Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Daniel Jacobs is on but controversy lingers

Arizona proceeded with plans for the Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Daniel Jacobs card without any unforeseen issues at a meeting Wednesday.

PHOENIX – The Arizona State Boxing & MMA Commission proceeded with plans for the Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Daniel Jacobs card without any unforeseen issues related to the licensing of Chavez at a meeting Wednesday.

Chavez, who faces Jacobs in a super middleweight bout Friday at Talking Stick Arena on DAZN, was cleared to fight Tuesday after a Nevada district judge granted him an injunction, lifting his suspension by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Chavez already had been granted a pending license by the Arizona Commission, a three-member regulatory board which approved the Matchroom-promoted card at its Nov. 18 meeting.

If the Nevada judge had ruled against Chavez and upheld the suspension, it’s likely that the license would have been withdrawn. Under the Muhammad Ali Act, federal law mandates that one state’s suspension be honored nationwide. An item on the Arizona Commission’s agenda Wednesday indicated it was prepared for that possibility. Possible action was mentioned regarding the main event, including an option to move into a private Executive Session if necessary.

It wasn’t necessary.

Yet controversy lingers.

Chavez Jr. was suspended after he allegedly refused to submit to a drug test while training at the Wild Club Boxing Club in Los Angeles in late October. First, Chavez said he was asked for a test sample by someone who failed to show him credentials proving he was a Voluntary Anti-Doping Association representative. Then he said he did not believe he had to undergo the test because he had yet to sign for the fight, although the bout had already been scheduled for Las Vegas.

That’s when Matchroom’s Eddie Hearn moved the card to Arizona. Then the Nevada Commission upheld its suspension of Chavez Jr. at a meeting in mid-November. Chavez Jr. then filed his lawsuit.

The Nevada Commission, angry at Hearn’s decision to move the card, has threatened his promotional license. Hearn is using the Arizona license held by Phoenix-based Iron Boy Promotions to promote Friday’s card. According to the Arizona Commission, Matchroom has applied for a license. The U.K.-based promoter plans to stage more cards in the state in 2020.

“We have no quarrel with Nevada,’’ Scott Fletcher, Chairman of the Arizona Commission, said Wednesday. “We share a border.’’

But there is a quarrel between Top Rank’s Bob Arum and Hearn. Arum ripped into Hearn during a session with reporters last weekend while promoting Terence Crawford’s fight against Egidijus Kavaliauskas.

Hearn, Arum said, is “in a strong position in the U.K. where the fans really buy tickets, but he’s falling on his ass in the United States, because he doesn’t understand the market and says stupid things. And what he’s doing now with Chavez, putting himself at risk with the Nevada Commission, is senseless.”

Hearn, of course, read the comments. And, of course, he fired back at a news conference Tuesday after the court ruling in favor of Chavez Jr.

Hearn took the podium at Talking Stick and thanked Chavez for enduring what he called “an ordeal.’’ He thanked Chavez’s attorney.

“I also want to thank the haters,’’ Hearn said. “Thank you, Bob Arum. I saw his comments.’’

Hearn accused Arum of also “shopping” a controversial card from one state to another. Hearn cited Antonio Margarito. Margarito couldn’t fight in California after he was found to have used altered hand wraps before losing to Shane Mosley on Jan. 24, 2009 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center. While under suspension in California, Margarito fought his next bout in Mexico. Then he was licensed in Texas for his loss to Manny Pacquiao on July 23, 2010 on the Dallas Cowboys home field in Arlington.

Arum also argued that the Nevada Commission should begin drug testing once a fight is announced.

“Once a fight is announced, the Nevada Commission has jurisdiction to test a fighter,’’ Arum said. “A lot of fighters take performance enhancing drugs and then clear their system by the press conference, so if you wait until the press conference, you will miss that they took performance enhancing drugs.’’

Hearn said that Chavez is being tested, but not by VADA. Instead, Hearn said, the tests have been conducted by Drug Free Sports, which conducts testing for the NFL.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. granted license in Arizona, will fight Daniel Jacobs

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. has been granted a license to fight in Arizona, which means he’ll face Daniel Jacobs on Friday in Phoenix.

