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Mauricio Sulaiman, has said that former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua will earn the WBC’s No.1 ranking if he beats Francis Ngannou.

However, Sulaiman insists a potential fight with Tyson Fury will likely have to wait as he is already committed to a rematch with Oleksandr Usyk.

Joshua will enter the ring with Ngannou on March 8 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in what will be his fourth fight in the space of 11 months after victories over Jermaine Franklin, Robert Helenius and Otto Wallin.

Ngannou will be competing in just his second professional boxing fight after narrowly losing to Fury on debut last October.

Mauricio Sulaiman, has said that former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua will earn the WBC’s No.1 ranking if he beats Francis Ngannou.

However, Sulaiman insists a potential fight with Tyson Fury will likely have to wait as he is already committed to a rematch with Oleksandr Usyk.

Anthony Joshua

Joshua will enter the ring with Ngannou on March 8 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in what will be his fourth fight in the space of 11 months after victories over Jermaine Franklin, Robert Helenius and Otto Wallin.

Ngannou will be competing in just his second professional boxing fight after narrowly losing to Fury on debut last October.

Joshua held the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO belts until he lost to Usyk in September 2021 and he has got his career back on track following successive defeats against the Ukrainian.

And Sulaiman says his rise to being No.1 in the WBC will be complete if he is victorious in March.

“Anthony Joshua was first ranked by the WBC when he started as a professional and then he kept moving up and was ranked inside the top five and then number 2 ranked when he received the opportunity to fight for another title (the IBF),” he told gambling.com.

Errol Spence Jr. eyes redemption. His career got derailed last year when Terence Crawford handed him a sound beating. Since then, a rematch has been on the card, and the American also activated a rematch clause to exact vengeance. However, the signs are not encouraging for his fans.

The fans recently had a sneak peek into ‘The Truth’s first training session after his cataract surgery. Notably, Spence Jr. has had troubles with his eye that have proved costly. He had to withdraw from a fight with Manny Pacquiao in 2021 because of a left retinal surgery. Similar issues persisted and resulted in ‘Bud’s “so many jabs and hooks” piercing through his body that eventually cost him the fight.

Errol Spence Jr.’s troubles with his eye that cost him the Terence Crawford fight

The 33-year-old boxer recently went through cataract surgery to fix his eye situation. Before getting into the square circle with Crawford, he had decided to get vital surgery done and updated fans on the same on his Instagram handle.

“It’s been past due. Sh*t was covering my eye. Why [do] you think I got hit with so many jabs and hooks? Still a great performance by bro [Terence Crawford],” Spence announced.

errol and terence

Now, the first visuals of the former unified welterweight champion hitting the gym have made the rounds on the internet. It looks like Spence Jr. has been away from the gym for a while, and therefore, he has gained some weight.

Spence Jr.’s training clip leaves fans in worry

The fans are not sure whether this might help his chances of defeating Crawford. One fan wrote, “He ain’t missing no meals that’s for sure.”

A user called Spence Jr. a “SUPER heavyweight.”

A comment read, He looks bad. Will look even worse after Crawford is finished with him.”

Someone suggested Spence Jr. might need more time for the Crawford rematch. They announced, “Needs more time for Crawford fight winner of tzu n Thurman.”

Another user asked curiously, “Errol what have you been eating dude?Hope you can get back in shape soon.Best wishes.”

Similarly, another comment pointed out, “Just stop…. Please!! This isn’t a fitness contest; it’s boxing!

A user wrote, “He went up on weight good life.”

Another fan declared hilariously, “No sh*t.. That boy got big I thought it was Razor Rudduck getting ready for another celebrity match.”

Someone suggested, “He better do more than just exercise if he plans to rematch Crawford.”

Lastly, another fan noted, “Errol need to fight at 160 lbs.”

Gervonta Davis’ coach Calvin Ford has explained why he is not keen on a fight between ‘Tank’ and Shakur Stevenson, after watching the latter pick up the WBC lightweight title in disappointing fashion.

Stevenson outpointed Edwin De Los Santos in November in what was meant to be Stevenson’s breakthrough bout to announce himself to the lightweight scene, but some viewers were left wanting more, despite doing enough to become three-division champion.

