditioned King Abdullah Sport City Arena.

A crowd that was somewhat subdued for most of the night came alive as Joshua - the challenger - marched to the ring first. Jeers echoed around the arena as Usyk followed. It was clear who the fan favourite was.

Heading into the fight, there were questions as to how well Joshua and new trainer Robert Garcia had gelled, having only started working together this year.

The opening few rounds were close, but ones which Usyk most likely edged. After three rounds, American Garcia told Joshua he had won every round.

The champion was given time to recover in the fifth round after a Joshua low blow had him wincing. A two-punch combination to Joshua's midriff and head, from range, was the pick of the sixth round.

As the fight progressed, Usyk's movement started to dictate the fight. He landed a counter left in the seventh, before Joshua unloaded two smart shots to the body in the eight.

Then came the two of the most memorable rounds, out of the 24 across two bouts, between the two fighters. Joshua gave it everything in the ninth, and appeared to have Usyk in a spot of bother. Perhaps it was a ploy from Usyk to tire Joshua out. In the 10th, he broke Joshua's resolve - and went on to take the fight.

Before the fight, Joshua and promoter Eddie Hearn insisted defeat would not spell retirement but described the bout as must-win.

After a third loss in five bouts, Joshua now has to resurrect his career. But he can take positives from his performance. His reputation and legacy have been dealt a blow, but perhaps not as heavy as many predicted.

In June 2019, Joshua suffered a shocking knockout defeat by Andy Ruiz Jr in New York. Six months later, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Joshua recaptured his heavyweight crown with a disciplined points win.

Beating Usyk, however, was a totally different challenge. Joshua was in against a pound-for-pound star - the trickiest of southpaws. And he was facing a patriotic Ukrainian determined to bring some much-needed joy to a nation torn apart through war.

Boxing fans wanted to see some heart and fight from Joshua. In the 10th round, when under attack from Usyk, he barked "come on" at his opponent.

Such is the beast of heavyweight boxing and the level of fame bestowed on Joshua, there will always be critics. This time, though, perhaps not for his performance, but for his post-fight interview.

BBC
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">JOSHUA CONFRONTS USYK AFTER DEFEAT ����<a href="https://t.co/gUJ15SmkXI">pic.twitter.com/gUJ15SmkXI</a></p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1561142761721679874?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 21, 2022</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">An emotional Anthony Joshua speaks after his defeat against Oleksandr Usyk ��<br><br>��️ "��'�� ���������� �������� �������� ���� ���� ����������" ����<a href="https://t.co/kNMlhkNe0x">pic.twitter.com/kNMlhkNe0x</a></p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1561157370822238208?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 21, 2022</a></blockquote>
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Anthony Joshua breaks down in his post-fight press conference after loss to Oleksandr Usyk.

An emotional Anthony Joshua broke down in tears at the post-fight press conference after losing his world-title challenge to Oleksandr Usyk in Saudi Arabia.

Joshua, 32, was defeated by split-decision, having also lost to the Ukrainian on points in September.

Asked if he was proud of his performance, Joshua became emotional.

"It's really, really hard for me to say I'm proud of myself," he said. "I'm upset, really, deep down in my heart."

The two-time world champion then covered his face with both hands, taking deep breaths, as promoter Eddie Hearn took the next question.

Joshua composed himself and continued addressing the media.

The 2012 Olympic Gold medallist has been propelled into stardom ever since turning professional nine years ago.

He said the pressure and intrusion he faces "comes at a cost".

Joshua added: "It will never break me but it takes real strength not to break me and tonight there is a little crack in the armour because that took a lot."

Moments after Usyk's hand was raised, Joshua seemingly lost his temper - lifting two of the champion's belts, throwing them out of the ring and then arguing with the opposing team.

"When you try and do things from your heart, not everyone is going to understand," Joshua explained.

"It was just from the heart. I knew I was mad at myself. Not at anyone, just myself. I was like I got to get out here because I'm mad.

"When you're angry you might do stupid things. Then I realised this is sport. I came back and did the right thing."

Joshua's promoter Hearn, gave a passionate defence of his fighter.

"This is someone who I want my kids to look up to," Hearn said.

"If he's out in public, he gives everyone his time. He's one of the nicest guys. He's a competitor and winner.

"What you saw today was raw emotion. A real person who wanted to win badly."

Hearn dismissed any suggestions of Joshua retiring, and confirmed he would like see him be more active. Hearn said he wanted Joshua to return in December and have at least three fights in 2023.

Joshua has fought just twice - both times against Usyk - in the last two and half years.

"I'm a fighter for life. That hunger never dies. Fighter for life," Joshua said.