PHOENIX – The Arizona State Boxing and Mixed Martial Arts Commission has granted Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. a license, allowing him to fight Danny Jacobs on Friday night at Talking Stick Arena on DAZN.

Francisco Meneses Jr., the Commission’s executive director, told Boxing Junkie Tuesday that the three-member regulatory board voted to license Chavez.

“He has a license,’’ Meneses said.

According to an unsourced report from The Athletic on Twitter, Chavez was granted an injunction by a Nevada court, lifting his suspension by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Chavez sued Nevada after it upheld his suspension for refusing to submit to a drug test at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif. in late October. Chavez said then that a VADA testing representative did not show his credentials. He also said he didn’t think he had to submit to the test because he had yet to sign for the super middleweight fight.

The Arizona Commission is scheduled to meet Wednesday. Meneses said Chavez is not required to appear. Chavez and Jacobs appeared together at the Portland Trail Blazers-Phoenix Suns game Monday night at Talking Stick. The weigh-in is scheduled for Thursday.

The Matchroom-promoted card has generated a lot of controversy. The Nevada Commission threatened to suspend Eddie Hearn’s license after he moved the card to Phoenix in the wake of the Chavez suspension. The bout had been scheduled for Las Vegas.

Mikey Garcia joins forces with Matchroom Boxing and DAZN

Mikey Garcia has agreed to a deal with Matchroom Boxing and DAZN, and is expected to return to the ring on Feb. 29.

Mikey Garcia celebrated a birthday Sunday with an announcement that he has a deal with Matchroom Boxing and DAZN that will include his return to the ring on Feb. 29.

Garcia, now 32, did not disclose the terms of the deal or who he will fight, although multiple media reports indicate that former junior welterweight and welterweight titleholder Jessie Vargas is a leading candidate.

“I am happy to announce my return to the ring for February 29,” Garcia said in a statement. “I am eager to make my return and grow my legacy. I look forward to working with Matchroom Boxing USA and DAZN, and I want to thank all my fans for the continued support. Fight details will be announced soon, and I can’t wait to be back in the ring.”

Garcia (39-1, 30 KOs) hasn’t fought since he jumped up to welterweight and lost a one-sided decision to Errol Spence Jr. on March 16 at AT&T Stadium, the Dallas Cowboys’ home field in Arlington, Tex.

Garcia has held belts in four divisions – featherweight, junior lightweight, lightweight and junior welterweight. He was leading pound-for-pound contender before the Spence loss.

The younger brother of veteran trainer Robert Garcia had been a free agent since he and former promoter Top Rank agreed to split in April 2016.

Matchroom’s Eddie Hearn and Garcia are expected to talk about the deal at a news conference Wednesday in Los Angeles.

“I’ve been talking to Mikey for over a year now, and I’m so happy to welcome him to the team,” Hearn said. “Mikey is a standout star, and I’m looking forward to working with him on big fights moving forward. He will return to the ring on Feb. 29, and we will be announcing the opponent and venue shortly.”

Vergil Ortiz Jr. puts punctuation mark on remarkable 2019

Vergil Ortiz Jr. scored a fifth-round TKO of Brad Solomon on Friday in Indio Calif., the welterweight prospect’s fourth victory in 2019.

It’s hard to know exactly when a prospect becomes a contender, but Vergil Ortiz Jr. might have taken that step with a definitive stoppage Friday night that left him with a perfect record in 2019 and limitless possibilities in the New Year.

Ortiz (15-0, 15 KOs) scored a fifth-round TKO of Brad Solomon at Fantasy Springs in Indio Calif. Solomon (28-2, 9 KOs) used a mix of tactics in an apparent attempt at forcing the young Ortiz into doing something he can’t.

But Ortiz, a 21-year-old welterweight from Dallas, continued to show that there’s nothing he can’t do.

