Former heavyweight champion is back in action on Saturday knowing a third straight loss would signal the end of his career

As Anthony Joshua walks to the ring at the 02 in London on Saturday night, to face the relatively limited American Jermaine Franklin, it will be more than two years and three months since he last had his hand raised in victory. In December 2020, on a bleak winter night in the midst of Covid and in front of a sparse crowd of a thousand socially distanced fans, Joshua bludgeoned Kubrat Pulev to earn a ninth-round stoppage win.

Despite lockdown restrictions, Joshua left Wembley Arena on a high as he retained his IBF, WBA and WBO world heavyweight titles. It seemed certain, then, that he would soon fight Tyson Fury, the WBC belt-holder, for the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Yotam Ottolenghi’s recipes for 30-minute meals

Smoked mackerel on couscous with horseradish yoghurt and spicy oil, a stir-fry…

Tributes pour in for mother of 13 who died of Covid

Sonia Partridge, 35, died in hospital as England registers highest death rate…

Ukraine deputy minister sacked for alleged theft of $400,000

Infrastructure deputy Vasyl Lozinskyi detained after allegedly siphoning money from winter aid…

From Hogwarts to inter-galactic space: how Alfred Enoch’s career rocketed

He gained cult status in Harry Potter, despite not even wanting to…