BBC
 
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Having said that, those overly criticising his performance are misguided. He improved on the first fight and was relentless with his body attack, aggressive but not overzealous and more composed with his feet. Usyk is simply on another level, and with all his ability, there were times when he really had to grit his teeth and weather the body attack, it amazes me he was able to stay up after giving away a 20 lb advantage. You can’t say AJ belongs in the same class as Chisora or Hughie because he lost to Usyk, it is foolish to spew such high level ignorance, as nice as it is to see the casual bandwagon get exposed.

Joshua vs Chisora / H Fury would be a good domestic scrap so dunno why your dismissing it.
 
You said he is on their level, I don’t know if you done something illegal last night :)))

Joshua isnt elite level and never has been. Joshua should now be used for fighters getting close to a world title so they can fight a former champion to have a name on their record ;)
 
Joshua was a hugh improvement in this fight compared to the first showing and that was down to Garcia who is a elite trainer. And it was clear he improved Joshua in the short time together and will further improve him if Joshua has the heart to carry on.
 
The Saudis totally bemused!

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Anthony Joshua has split the boxing community after delivering an impromptu outburst following his defeat to Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk.

After the split decision was announced in the ring, Joshua grabbed two of the heavyweight championship belts and dumped them over the side of the ropes, before storming off towards the changing room.

However, he did return to the ring and grabbed the microphone to deliver an impromptu, impassioned speech.

He told the stadium in Jeddah: "If you knew my story, you would understand the passion.

"I ain't no amateur boxer, from five years old that was an elite prospect from youth. I was going to jail, I got bail and I started training my a*** off, I wanted to be able to fight.

"This guy beat me tonight, maybe I could have done better, but it shows the level of hard work I put in, so please give him a round of applause as our heavyweight champion of the world."

Joshua came in for criticism in the aftermath for failing to let his opponent speak first and throwing the belts over the side of the ring.

Professional boxer Frazer Clarke said Joshua's outburst was "out of character" for him, telling Sky Sports: "As a gym friend and a friend in general, for anyone offended in general by what happened, I think I can apologise on his behalf for the outburst.

"His team might be mad at me for saying this, but I feel he was hung out to dry there. Somebody should have saved him from himself.

"It's words, but in the true reflection of boxing, that was Usyk's time to celebrate that victory, and he didn't get to do it straight away, and I don't think that was right.

"Anthony is a great person and has done a lot for a lot of people, a lot for me, but I feel like he had a bit of a bad one there, and it was out of character."

He added: "Someone should have jumped in there. Someone should have stopped him and saved him from himself. It was only words, but it was the wrong time."

Meanwhile, former middleweight champion Carl Froch defended Joshua, saying: "He didn't say anything that would have offended anybody too much.

"He was just trying to speak off the cuff. He put his heart on his sleeve and hopefully didn't offend anybody, but he did steal Usyk's moment, and it was a bit strange.

"I think he was so emotionally built up to win that fight, the way in which he lost... I didn't like the way the belts got thrown. It was a great boxing match, I thought it was a great performance."

Addressing the speech in the post-match news conference alongside promoter Eddie Hearn, Joshua said: "When you try and do things from your heart, not everyone's going to always understand.

"It was just from the heart, I knew I was mad at myself... and I thought 'I've gotta get out of here'.

"Then I realised - this is sport.

"I'm a hustler, so I try and put things together... but it comes at a cost, and it'll never break me, and it takes real strength not to break me, and tonight there's a little crack in the armour because I took a loss.

"Let's not forget about the champ... credit to him."

https://news.sky.com/story/usyk-v-j...racter-outburst-after-losing-rematch-12678199
 
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i would love to see a 3rd fight between these two, i always had usyk winning by points, thought it will be a UD win, but joshua fought very well especially in rounds 8&9 - but usyk in round 10 was a beast.

Would like to see Wilder to come back and fight joshua, if not then i like to see joshua v joe joyce= i have joe beating joshua.

Obvious we all want to see fury v usyk.
 
Usyk is another level. He will beat Joshua 10 out of 10 times. He is a superior boxer. Joshua aint done though. He can fight wilder/King Kong/ Tyson.
 
Mike Tyson could not handle Evander Holyfield. No way he can beat Usyk

Another casual fan from India.

Tyson in the late 80's is seen by many as the 2nd GOAT after Ali.

Unlike AJ, Iron Mike would be throwing a barrage of punches, walk through any shots to deliver a knockout blow.
 