The negative style of the 26-year-old broke unwanted punch records and led to a heap of criticism, with a lack of activity in the fight having a direct impact on Stevenson’s popularity and star power.

As a result, Calvin Ford has admitted that a fight between Davis and Stevenson is not an idea that he is too fond of, telling Marko Boxing that he at least wants Tank’s opponents to attempt to ‘put on a show’ and fearing that if Stevenson fought that style against a power-puncher in De Los Santos, he would be even more dull against someone with the knockout record of Tank.

Gervonta Davis

Should Davis choose to remain at lightweight, a fight between the two Americans seems almost inevitable, with Stevenson chasing the belts in an attempt to become the undisputed champion.

However, Davis could instead opt to vacate his WBA title and move up to 140lbs to pursue Devin Haney and his WBC super-lightweight title.

Terence Crawford TKO 9 Errol Spence Jr.

Terence Crawford has been universally recognized as one of boxing’s best pound-for-pound fighters for the better part of the last decade.

But the one major knock on “Bud” was that a win against a highly reputable opponent was missing from his resume.

That all came to an end on July 29, when Crawford (40-0, 31 KOs) reeled in “The Big Fish,” Errol Spence Jr., and delivered a career-defining performance in a major showdown more than five years in the making.

The win resulted in Crawford collecting all of the welterweight belts and the prestigious Ring Magazine title. Being crowned the undisputed champion also resulted in Crawford’s elevation to No. 1 in The Ring’s pound-for-pound rankings.

Terence Crawford

The fight was considered somewhat of a 50-50 matchup going in, although Crawford was the slight betting favorite. But the Nebraska native delivered a one-sided beating that will be remembered for ages to come.

Crawford had a stunning, stone-cold showcase, knocking down the Texan once in the second, twice in the seventh, then mercifully forcing referee Harvey Dock to step in and stop the one-sided action in the ninth.

Crawford connected with 185 shots against Spence, who fired back 96 of his own but failed to evoke any concern from Crawford. Bud seemingly dominated every second of the contest from stern to stem.

The long-anticipated event was also a commercial success by all accounts, generating nearly 700,000 pay-per-view buys domestically and more than $21,000,000 in ticket sales at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

A sequel is in store for 2024. Spence exercised his contractual right to a rematch, but it remains to be seen at what weight a fight will be contested. Crawford and Spence have both stated that a move up to 154 pounds is imminent.

After years of pounding the table for high-profile fights, the 36-year-old Crawford is finally in an advantageous position to fight anyone at any weight he pleases.

Clashes against the likes of Ring Magazine 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo and undisputed super middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez could follow.

The three-division champion could quickly add world titles in other weight classes, should he turn in more prolific performances like he did against Spence.

Naoya Inoue KO 8 Stephen Fulton — Naoya Inoue’s tentative title for Performance of the Year lasted a mere four days until Terence Crawford took it away, but the Japanese star’s destruction of unified titlist Stephen Fulton during his 122-pound debut was utterly impressive and further added to his mystique and moniker of “The Monster.”

Devin Haney UD 12 Regis Prograis — Former undisputed lightweight champion Devin Haney made two-time 140-pound titlist Regis Prograis look like an outmatched novice, easily picking him apart to score the shoutout unanimous decision win in his junior welterweight debut. Haney outlanded Prograis 129 to 36 during the masterclass performance. Prograis, meanwhile, set a CompuBox record for the fewest total punches landed in a 12-round fight.

Teofimo Lopez Jr. UD 12 Josh Taylor — Teofimo Lopez Jr. was perceived to be a broken boxer heading into the fight against Josh Taylor, but he proved that he still has plenty left in the tank by beating the former undisputed junior welterweight champion. Lopez’s big win planted him back in Ring Magazine’s top 10 pound-for-pound list.

Jesse Rodriguez RTD 9 Sunny Edwards — If 2022 was considered Jesse Rodriguez’s coming-out party, 2023 was the year that proved the boxer billed as “Bam” will be hosting block parties across 112, 115 and 118 pounds for years to come. Rodriguez dominated Sunny Edwards to become a unified flyweight titlist, and for the first time, also cracked the top 10 of Ring Magazine’s pound-for-pound list.

