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Anthony Joshua is set to get a shot at becoming the undisputed heavyweight champion by facing the winner of the rematch between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk, according to promoter Eddie Hearn.

In an interview with The Sun, Hearn stated, “I expect the winner of the December fight to fight Anthony Joshua if he wins in September. There’s no decision yet made on the opponent, there are three or four in the mix. But yeah, that’s the absolute plan.”

Joshua, who last fought in March when he brutally knocked out Francis Ngannou in Saudi Arabia, is expected to take on Daniel Dubois in September at Wembley Stadium. Dubois recently won the IBF ‘interim’ belt by stopping Filip Hrgovic.

“The first priority is to regain the world heavyweight title and obviously undisputed’s always been the dream. So I think we’re two fights away from becoming undisputed. But, we’ve got to win them,” Hearn added.

In their initial meeting last month, Usyk defeated Fury via split decision to become the first boxer since Lennox Lewis in 1999 to unify the heavyweight division. The Ukrainian’s victory saw him claim the WBC title from Fury, adding to his WBA (Super), WBO, IBF, and IBO belts.

According to a report by Dailymail, promoter Frank Warren confirmed that discussions are ongoing for a potential Joshua-Dubois clash, stating, “Daniel Dubois proved all his doubters wrong and won the IBF ‘interim’ belt. He hopefully will be fighting AJ in the autumn, we’re working on that. He did well. We would love it to be in the UK, they’re two Brits, it would be a great fight to put on at Wembley.”

Should Joshua overcome Dubois, he will be in line to face either Fury or Usyk in a bid to become the undisputed heavyweight champion, even if the Gypsy King gains revenge on the Ukrainian to set up a potential trilogy.

World heavyweight champion, Oleksandr Usyk, has compared Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury after beating both fighters tagging the British-Nigerian the classier fighter of the two, PUNCH Sports Extra reports.

Usyk won the undisputed heavyweight world titles last month when he beat Fury in their historic fight. Their rematch was expected to take place in October but has since been pushed back to December 21.

The Ukrainian has two wins over Joshua as he won the unified belts from the 34-year-old in September 2021 and defended them in their rematch the following year.

Usyk gave a funny comparison when talking about his wins against Joshua and Fury as he told Three Knockdown Rule, “Anthony Joshua has classy boxing.

“Greedy Belly, my friend Tyson Fury. It’s like sparkling water, when you open it without shaking it’s good. If you shake it, it [blows]. Sparkling water is Tyson Fury and still water is Anthony Joshua. Tyson’s arms are like two metres, like a rope.”

Usyk admitted he doesn’t want to think about boxing at the moment after spending eight months preparing for Fury. Their fight was pushed back several times and cancelled on just days notice when Fury was cut above his eye in February.

Usyk surprisingly snubbed Fury whilst revealing the hardest puncher he has ever faced saying, “I would say toughest fight, yes, but I think biggest punch, no.

“Derek Chisora, very tough guy. With Derek, I don’t remember which hand if it was left or fight but I would block it and it would be like a baseball bat. It was very dangerous.”

Usyk is expected to lose his undisputed status and be stripped of his IBF belt in the coming weeks so the title can be on the line for Joshua’s UK return in September. The Ukrainian’s manager disagrees with the governing body’s decision and wants to see all four belts on the line again for Usyk and Fury’s second fight.

“We’re waiting for a decision to be made,” Klimas told Boxing Scene.

“I think it’s more important for Tyson Fury now. Oleksandr, of course, is a two-time unified champion and if the next fight is just for the three belts, I don’t think it’s going to be fair for either of the two guys, either Tyson or for Oleksandr.”

Tyson Fury goes back to the drawing board after being handed his first loss by Oleksandr Usyk and then using his contracted rematch clause to book the second fight.

Fury put his WBC belt on the line against Usyk’s IBF, WBA and WBO to crown the first undisputed champion since 1999. It was the Ukrainian technician who took it on the cards after scoring a significant knockdown in the ninth. He becomes only the second man to hold all belts at cruiserweight and then heavyweight.

Someone who may look to emulate in the future is current 200lbs champ Jai Opetaia. He spoke to Seconds out about the fight and what Fury can do in the rematch to change the result.

“I think he’s just gotta be more active. He’s gotta want to win and just go for it a bit more. You can let him steal the rounds like he was.

I don’t think [Fury] disrespected [Usyk’s power], but I wasn’t expecting [Usyk] to hurt him like the way he did. I was expecting it to be a full-on boxing match the whole time, a lot more punches to be thrown.”

Opetaia was providing southpaw sparring for Fury briefly before the initial fight date. When his undercard bought against orthodox Mairis Briedis, he left camp to focus on his own preparation. The card was then rescheduled due to a cut the Brit suffered during rounds in the gym.

