AJ vs Wilder
#41
Anthony Joshua to fight at Wembley September 22 and again April 13 – will it be Povetkin then Wilder?
James Slater - July 5, 2018 0 Comments

Fight fans may have read how it has been confirmed that WBA/IBF/WBO heavyweight champ Anthony Joshua will box his next two fights at Wembley in London: the next fight on September 22, the fight after that to take place on April 13 of 2019.

But so far promoter Eddie Hearn has not confirmed who AJ’s challengers will be. It is of course widely expected to be Russia’s Alexander Povetkin, the current WBA mandatory challenger, next. With the recent talks over a possible Joshua-Deontay Wilder unification fight grinding to a halt, fans are thinking they will have to wait until next year to see this fight go down – if it even does then.

With Joshua’s two-fight Wembley deal, Wilder simply has to agree to travel if he wants the fight; that or the WBC champ is willing to wait until some time next summer at the earliest to get it on with Joshua. Has the fact that Joshua is committed to fighting at home for the better part of the next year delayed a Wilder fight even further?

Assuming it is Povetkin next for AJ, who will be next if it’s not Wilder? As big as he is, as popular as he is in this country, Joshua can expect two more Wembley sell-outs whoever he fights in his next two bouts. Wouldn’t it be great if Hearn and Joshua surprised us all and announced that a deal has been done for Wilder to come over to the UK to fight Joshua; either in September or in April of next year!

READ Eddie Hearn offers Deontay Wilder $5 million to fight “anyone he likes over there” - Wilder issues statement to the boxing world
If Wilder cannot agree terms, it’s likely he will instead face his own mandatory, Dominic Breazeale, maybe in New York. Joshua at the same time, will be making huge money, far, far more than Wilder will get for a Breazeale defence. But Wilder has said before how money is not the be all and end all to him.

We must now wait and see who Hearn officially announces as Joshua’s September opponent, and then await the announcement of his April foe. This of course, is reliant on Joshua taking care of business against the “dangerous” Povetkin.
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#42
Anthony Joshua to fight Alexander Povetkin at Wembley in September

Anthony Joshua celebrates victory after his WBA, IBF, WBO & IBO heavyweight championship title fight against Joseph Parker on March 31 in Cardiff.

Anthony Joshua will defend his WBA, WBO and IBF heavyweight titles against Alexander Povetkin of Russia in London on September 22.

Joshua's promoter Eddie Hearn on Monday (Tuesday NZ Time) confirmed the fight, which will take place at Wembley Stadium.

Povetkin is the mandatory challenger to the WBA title. The 28-year-old Joshua has been in training while negotiations with WBC champion Deontay Wilder stalled, but could yet face the American in April 2019.

Joshua said in a statement: "Povetkin is a serious challenge that I will prepare meticulously for. He has serious pedigree and only a fool would underestimate what he brings to the table."

Povetkin, 38, beat David Price on the undercard of Joshua's victory over Joseph Parker in March, having previously fought for the titles Joshua now holds in a 2013 defeat to Wladimir Klitschko.
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#43
Yawn. Easy KO win for Joshua.
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#44
(07-17-2018, 11:36 AM)Boxingfan25 Wrote: Yawn. Easy KO win for Joshua.

Who should he fight? Apart from Wilder its the toughest fight in the heavyweight division at the moment.
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#45
I think Povetkin is in with a chance. He's got power and boxing skills. His size and speed may let him down though.
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#46
(07-17-2018, 11:54 AM)craigyid14 Wrote:
(07-17-2018, 11:36 AM)Boxingfan25 Wrote: Yawn. Easy KO win for Joshua.

Who should he fight? Apart from Wilder its the toughest fight in the heavyweight division at the moment.

Exactly. The HW division is hardly stacked for talent at the moment.
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#47
(07-17-2018, 11:54 AM)craigyid14 Wrote:
(07-17-2018, 11:36 AM)Boxingfan25 Wrote: Yawn. Easy KO win for Joshua.

Who should he fight? Apart from Wilder its the toughest fight in the heavyweight division at the moment.

True. But it doesn’t change the fact that AJ will wipe him out. Povetkin on drugs and Povetkin not on drugs are completely different fighters.
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#48
Joshuas recent form:

Dillian Whyte (goes on to be a major contender)

Charles Martin (Title shot)

Dominic Brezeale (Title shot vs Martin gave Haymon options on Joshuas next 2 fights, this was the first)

Wladamir Klitschko (Voluntary vs the #1 in the division and unification)

Carlos Takam (mandatory replacement for pulev)

Joseph Parker (unification)

Alexander Povetkin (Mandatory)

How anyone can belive that Joshua is the one ducking Wilder is mind bobblin.
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#49
(07-17-2018, 10:09 PM)Boxingfan25 Wrote:
(07-17-2018, 11:54 AM)craigyid14 Wrote:
(07-17-2018, 11:36 AM)Boxingfan25 Wrote: Yawn. Easy KO win for Joshua.

Who should he fight? Apart from Wilder its the toughest fight in the heavyweight division at the moment.

True. But it doesn’t change the fact that AJ will wipe him out. Povetkin on drugs and Povetkin not on drugs are completely different fighters.

I agree. Where was that Brutal ko power vs Marco Huck etc

There's clearly two povetkins:

Monsterous roided up wrecking machine

Average contender whos just "ok"

Dont be expecting the former, Hearn will have povetkin tested about 50 times. By the way he probably LET povetkin use his gear vs Price to make it look better when Joshua smashes the shit out of him.
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#50
https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/combat-sports/105577453/anthony-joshua-confronted-on-stage-in-new-york-by-american-heavyweight-jarrell-miller
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