Anthony Joshua seemed like a broken man. He ditched his original trainer, Rob McCracken, several years ago following a few lackluster performances. Since then, Joshua has been looking for answers. He traveled stateside and began looking at his options. When it was all said and done, he settled on Robert Garcia. That relationship, however, was transient, evaporating after just one fight, a loss to Oleksandr Usyk.

Joshua was back on the search again. There was something about Derrick James that Joshua enjoyed. He was the no-nonsense type and drilled into Joshua the basics and fundamentals day after day.

Ultimately, Joshua (27-3, 24 KOs) picked up back-to-back wins over Jermaine Franklin and Robert Helenius but it isn’t always about wins and losses. Sometimes, it’s about the way you look in the process.

For whatever reason, Joshua looked unnerved and unsure of himself in there. Still, he admitted that he enjoyed working under the former Trainer of the Year and looked forward to working with him again. But, prior to jumping into the ring with Otto Wallin recently, Joshua revealed that he was making another change.

Anthony Joshua

Ben Davison was chosen as the man to shout instructions from his corner. While they may have been together for just a single fight, Joshua looked like his old violent self, easily stopping Wallin in the fifth round.

Joshua and Davison may have gone from the dating phase to making things official as they’ll partner up again when Joshua takes on Francis Ngannou on March 8th.

When recently asked to explain why things between himself and Davison have gone smoothly, Joshua provided a succinct answer.

“The reason I was able to gel with Ben is because he doesn’t try to change your style,” Joshua told iFL TV.

Joshua isn’t the type to attack someone’s character. He keeps things bottled up and behind closed doors. He does, however, spend a ton of time reflecting.

The last handful of years were both a blur and bemusing. He doesn’t believe the trainers he had in the past were bad additions, but the constant need to tinker and play with his style made his head spin.

With Davison, it hasn’t been about the X’s and O’s but more so about perpetual reminders.

“I went to a stage where I was trying to change my style. A bit of back-foot boxing, box behind the jab, stick and move, not be explosive, control the pace. Stuff like that. But Ben was like, ‘that’s not your body type. You’re a f—— big unit. You’re explosive, go and knock f—— people out.”

Anthony Joshua hasn’t been guaranteed a mandatory world title shot if he beats Francis Ngannou in their crossover fight.

Former two-time heavyweight champion Joshua welcomes Ngannou back into the ring on March 8 after the ex-UFC champion’s stunning boxing debut against Tyson Fury. Ngannou dropped the heavyweight champion and only lost by one point in a controversial decision and will now look to win his first boxing fight against Joshua.

Joshua and Ngannou were told the winner of their fight will get a chance to fight either Fury or Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed belts. WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman isn’t seemingly on the same page as he told Gambling.com : “Anthony Joshua was first ranked by the WBC when he started as a professional and then he kept moving up.

“He was ranked inside the top five and then number 2 ranked when he received the opportunity to fight for another title [IBF]. He has had a sensational career and if he beats Francis Ngannou, then he is number one in the WBC while Francis Ngannou is number 10 so the winner will certainly be positioned for great things in the immediate future.”

Anthony Joshua

“The WBC already sanctioned Fury v Usyk and the rematch. We received the request and have already accepted a rematch if the promoters put it together so that’s where the WBC stands. If the promoters change their request for the rematch, we will certainly address it

Joshua and Ngannou sized each other up for the first time at a launch press conference in London earlier this month. Ngannou isn’t interested in fighting for a world title anytime soon and Joshua admitted he has put his quest to become a three-time heavyweight champion on hold for now.

“Every fight leads to somewhere, so this fight is my everything, my soul, my spirit, my mind, my body,” Joshua said. “We’ll see where it leads me but at the moment I’m not thinking about championship belts or anything other than Francis. We’re putting the belts on hold, I’m searching for greatness.”

 

Tyson Fury has admitted he only spent five weeks training for Francis Ngannou despite claiming his camp was three months long.

Heavyweight champion Fury controversially beat Ngannou last October despite being dropped in the crossover fight. The Brit got the nod by a single point on the judges’ scorecards with the damage he sustained delaying his undisputed clash against fellow champion Oleksandr Usyk, as they were expected to meet in December but now fight on February 17.