I am not into boxing, but for those that are, was Usyk really the better fighter on the night or was or was it a case of letting a Ukrainian win?
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">JOSHUA CONFRONTS USYK AFTER DEFEAT ����<a href="https://t.co/gUJ15SmkXI">pic.twitter.com/gUJ15SmkXI</a></p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1561142761721679874?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 21, 2022</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">An emotional Anthony Joshua speaks after his defeat against Oleksandr Usyk ��<br><br>��️ "��'�� ���������� �������� �������� ���� ���� ����������" ����<a href="https://t.co/kNMlhkNe0x">pic.twitter.com/kNMlhkNe0x</a></p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1561157370822238208?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 21, 2022</a></blockquote>
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Anthony Joshua breaks down in his post-fight press conference after loss to Oleksandr Usyk.

An emotional Anthony Joshua broke down in tears at the post-fight press conference after losing his world-title challenge to Oleksandr Usyk in Saudi Arabia.

Joshua, 32, was defeated by split-decision, having also lost to the Ukrainian on points in September.

Asked if he was proud of his performance, Joshua became emotional.

"It's really, really hard for me to say I'm proud of myself," he said. "I'm upset, really, deep down in my heart."

The two-time world champion then covered his face with both hands, taking deep breaths, as promoter Eddie Hearn took the next question.

Joshua composed himself and continued addressing the media.

The 2012 Olympic Gold medallist has been propelled into stardom ever since turning professional nine years ago.

He said the pressure and intrusion he faces "comes at a cost".

Joshua added: "It will never break me but it takes real strength not to break me and tonight there is a little crack in the armour because that took a lot."

Moments after Usyk's hand was raised, Joshua seemingly lost his temper - lifting two of the champion's belts, throwing them out of the ring and then arguing with the opposing team.

"When you try and do things from your heart, not everyone is going to understand," Joshua explained.

"It was just from the heart. I knew I was mad at myself. Not at anyone, just myself. I was like I got to get out here because I'm mad.

"When you're angry you might do stupid things. Then I realised this is sport. I came back and did the right thing."

Joshua's promoter Hearn, gave a passionate defence of his fighter.

"This is someone who I want my kids to look up to," Hearn said.

"If he's out in public, he gives everyone his time. He's one of the nicest guys. He's a competitor and winner.

"What you saw today was raw emotion. A real person who wanted to win badly."

Hearn dismissed any suggestions of Joshua retiring, and confirmed he would like see him be more active. Hearn said he wanted Joshua to return in December and have at least three fights in 2023.

Joshua has fought just twice - both times against Usyk - in the last two and half years.

"I'm a fighter for life. That hunger never dies. Fighter for life," Joshua said.

BBC

Basically a horse in the stable. He was identified, moulded, media trained and became a darling. This was a convicted criminal, a drug dealer, that became an icon virtually overnight. The mask slipped bad
 
Basically a horse in the stable. He was identified, moulded, media trained and became a darling. This was a convicted criminal, a drug dealer, that became an icon virtually overnight. The mask slipped bad

It was horse how has Olympic success to be fair but I’ve been saying this from the start, but those who were some of his most loyal and hardcore fans, to see them rip him up now just shows what casual melons they’ve always been.
 
Mike Tyson of 1986/1987 would have destroyed him

This is just the second time in history where a former Cruser champion has had such success at Heavyweight since Evander Holyfield himself. Many of the legends who made a name for themselves in the 90’s, Tyson was their signature win, he still became unified champion during that run and was rated highly by most publications, Usyk isn’t an ATG HW yet but he’d pose some serious problems against Tyson in any era in my view due to his ring IQ and multi-dimensional skillset especially past the first 6 rounds. If we go all the way back, am sure there were probably some skeptics about Holyfield’s HW ambitions to, but he was the real deal and many highly regarded trainers and peer’s in the sport who were aware of him from the amateurs though had very little doubt, probably based on some interesting sparring sessions and seeing him in the flesh. More then skill, the smaller man really needs exceptional grit, it doesn’t matter how well conditioned they are when someone outweighing you by 20lb+ is thudding body shots in your liver repeatedly
 
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A good HW fight overall, AJ tried hard, hurt Uysk many times but couldnt land the killer blow.

Uysk fought how it was expected, move and counter with great precision.

I sat watching thinking HW boxing has deteriorated to a level never seen before in history. Imagine Iron Mike up against Uysk , it would be a demolition job. Uysk is this eras great but isnt even in the top 20 of HW's in history.

He has called out Tyson Fury, which I expect he will accept. Should be a better contest with Fury winning on points imo.