Solomon, of Douglasville, Georgia, stayed away in the opening moments. Then he moved forward, throwing punches. But it was all to no avail against the multi-skilled Ortiz, a Golden Boy-promoted fighter who knocked down Solomon in the fourth round with a jab and finished him with two knockdowns in the fifth.

“He was pretty difficult to figure out,’’ Ortiz told DAZN.  “He kept me at bay and really made me use my brain. I had to figure out the range. I just had to use my smarts.’’

The stoppage was Ortiz’s fourth in 2019. It was also his third straight of a fighter who had never been stopped before. He finished Mauricio Herrera in three rounds on May 5. He stopped Antonio Orozco in six on Aug 10.

Stopping Ortiz in 2020 might be hard to do.

Anthony Joshua: Andy Ruiz Jr. should get back to work, not make excuses

Anthony Joshua said Andy Ruiz Jr. should now do what it takes to answer his critics, rather than make excuses.

Andy Ruiz Jr. said after he was embarrassed by Anthony Joshua in their rematch Saturday that he didn’t train properly for the fight.

That might or might not be true – although it apparently was – but excuses don’t go over well in boxing. Joshua, who regained his titles by a wide decision in Saudi Arabia, made light of Ruiz’s comments but they obviously didn’t sit well with him.

“I would have loved to have trained the way Andy trained,” joked Joshua, speaking on ITV’s Good Morning Britain. “I would’ve loved that, but that’s not the way of a champion. Andy can say all these things, but he knew he had a fight, and he knew the best way to prepare.

“Unfortunately it didn’t go his way and I’m sure he can make those changes, and learning life’s lessons come in different forms. And Andy’s was in the form of a loss as well (as mine). He knows his mistakes, whatever they were or maybe they’re excuses. He just needs to go out there and get it right and come back again.”

Ruiz overwhelmed in their first fight, in June, putting Joshua down four times and stopping him in seven rounds in a stunning upset to take the titles.

Anthony Joshua relished his ability to prove his doubters wrong on Saturday in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

Afterward, evidently, he was more interested in living the highlife of someone who had just gained great fame and fortune instead maintaining the life of a professional boxer.

Ruiz weighed in Friday at 283.7 pounds, roughly 15 more than in their first fight.

“We started training too late,” he said. “I don’t want to say that the three months of partying and celebrating affected me but to tell you the truth, it kind of did.”

Meanwhile, Joshua, obviously determined to save his career, worked hard in training camp. He came in about 10 pounds lighter than in the first fight, which presumably made him quicker and more agile.

He thoroughly outboxed Ruiz to regain his titles and prestige, proving wrong those people who thought he’d never recover from the June beating. Now, he says, it’s Ruiz’s job to prove his critics wrong.

“No excuses for the last time,” Joshua said, “and I don’t want anybody to write Andy off. He’s a great former champion, and he done well, and he beat me fair and square. Sometimes you just have to recheck yourself, and that comes in many different forms, and mine was in a loss, and this time I was really concentrated on my job.

“I just didn’t listen to these so-called boxing experts who claimed that I wouldn’t be able to reclaim my belts. It’s dangerous going straight into a rematch – not many heavyweights have been able to reclaim their belts – but I believed in my team. I kept my same team that everyone told me to get rid of, and I feel like loyalty proves strength and we went out there and proved how good we really are now.”

Good, bad worse: Anthony Joshua brilliant, Andy Ruiz Jr. a disaster

Anthony Joshua entered the ring with an excellent game plan and executed it perfectly to dominate Andy Ruiz Jr. on Saturday.

GOOD

Well done.

Anthony Joshua answered a lot of questions with a brilliant game plan and superb execution Saturday night in Saudi Arabia, thus resurrecting a career that briefly went off the rails and leaving Andy Ruiz Jr. to answer his own questions.

The last time we saw Joshua he was a beaten man, having been stopped and (borrowing a word used by promoter Eddie Hearn) humiliated by Ruiz in June. On Saturday, he owned Ruiz from beginning to end.