Fury told TNT Sports before the fight: “This is why I’m putting in a 12-week training camp instead of a six-week camp, which I have usually done for [Deontay] Wilder and [Dillian] Whyte.” Fury has now made clear that he was joking about training for three months whilst stating his training camp for Usyk will only be five weeks.

Fury flew out to Saudi Arabia on New Year’s Eve for his training camp and has been in the Middle East ever since. Despite butting heads with Usyk on numerous occasions, Fury has insisted there is no personal feud between the two whilst praising the Ukrainian for his faith in God.

Tyson Fury and Francis Ngannou

“I’ll bring in some southpaw left-handed fighters for sparring obviously, just the same stuff as usual. What can you do for a fighter? Can’t do much for me or him. It’s a boxing match, if he’s better than me he will beat me. If I’m better than him, I’ll beat him and that’s it. No more or less to it,” Fury said.

Tyson Fury will tell trainer SugarHill Steward ‘sod you’ if the instructions from his camp are failing to work against Oleksandr Usyk, father John Fury says. Fury Snr has been outspoken about Steward’s work with his son, believing the instructions given during the boxer’s narrow win over Francis Ngannou last year were “pathetic”.

Tyson Fury will tell his team to ‘sod off’ if their plan is not working, John Fury says (Image: Getty)

Tyson Fury will tell trainer SugarHill Steward ‘sod you’ if the instructions from his camp are failing to work against Oleksandr Usyk, father John Fury says. Fury Snr has been outspoken about Steward’s work with his son, believing the instructions given during the boxer’s narrow win over Francis Ngannou last year were “pathetic”.

Fury faces Usyk on February 17 and is preparing to defend his heavyweight titles. However, John has not been convinced by the team’s approach.

He believes Tyson is guaranteed to win once he “smells the coffee”, and has backed his son to come up with his own plan on the spot if the team’s instructions fail to deliver a better performance than they did against Ngannou.

 

“If he’s woken up and smelt the coffee, it’ll be a Tyson win. If he hasn’t, good luck to the other team. The best team and the best man will win on the night. Can I compare SugarHill and with what I’m seeing with the rest of the team, with Usyk? From the last showing, definitely not. Everyone is entitled to the benefit of the doubt,” Fury Snr told the Daily Star.

Tyson Fury faces Oleksandr Usyk on February 17, the winner becoming the first sole champion of the heavyweight division in over two decades. The man who almost ruined those plans has now given his prediction.

Francis Ngannou made his debut against Fury in October of 2023, dropping the heavyweight champion in the third round of ten and battling to a close loss on the cards.

Fans were shocked on two counts – impressed by Ngannou’s performance and left wondering if Fury’s best days were behind him. Many even changed their prediction for the already-signed Usyk bout.

Still, speaking to Queensberry Promotions, the MMA man turned pro boxer backed his former opponent to emerge as the next undisputed champion.

Fury will enter the ring the betting favourite, although Usyk is no stranger to upsetting the odds in the heavyweight division, most notably in his first fight with Anthony Joshua for the unified titles.

His late stoppage win over Daniel Dubois was impressive on paper, but many feel the Ukrainian once again showed a vulnerability to the body that Fury may be able to exploit.

The Brit, though, certainly didn’t inspire in his last contest with Ngannou, and the general verdict is he must prepare much more diligently to snatch three belts from Usyk and add them to his WBC.

Anthony Joshua is following in fellow Brit Tyson Fury’s footsteps by taking on the former UFC champion Francis Ngannou on March 8 and the latest onlooker to predict what might happen is Tim Bradley.

Joshua will be hoping to deal with Ngannou rather more comprehensively than Fury. That fight back in October was the big-hitting MMA star’s boxing debut and was arguably one of the best ever as he kept Fury on his toes and working hard for the full 10 rounds.

Despite hitting the canvas in the third, Fury rallied to a close split decision points win. Ngannou now goes in with Joshua, who will be fighting for the fourth time in 12 months.

He has picked up rebuild wins over Jermaine Franklin, Robert Helenius and Otto Wallin that have all got him back into good form and backed by many people to lift a world title for the third time at some point soon.

Speaking to ProBox TV, Bradley broke down the contest.

The reward for the winner of this fight could well be a battle with the newly crowned undisputed heavyweight king once Fury and Oleksandr Usyk have settled their differences on February 17, with Joshua picking Usyk for the win.