I don’t think so personally, this era has been a vast improvement over the Kiltchko’s. Fury opened up the division and we’ve not looked back since, we’ve had some great HW fight nights and a revival not seen before on our shores. There are some serious prospects coming through but whether it’s AJ, Fury, Wilder or Usyk, when they leave the scene there will be some big shoes to fill. As for Mike, I don’t see it exactly the same way as you, but there will only ever be one Mike and no one can come close to the way he fought and his presentation in his prime unless we raise Cus D'Amato from the dead :))
 
Anthony Joshua: 'I let myself down' says British boxer about post-fight antics

Anthony Joshua says emotions got the better of him and he let himself down with his bizarre post-fight antics after losing to Ukraine's Oleksandr Usyk in Saudi Arabia on Saturday.

Joshua was defeated by split decision in the heavyweight world title rematch.

After the contest, the Briton picked up two of Usyk's belts, dropped them out of the ring and strode towards the dressing room, before returning to the ring to give an impassioned speech.

"I let myself down," Joshua tweeted.

After returning to the ring, the 32-year-old confronted Usyk, saying, "you're not strong, how did you beat me? How? I had character and determination'.

Joshua then picked up the microphone and produced a expletive-filled speech in which he reflected on the fight and his shortcomings as a boxer.

He also talked about several topics, including his troubles with police as a teenager, the war in Ukraine, his career and led the crowd in saluting 35-year-old Usyk.

In his post-fight news conference, Joshua said he had acted that way because he was mad at himself. "When you're angry you might do stupid things," he added.

In his tweets on Sunday, he wished Usyk, who also beat him on points last September in London, "continued success in your quest for greatness".

"You are a class act, champ," he said. "Yesterday I had to mentally take myself into a dark place to compete for the championship belts! I had two fights, one with Usyk and one with my emotions and both got the better of me.

"I'll be the first to admit, I let myself down. I acted out of pure passion and emotion and when not controlled it ain't great. I love this sport so so much and I'll be better from this point on. Respect."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/boxing/62627169
 
It was horse how has Olympic success to be fair but I’ve been saying this from the start, but those who were some of his most loyal and hardcore fans, to see them rip him up now just shows what casual melons they’ve always been.

You deride casual fans but surely AJ, like Bruno before him opened up the sport to a wider audience?

Unlike Lewis who was the real deal but never won the nation’s heart.
 
You deride casual fans but surely AJ, like Bruno before him opened up the sport to a wider audience?

Unlike Lewis who was the real deal but never won the nation’s heart.

That can’t be denied, this has never happened before on our shores in nearly 100 years / post-war, the stadium attendance is a reflection of the popularity of Boxing and subsequently our participation and record this century in the Olympics. We have matched / broken the attendance record held by McAvoy/Harvey in 1939 twice and consistently produced stadium shows which has rarely been seen in the Europe let alone the UK, this is truly groundbreaking and difficult to comprehend / appreciate given how it is a norm now. Even presently, if Fury vs AJ was booked, I don’t think Wembley is big enough.

Lewis did win a nations heart though, just not ours :yk2
 
That can’t be denied, this has never happened before on our shores in nearly 100 years / post-war, the stadium attendance is a reflection of the popularity of Boxing and subsequently our participation and record this century in the Olympics. We have matched / broken the attendance record held by McAvoy/Harvey in 1939 twice and consistently produced stadium shows which has rarely been seen in the Europe let alone the UK, this is truly groundbreaking and difficult to comprehend / appreciate given how it is a norm now. Even presently, if Fury vs AJ was booked, I don’t think Wembley is big enough.

Lewis did win a nations heart though, just not ours :yk2

With that being said, British Boxing was on the rise prior to the casual boom. Hatton, Calzaghe, Khan, Haye, Fury and Froch all contributed in abundance home / away.
 
A "historic" heavyweight unification fight between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk "will be made", says the Briton's promoter Frank Warren.

Ukrainian Usyk retained his WBA, WBO and IBF titles with a split-decision win over Anthony Joshua on Saturday.

This month WBC champion Fury said he would stay retired. After Usyk's win he said he "would annihilate them - get your cheque book out".

"He and Usyk would be a really good fight," Warren told BBC Radio 5 Live.

"It's a fight that I think will be made because both teams would like to see that happen."

Britain's Lennox Lewis was the last undisputed heavyweight champion after beating Evander Holyfield in 1999.

Since 2007 the undisputed heavyweight championship has included the WBO title, and there has never been a fight where all four belts were on the line.

Fury remains unbeaten after 33 fights. After extending his unbeaten record to 20-0, Usyk said: "If I'm not fighting Tyson Fury, I'm not fighting at all."

Warren said: "Usyk said after the fight that it's the only fight he's interested in, and it's certainly the same case with Tyson.