Joshua and trainer Rob McCracken should be commended for their game plan – jab, move, stay out of trouble, take back what’s yours. The fact Joshua was 10 pounds lighter this time played into the strategy; he moved like a middleweight. He obviously put in the work. And Joshua showed no signs of a damaged psyche from the first fight. He was focused, confident, determined.

A particularly heavy Ruiz really never had a chance. He lost a near-shutout decision.

Some critics will suggest that Joshua was too careful, although he did throw a number of hard right hands and a few hooks in attempt to hurt Ruiz. They might point to Lennox Lewis, a fellow Briton who did to his two conquerors what they did to him – knocked their asses out.

That’s not a fair assessment. Joshua learned in a way more damaging than Lewis experienced – Lewis was stopped, not beat up – that Ruiz is a dangerous heavyweight. He made adjustments to minimize that danger and win rounds, which is how the fight played out.

It might not have been as exciting as Lewis knocking out Oliver McCall and Hasim Rahman but it was just as thorough. Brilliant.

 

BAD

Anthony Joshua right) kept a safe distance from Andy Ruiz Jr. much of the fight. Too safe? Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

Again, it’s difficult to find fault in Joshua’s performance. The man dominated an opponent who had dominated him only six months earlier.

One thing was missing, though: It wasn’t much fun to watch. Joshua supporters will minimize the entertainment factor but others will ask with some legitimacy, “Where was the action?” Entertaining fights are the result of risks, genuine attempts to score a knockout, ebbs and flows, all of which were missing on Saturday.

If that’s not important to you, that’s fine. If it is, that’s understandable.

Joshua turned in a fine performance, not an exciting one. He demonstrated that he could come back from extreme adversity, which says a lot about him. He just didn’t make as strong a statement as Lewis, who said with his performances in his rematches with McCall and Rahman that, “I’m going to do to you what you did to me” and then did it.

That’s special stuff. Joshua was impressive, too, only in a less compelling way.

I doubt Joshua has turned into a safety-first boxer long term even though he said in the ring immediately after the fight that he wanted to “show that the sweet science of this lovely sport is about hitting and not getting hit.”

I believe he and McCracken thought – rightly – that he could regain his titles and the clout that goes with them with a deliberate strategy against Ruiz. That’s done. If he had any demons lingering from the first fight, they’re gone.

Going forward, Joshua, one of the biggest punchers in history, probably will be a hybrid. He’ll be more cautious than he was in the past – he never wants to endure the trauma of a brutal loss again – but he’ll fight aggressively enough to score many more knockouts. In other words, more thrills lie ahead.

 

WORSE

Joshua could only console a disappointed Ruiz after dominating him. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

Well, it looks as if Ruiz might be another Buster Douglas.

Douglas is known both as the fighter who upset then-unbeaten Mike Tyson and the one who mailed it in for his first defense, against Evander Holyfield. Douglas came in 14½ pounds heavier for Holyfield than he weighed for Tyson. He was prepared neither physically nor mentally. Thus, he lost his title in three rounds.

Ruiz weighed roughly 15 pounds more than he did in the first fight with Joshua, which suggests he didn’t put in the necessary work beforehand. He was focused on the hoopla that followed his stunning upset of Joshua, not taking the steps necessary to build on his victory. He reportedly starting training camp much later than trainer Manny Robles wanted him to.

I believe the version of Joshua we saw on Saturday probably would’ve beaten even a fit Ruiz. However, the Mexican-American made his task much more difficult by letting his weight get away from him.

As a result, he cheated himself out of an opportunity to take a step toward becoming an enduring champion. And he cheated the fans, who had reason to expect a similar version of the fighter who shocked Joshua at Madison Square Garden.

Of course, Ruiz isn’t finished. He’s only 30. He said after the fight that if he gets a chance to fight Joshua again, “I’ll be in the best shape of my life.” It might be too late for that; there are no guarantees that there will ever be a third meeting.

Ruiz will get more big fights, though. We’ll see whether he learned a lesson from what can only be described as a disaster on Saturday night.

Anthony Joshua uses his smarts to turn tables on Andy Ruiz Jr.