With the December 21 date now in the diary, Opetaia said he would be more than happy to work with Fury again.

“Yeah, man, if they need me in there… Obviously I’m gonna have to work [for] who I’m fighting against if it’s on the same card. If I’m not fighting on the same card, I’m happy to go in there and help out. It’s always a good experience to be around other world class athletes.”

Turki Alalshikh has promised a ‘bigger and better’ undercard for the rematch, so Opetaia is a natural choice given his fan-friendly style.

What next for AJ? Where does Deontay Wilder fit into the landscape? We take a quick look at the current heavyweight picture ahead of another big weekend of boxing; the live action continues on Sky Sports on June 15 when Chris Billam-Smith faces Richard Riakporhe at Selhurst Park

The modern heavyweight division is at the peak of its powers as it parades a long-awaited undisputed champion while pitting some of boxing’s marquee names against one another.

The belts belong to a worthy ruler in Oleksandr Usyk, behind whom lies a Tyson Fury-spearheaded chasing pack of both established and upcoming heavyweight challengers seeking to leave a dent in knockout proceedings.

Fury and Usyk II

Let’s start with the top of the heavyweight tree. Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury. So nice, they are having to do it twice.

Usyk completed a mission spanning two decades in Saudi Arabia earlier this month when he defeated Fury by split decision to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era and the first since Lennox Lewis beat Evander Holyfield in 1999. It followed up supremacy at cruiserweight to further cement his status as one of the greatest fighters of his generation.

The masterful Ukrainian weathered a Fury storm over a gruelling first half of the fight before finding his breakthrough at the midway point and following up with a stunning ninth round, in which he was seconds away from stopping the rocked Gypsy King.

It had been public knowledge that a rematch clause was included in the contract, with it being announced this week that the pair will meet again on December 21. Win again and Usyk would have nothing more to prove. As for Fury, there may be one more AJ-shaped domino to fall, regardless of the result later this year.

AJ awaits… but with who?

An explosive Anthony Joshua has reignited his knockout exploits and clobbered his way back into title contention after shaking off the effects of back-to-back defeats to Usyk.

Joshua will be in attendance to watch Filip Hrgovic and Daniel Dubois fight as part of this Saturday’s 5 vs 5 event in Saudi Arabia, the winner awaiting as a potential opponent for the former unified world champion later this year. That, however, could also depend on whether Usyk is forced to vacate the IBF belt, for which Joshua and one of Hrgovic or Dubois would likely be in line to contend.

The Olympic champion is riding the momentum of his stunning knockout victory over Francis Ngannou, having also beaten Robert Helenius and Otto Wallin in statement stoppages to close out 2023. Hrgovic is a perfect 17-0 as a professional after knocking out Mark de Mori in the first round in December, while Dubois is 20-2 following his 10th-round stoppage win over Jarrell Miller late last year.

Joshua will take either, especially should a chance to become a three-time world champion arise. But he will also feel he has larger fish to fry.

And then… Fury?

If the ‘Battle of Britain’ is ever going to happen, 2025 feels like the window. Both Joshua and Fury have long-maintained their desire to deliver fans one of the biggest heavyweight dust-ups in British boxing history, but so far numerous attempts to make the fight have fallen agonisingly short.

Joshua and Fury were seemingly set to meet in 2021 after reportedly signing the contract, before Fury was ordered to meet Deontay Wilder in the third fight of their dramatic trilogy. The two then verbally agreed to fight following Joshua’s rematch defeat to Usyk in 2022, before a fight failed to materialise as the Londoner enjoyed a period of recovery.

Joshua reiterated his intentions to face Fury after demolishing former UFC heavyweight champion Ngannou earlier this year, where Fury had been watching on in Saudi Arabia ahead of his fight against Usyk, in the build-up to which Fury himself would allude to facing Joshua next once. It feels as close as ever, but there is first a matter of the undisputed rematch to contend with later this year.

Top Rank CEO Bob Arum recently told Sky Sports that Fury remains keen on fighting Joshua in 2025, highlighting Wembley Stadium as the ideal venue. We will see.

Where does Wilder fit in?

It feels like something of a climax moment for the current crop of heavyweight frontrunners as challengers seek to cling onto their last hopes of staying in the mix. Deontay Wilder is among the aforementioned.

 

The Bronze Bomber is under no illusions as to what might be at stake for him when he takes on Zhilei Zhang in a battle of devastating punch power this weekend. Lose, and that might be it. Win, and win in style, and a potential showdown with Anthony Joshua potentially resurfaces having been scuppered by his shock loss to Joseph Parker.

A punishing trilogy with Fury combined with a long period of inactivity had Wilder looking a shade of his destructive self in a unanimous decision loss to the New Zealander, as many cast doubt over his chances of overcoming the threat of Zhang. But that right hand has built a reputation deserving of the utmost respect, and can never be written off.