"It's just a matter of where it will generate the most income because it's a unique fight, a historic fight.

"It's the first time for God knows how long that the four belts are on the line. Both fighters are undefeated. The whole world of boxing will be captivated by this fight."

In failing to reclaim the titles he lost to Usyk in September 2021, Briton Joshua suffered a third defeat in his past five fights.

Although Joshua has now lost his belts, Warren said an all-British clash between Fury and Joshua could still happen "down the road maybe".

He said: "If AJ manages to get a couple of wins under his belt - and I believe Tyson will beat Usyk - that may be a fight to be made.

"But AJ's got to re-establish himself before you can even think about fights like that."

BBC
 
All the talk off AJ using his strength, size, power, fighting a big man fight, Robert Garcia just proved to be all talk in the end.

Yes he improved on the first fight, had a better game plan with the body punches vs the first fight but he ultimately yet again froze and shut down in the key moments of the fight. He again didn't look like a fighter who would go for broke and risk it all

It takes at least 3-4 fights to see noticeable changes with a new trainer, considering the two were together for 1 fight the improvement was pretty good. You can’t seriously have expected AJ to have boxed like Marcos Maidana who himself was a bit reckless but had a granite jaw, we saw what happened in Rd 10 after AJ got a bit more adventurous, if you are over eager, you give a counter puncher more opportunities to put combinations together and risk being stopped. I think we need to give Usyk credit because I still don’t know how he survived the body attack and onslaught in Rd 9, more then his skill his grit against a guy who may have been 30 pounds heavier on fight night was remarkable. Usyk is simply the better fighter in every capacity, AJ’s best was not enough.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="in" dir="ltr">Oleksandr Usyk leaves Saudi Arabia with the belts & Eeyore&#55357;&#56490;&#55356;&#57339; &#55356;&#57286; <a href="https://t.co/3w5esh7kkL">pic.twitter.com/3w5esh7kkL</a></p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1561731210153529345?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 22, 2022</a></blockquote>
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To me Joshua has looked like a boxer who will defeat poor/average fighters but when he comes up against the better fighters he will struggle.

Looks like a one-trick pony.
 
To me Joshua has looked like a boxer who will defeat poor/average fighters but when he comes up against the better fighters he will struggle.

Looks like a one-trick pony.

Spot on analysis, he only beats fighters who will stand in front of him and are slow in movement. As soon as he fights a fighter with good movement and power he struggles.
 
The official judge's scorecard of Anthony Joshua's rematch defeat to Oleksandr Usyk has shown he was deemed to have been winning the fight after nine rounds.
 
The official judge's scorecard of Anthony Joshua's rematch defeat to Oleksandr Usyk has shown he was deemed to have been winning the fight after nine rounds.

He might have a point about weight. He's an Extreme Heavyweight, so will naturally start gassing. Not affected Wilder, mind
 
Oleksandr Usyk’s huge undisputed fight against Tyson Fury is "in the making", according to the Ukrainian star's promoter.
 
Oleksandr Usyk: World champion says Anthony Joshua's post-fight rant was 'emotional'

Heavyweight world champion Oleksandr Usyk believes Anthony Joshua was "overwhelmed" by losing their rematch, branding his post-fight antics as "emotional".

Briton Joshua, 32, went on a lengthy rant after his points defeat to Usyk in Saudi Arabia, throwing two of the world titles out of the ring.

Asked about Joshua's bizarre behaviour, Usyk said: "I cannot say his behaviour was a disgrace, it was just emotional.

"I don't think he wanted to offend me."

Joshua apologised in the post-fight media conference for what happened and Usyk, who retained the WBO, IBF and WBA (Super) titles with the victory, encouraged people to stop criticising his rival.

"I think he was just overwhelmed, it was too much to take, and he just started ranting," said the Ukrainian, 35.

"But I don't have any rancour towards him and I want to tell people that they shouldn't hold it against him - he didn't do anything bad.

"Emotions took over him and he just spurted those words, but later he told me it was OK. Don't judge him for that. Instead, he needs support and reassurance."

Usyk also revealed what he said to Joshua when the two-time world champion confronted him in the ring about how he could have lost again, following another points defeat in September 2021.

"He was simply asking how he, the strong guy, could have lost to me, the weak one," Usyk added.

"I wanted to talk to him, I said, 'ease up, man, let's just calm down, when I have time I could come to see you in the UK, come to your gym and we could spar together and stuff'."

Asked if Joshua still has a boxing future after suffering a third defeat of his career, Usyk added: "Of course, he does. Why not? What nonsense.

"OK, he has lost, so what? It's not lethal. It's just a small respite to do some homework."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/boxing/62769798
 
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