Anthony Joshua, one of the biggest punchers ever, used his brain and athleticism to turn the tables on Andy Ruiz Jr. on Saturday.

Sometimes it’s better to be smart than sensational.

Anthony Joshua, one of the biggest-punching heavyweights ever, turned into safety-first, stick-and-move boxer against the fighter who knocked him out six months ago. The result wasn’t exciting to watch but it couldn’t have been more effective.

A trimmed down, nimble Joshua essentially jabbed his way to a near-shutout decision over a 283.7-pound Andy Ruiz Jr. on Saturday night in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia, to regain the three heavyweight titles he lost to Ruiz in June. The scores were 118-110, 118-110 and 119-109. Boxing Junkie scored it 119-109.

“Look, this is about boxing,” Joshua said in the ring afterward. “I’m used to knocking guys out. You know what I’m saying? I realized I hurt the man (in the first fight) and got caught coming in. I gave the man credit. There were no excuses, right?

“… I wanted to put on a great boxing masterclass and show that the sweet science of this lovely sport is hitting and not getting hit.”

Anthony Joshua (right) built his impressive victory over Andy Ruiz Jr. with a superb left jab Saturday in Saudi Arabia. AP Photo / Hassan Ammar

Joshua (23-1, 21 knockouts) was beaten up and embarrassed in his first fight with Ruiz, who put the Adonis-like Englishman down four times and stopped him the seventh round at Madison Square Garden in New York.

That raised many questions about him. Did he have a weak chin? It held up Saturday. Did he suffer psychological damage the first time around? If so, it wasn’t evident. What could he do to turn the tables? We found out on Saturday.

And Ruiz (33-2, 22 KOs) did his part to help Joshua, coming in extra-flabby, which he said afterward hindered his efforts to chase down a quick-footed foe.

Joshua essentially won the fight by jabbing and moving, which made it next extremely difficult for a frustrated Ruiz to get close enough to do damage. And when Ruiz did manage to get inside, Joshua generally clinched until referee Luis Pabon separated them.

Joshua landed some power shots, although none hurt Ruiz. The same goes for Ruiz, who connected on a few big punches — particularly later in the fight — but none that wobbled Joshua as they did in the first fight.

To be sure, this fight wasn’t about power punching. It was about a fit, hungry former champion with an excellent game plan who made an out-of-shape opponent look foolish with his skill and athleticism.

Joshua landed some power shots but he won the fight with his brain, not his brawn. AP Photo / Hassan Ammar

So focused was Joshua that on the rare occasions he did engage Ruiz, thereby placing himself in danger, he calmly but quickly used his feet to back out of trouble. He was in full control.

That was the pattern of the fight from beginning to end. It never really changed.

“It’s all about preparation,” Joshua said. “… Careers are all about experience. There’s no losing or winning, just creating great memories in this game that we all love. I took my ‘L’ and bounced back. Anyone can do it.

“Life is a roller coaster. What did you want me to do? Give up? I heard a man say I should retire. C’mon man, I love this sport.”

Joshua, standing in a crowd in the ring, then looked Ruiz’s way. “Andy,” he said, “are you ready to retire?” Ruiz responded, “Uh, no.” The loser then pulled Joshua’s arm and the mic to his face. “Who wants to see a third fight?,” the now-former champion bellowed.

Some might argue that Ruiz didn’t earn a rubber match. He came in 15-plus pounds heavier than he weighed in their first fight, which suggested to everyone that he didn’t train properly for the rematch.

He admitted as much afterward.

“I think I didn’t prepare how I should have,” he said. “I gained too much weight. But I don’t want to give no excuses. He won, he boxed me around. You know what? If we do a third fight, you best believe I’ll get in the f—ing best shape, be in the best shape of my life.

“(The extra weight) kind of affected me. I thought I’d feel stronger, I thought I’d feel better. The next fight I’ll be more prepared.”

A frustrated Andy Ruiz Jr., said his extra weight slowed him down in the fight. Nick Potts / PA via AP

What’s the next fight for Joshua, who as champion again can call his shots?

