Tag Archives: Anthony Joshua

JOSHUA TRASHES PAUL IN 6, CALLS OUT FURY

By Steven Cummings

The Jake Paul-Anthony Joshua spectacle played out on Friday night and after four laughable rounds of Paul running around the ring, a sincere fight broke out and AJ ended it at 1:31 of the sixth round. Paul was down twice in the fifth and twice in the sixth.

In his in-ring post-fight interview, Anthony Joshua called out Tyson Fury.

The first four rounds saw Jake Paul run around the 22-foot ring with almost no legitimate action. Joshua stalked, and could have done a better job of cutting off the ring, but Paul was as elusive as he could be.

In round five, Jake Paul chose to engage and if you start the clock at that point, then AJ did, in fact, stop the social media star in under two rounds. Down went Paul twice in the fifth, looking awkward and overmatched.

When the sixth round started, it was obvious that the end was near. Another knockdown happened early in the round and Paul rose on shaky legs. Finally, AJ landed a clean right hand and that sent Paul down for the 10-count.

The crowd booed loudly over the first four rounds, rightfully so. Once Jake Paul made the decision to behave as a true heavyweight fighter, he got what any reasonable boxing fan expected. The skepticism of a scripted event loomed over this event, but ultimately, it was a proper boxing match between a world-class fighter and an athlete in workout shape trying to box. No contest.

Anthony Joshua has nothing to be ashamed of on any level. 15 months ago, he was stopped and his career was stalled. His name made big-money fights available but his trajectory as a heavyweight boxer was headed in the wrong direction.

This opportunity is rare. The money is insane. AJ should not be faulted for taking this route.

If anyone doubted the outcome if the fight took place on the level, it is clear as day now that there was no way in this world that Anthony Joshua could lose this fight and almost no chance that he wouldn’t win by punishing knockout.

Jake Paul’s skills were on display here. Against a true championship-caliber opponent, he was completely outclassed. Paul staved off the early-knockout humiliation by avoiding any exchanges. Once he did engage, it went very badly, very quickly.

Nobody should feel betrayed. There was no harm done tonight, or at any point in Jake Paul’s boxing career. He’s not doing anything wrong. There is fan interest and money flowing. Why not?

Can Jake Paul defeat Mike Tyson 30+ years after Iron Mike’s prime? Yes.

Can Jake Paul compete with two-time heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua in the waning days of AJ’s prime? No. Once he endeavored to stand in there and fight, it looked like Johnny Knoxville vs. Butterbean.

No problem for the integrity of boxing. No problem for legitimate fights. These Jake Paul fights are Crazy Town events. He legit beat a bunch of MMA guys and aged boxers. He lost to non-factor Tommy Fury and got blown up by 36-year old Anthony Joshua. All while generating tons of money and fan interest.

Boxing fans, don’t start worrying about the sport’s image now. We’ve had rigged fights, PEDs, politics that block big fights, the mafia running the sport, deaths in the ring, loaded gloves…..the list goes on and on. If you’re still in at this point, you have to see the Jake Paul arc as a minor annoyance, if you’re bothered at all.

For me, it’s interesting. Nothing more, nothing less. How good of a boxer can Jake Paul be? He’s been training appropriately. He’s gotten some good results. But he only succeeds against limited opposition. Tonight we saw how overmatched he is when things don’t go his way. He wobbled and staggered like a guy who had never been damaged.

Because he hadn’t.

But we shouldn’t be mad about it. If he faces a legit guy closer to his natural weight, he probably gets the same thing. He doesn’t have the legs. He’s got a chin for bar fights, but not for professional boxers who attack with a plan. We saw that tonight.

So what? All good.

DANIEL DUBOIS STOPS ANTHONY JOSHUA IN 5

Daniel Dubois added to his growing credentials with a dominant stoppage win over Anthony Joshua on Saturday September 21st. It was a pay-per-view event with 90,000 people in attendance with Dubois emerging as the man of the hour.

On the other side of the coin, Joshua lost for the third time in his last seven fights and is 6-4 over his last 10. Here’s a look at where Anthony Joshua stands at this point in his career.

USYK TAKES JOSHUA’S TITLES WITH UD12

Oleksandr Usyk boxed his way to a lead and then punished Anthony Joshua late to take a clear decision victory on Saturday night, earning a collection of heavyweight championship belts. Usyk (19-0, 13 KOs) overcame Joshua’s considerable height and reach advantages and handed the popular British fighter his second loss in front of over 60,000 partisan fans at Tottenham Hostspur Stadium.

Official scores were 117-112, 116-112 and 115-113, all for Usyk. InTheCorner.net had it 115-113 for Usyk.

From the opening bell, the Ukranian showed high-energy movement and punching, seemingly confusing Joshua (24-2, 22 KOs) who looked like he was trying to swat a fly. But Usyk was landing from time to time whereas Joshua was trying without success to find an opening. Ukyk had the slight edge in a tactical round one and a clear edge in round two.

The straight left found the mark a few times in round three for Usyk and then, near the end of the round, he wobbled Joshua. 3-0 Usyk going to the fourth round.

Joshua came out for round four with a better plan, moving forward and trying to get off first. It was another close round but Joshua had the edge as he finally appeared to be the bigger, more dangerous man. Usyk was not deterred but his attack wasn’t as effective as he was still on the move, but now going backwards a lot.

Two-way action in round five continued this pattern and in round six, AJ landed his best best shot of the fight, a straight right hand that caught Usyk flush on the face.

The next several rounds were back-and-forth. Usyk started to get his second wind and Joshua continued to press his own attack, having adjusted to the problem that he had in front of him. After 10 rounds, the fight was close, Usyk was cut over his right eye and Joshua had swelling under his right eye.

The championship rounds were where Usyk really shined. His relentless attack may have gassed Joshua and the Ukranian was energetic, peppering AJ with shots and landing cleanly on a consistent basis in round 11.

The final round turned out to be the crowning glory for Usyk, who left nothing to chance. He attacked from the opening bell and had the upper hand throughout. In the waning seconds of the fight he had Joshua in the most trouble he had been in all night, staggered against the ropes and taking clean shots. The bell prevented a knockdown or worse.

Oleksandr Usyk had his coming out party on Saturday night in a big way with a clear victory over a respected champion. Joshua is now faced with questions and, having been in this spot once already after losing to Andy Ruiz, the detractors are all in with the anti-AJ sentiment. Fair enough. Joshua’s been outworked twice when not everyone expected it. This loss to Usyk isn’t in the same category as the shocking beating he took from Ruiz, but it’s enough to question greatness.

Usyk, on the other hand, is the man of the hour. Outsized, in hostile territory, moving up from cruiserweight to take on a 240-lb champion, Usyk blew through every challenge and took home four titles.

DAZN broadcast the eye-popping spectacle and, as with many of their fight cards, it took place in the middle of the day in the States being that it originated from England. Despite this, DAZN continues to be money well spent. A fight of this magnitude dictates that a true boxing fan makes the fight a priority and watches it live or makes an effort to avoid hearing the decision before viewing the fight on demand later. Of course, the second option is an inconvenience. But the multi-belt heavyweight championship of the world, contested by fighters as significant as AJ and Usyk, should take priority over any early season college football game for a fan who has the commitment to pay the yearly fee. If you’re going to pay $100 for a year’s worth of fights, whenever they happen to be scheduled, this one was the one to plan your Saturday around.