Top Rank boss Arum identified Wilder as a possible next opponent for Jared Anderson as they look to progress the promising career of the young rising American star. But beating Zhang is no formality, and they know it.

The Parker party goes on

Hello, resurgent Joseph Parker. Rarely is the heavyweight landscape blessed with simplicity or logic, and now here is Parker to throw yet another spanner in the works as he vies for another world title shot.

The 32-year-old upset Wilder with a career-best performance in December to announce his revival, before overcoming a knockdown against Zhang to claim a majority decision win that positions him as the WBO mandatory challenger.

Parker has taken to social media to call out both Joshua and Dillian Whyte in recent months, eager to capitalise on what is showing the traits of being his prime. By virtue of both his form and still young age, you have to feel he is on his way to another title opportunity.

Kabayel’s rise

Agit Kabayel might be one to watch. The German has just knocked out both Arslanbek Makhmudov and Frank Sanchez to improve his record to 25-0, the latter of which had served as a WBC final eliminator that leaves him on the brink of fighting for a world title.

Logic would point towards a shot at Fury or Usyk once their rematch is settle; logic doesn’t always prevail in boxing, particularly given the likelihood of Fury and Usyk’s careers looking elsewhere, be it Joshua or retirement.

What else is going on?

Joe Joyce has ambitions of relaunching a late surge towards the world stage when he takes on Derek Chisora this summer amid his fightback from successive defeats to Zhang. Martin Bakole sits as the No 1 challenger in the WBA rankings, while Dillian Whyte remains on a comeback trail of his own.

Interesting storylines continue to emerge at bridgerweight as Lawrence Okolie closes in on the heavyweight division following his emphatic first-round knockout of Lukasz Rozanski in Poland. The former cruiserweight world champion is seemingly in line to face mandatory bridgerweight challenger Kevin Lerena, but appears destined to make the step up.

And while Frazer Clarke and Fabio Wardley await news of their next steps following a fight of the year contender, 19-year-old Moses Itauma is just getting started as one of the most frightening prospects in boxing with ambitions of becoming the youngest ever heavyweight world champion.

Tyson Fury is set to clash with Oleksandr Usyk to decide the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis in 1999.

The pair will do battle on Feb. 17, with fellow heavyweight boxers Anthony Joshua and Francis Ngannou set to face off the following month, on Mar. 8. Both bouts with take place in Saudi Arabia.

Anthony Joshua

According to Joshua’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, depending on the results of the two fights, fans may be in store for the “biggest boxing match in the history of the sport.”

Hearn has come under fire from Lewis for scheduling Joshua vs. Ngannou. Prior to the former UFC champion’s fight with Fury in October 2023, the Matchroom Boxing chairman labeled a potential clash between ‘The Predator’ and ‘AJ’ as a gimmick fight.

But after a fantastic showing against ‘The Gypsy King’, Hearn believes that Ngannou has deserved to remain in the top echelon of heavyweight boxing, atleast for now.

He was recently interviewed by Boxing Social, where he commented on the potential winners of Fury vs. Usyk and Joshua vs. Ngannou facing off. Hearn said this:

Deontay Wilder is one of two men to have fought Tyson Fury three times. It goes without saying then that he’s one of the best-placed to analyse the Brit’s upcoming fight against Oleksandr Usyk.

The two heavyweight champions will come to blows on February 17 in Saudi Arabia, the winner leaving the ring as the first undisputed titlist in the division since Lennox Lewis.

Fury secured his WBC belt back in 2020 following a draw in the first bout with Wilder. He would beat him once more in 2021 to move ahead and look to compete for the other major belts.

Now that he has the opportunity to do so against unified champ Usyk, Wilder doesn’t make him the favourite. The American KO artist told Instant Casino that it was a pick’em fight, but Usyk’s speed could swing it.

tyson fury and oleksandr usyk

“It’s a 50-50 fight, anything can happen. People look at Fury’s size as a major advantage but that doesn’t necessarily mean nothing because Usyk can stay low to the ground and because Fury’s so tall it’s going to be difficult to reach down. If Usyk can get in and out real fast, I feel speed could be a major factor.”

Most of all, Wilder just wants to fight the winner and become undisputed himself.

“For me it’s 50-50 and I’m glad it’s finally happening so we get all the belts in one place. That’s going to make it easier for me to fight for the unification of those belts, so I won’t have to fight different champions and have champions running away because of what he’s seen me do to the last opponent.”

Fury and Usyk have a rematch clause, so Wilder will have to keep winning between now and then to earn his shot. Next up is Joseph Parker on December 23, potentially followed by Anthony Joshua in 2024 should he also win on the card.