Yes, one option would be Ruiz. The winner of the projected fight between Deontay Wilder, who holds the fourth heavyweight belt, and Tyson Fury would be another, much more lucrative possibility.

Joshua and Co. weren’t tipping their hand at all after the fight Saturday. Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, was asked about the future.

“The future plans are to celebrate,” he said. “Celebrate, and celebrate hard. They wrote him off. He had to come back from humiliation at Madison Square Garden. Tonight he’s the governor, the governor of the division, a two-time heavyweight champion of the world.

“… We’re coming home tomorrow night. Heathrow, we’re landing. It’s going to be a hell of a flight home.”

 

Jermall Charlo and his bleak future at middleweight

Titleholder Jermall Charlo may be the most talented fighter in the stacked middleweight division. The problem? He has yet to prove it.

OPINION

Titleholder Jermall Charlo may be the most talented fighter in the stacked middleweight division. The problem? He has yet to prove it. And when he takes on Dennis Hogan on Saturday night at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, he won’t be any closer to doing so.

Both fighters made weight today. Charlo weighed in at 159¾ pounds and Hogan, with plenty of room to spare, at 158½ pounds.

Of course, Hogan (28-2-1, 7 knockouts) is a career junior middleweight who is making his debut at the 160-pound limit. That, in a nutshell, should tell you how difficult it has been for Charlo to match up with the top fighters at middleweight; he needed to entice a junior middleweight to step up as an opponent.

Granted, Hogan, an Irishman who resides in Australia, is coming off a controversial loss to Jaime Munguia in a match he appeared to have done enough to win. Hogan’s team immediately pursued a rematch, but Munguia’s brain trust had other ideas. Still, putting forth a convincing effort against a defensively porous fighter like Munguia (perhaps one of the most overrated titleholders in recent memory) is one thing; doing it against a fighter of Charlo’s caliber is an altogether different proposition.

Kevin Hogan (right) probably isn’t the type of opponent who will take Jermall Charlo to the next level. Stephanie Trapp / Showtime

Indeed, a Charlo (29-0, 21 KOs) victory is hardly in doubt, but it’s not clear what it will do for the Houston native’s career. To wit, Charlo’s middleweight run has consisted of Jorge Sebastian Heiland, Hugo Centeno Jr., Matvey Korobov and Brandon Adams. Hardly breathtaking. Aside from the Korobov fight – one in which many observers had Korobov winning – many of Charlo’s fights at middleweight are little more than showcases.

In many ways, Charlo’s predicament bears some comparison to that of Terence Crawford, the welterweight titleholder who currently faces a dearth of quality opponents on his end of the stratified boxing landscape, over at Top Rank/ESPN. Most of the best welterweights fight under the Premier Boxing Champions banner, which does business exclusively with Showtime and Fox. Likewise, the other middleweight titleholders all fight exclusively on DAZN, including Canelo Alvarez, Gennadiy Golovkin and Demetrius Andrade, and it’s not clear whether Charlo can ever get those fights. That’s a shame considering Charlo built his name off of one of the most impressive knockouts in the past few years, his fifth round stoppage of Julian Williams, in what was his last fight at junior middleweight. 

Surely, though, if the unification matchups are out of reach, there should be better options for Charlo than the likes of Hogan, Adams and Centeno. To that end, hard-hitting British contender Chris Eubank Jr., who fights Korobov on the same card Saturday night, may prove to be an attractive possibility. That fight would be intriguing and it would certainly sell, especially in Eubank’s native England. Moreover, Eubank would offer a far sterner test for Charlo than his recent opponents did. But there is no guarantee that Eubank even gets passed Korobov, a skilled, if somewhat shopworn southpaw who landed a surprising number of left hand leads against Charlo. Eubank has struggled with dexterous boxers in the past, namely Billy Joe Saunders and George Groves.

For Charlo, a Eubank win, at least in the interim, may represent the only meaningful step forward in his career.

 


 

Chris Eubank Jr and Matvey Korobov also made weight for their middleweight bout that will top the undercard. Eubank weighed in at 159 1/2 pounds, Korobov at 159.

Also, Marlon Tapales and Ryosuke Iwasa both weighed in at 121 1/2 pounds for their 12-round junior featherweight bout.

Lennox Lewis: Anthony Joshua has ‘a heavy task ahead of him’

Lennox Lewis said Anthony Joshua can beat Andy Ruiz Jr. in their rematch Saturday if he’s prepared.

Anthony Joshua didn’t just lose to Andy Ruiz Jr. this past June in New York. He was beaten down, as much emotionally as physically.

That’s one reason his attempt to the turn the tables in their rematch Saturday in Saudi Arabia is a significant challenge. Another is that Joshua took an immediate rematch instead of rebuilding his confidence against a lesser foe, which some believe was ill-advised.

Others have succeeded in reversing such a debacle. Joe Louis comes to mind. A young “Brown Bomber” was beaten up by veteran Max Schmeling in 1936. Two years later Louis KO’d the German inside one round.

A more modern example is Wladimir Klitschko. The giant Ukrainian suffered three deflating knockouts early in his career but bounced back to become one of the most-enduring heavyweight champions of all time.

Lennox Lewis reversed his misfortune in an immediate rematch, as Joshua is trying to do. Lewis was knocked out by Hasim Rahman in five rounds but, more focused, returned the favor in four rounds seven months later. He also avenged a knockout loss to Oliver McCall, although those fights were years apart.

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Lewis, speaking to members of the media before the Deontay Wilder-Luis Ortiz II fight on Nov. 23, wouldn’t predict how things might go for Joshua in the rematch but said their situations were entirely different.

“The way I lost was one punch,” he said. “When you lose by one punch, then you know the problem is not to get punched. For me, it was just a defensive error. It was like falling off a horse. OK, you fell off a horse. Let just get on the horse and show you I can ride the horse.

“It was a situation where, yeah, he caught me with one punch but he’s not a better fighter than me. I have more talent them him. … What I need to do is my best, don’t make a silly mistake because that’s what allowed me to lose the fight.”

In other words, Joshua knew exactly what the problem was and how to correct it. Joshua? That’s a different story.

His loss against Ruiz wasn’t the result of a single mistake or a single blow. Joshua was knocked down four times before the fight was stopped. And his body language when referee Michael Griffin waved off the fight screamed, “I’m hurt, I’m lost, I have no idea what to do.”

Some wonder whether that sense of helplessness can be damaging psychologically – and linger.

“(Joshua) can look at the tape and say, ‘When I get hurt, I need to hold him properly,’” Lewis said the week of Wilder-Ruiz. “That’s one thing I noticed. The second thing is he came back to the corner (after being hurt) and said, ‘What’s happening? What is he doing?’ I don’t know what happened but he obviously has gone back to the drawing board and looked at what he needs to do. Let’s hope he can correct it before the fight.

“… It was a bad loss,” Lewis added. “He’s got a heavy task ahead of him. He’s making the right moves. … (But) he needs to learn a lot of stuff.”

Lewis also doesn’t think an immediate rematch was a good idea – “especially how he lost” – but the site of the fight, in another foreign country, seems to bother him more.

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The former three-time heavyweight champion and Hall of Famer doesn’t begrudge promoter Eddie Hearn the money generated by staging the fight in Saudi Arabia. That’s his job, Lewis said.

At the same time, fighters’ needs aren’t always met when business comes first.

“(Joshua’s) promoter should really have brought the fight back to England, where his family is, where his crowd is, and build him back up that way,” Lewis said. “Now he’s been brought back to another foreign country where he doesn’t know anybody. …

“I don’t think an event should be made just because of the money. It should be what’s better for your fight, what’s the best place for your fighter, to guarantee the win. … Promoters try to get the most money possible but the promoter and boxer and supposed to work hand in hand.”

In the end, Lewis said, Joshua can win if he’s ready.

“If Joshua doesn’t come in mentally and physically prepared, he’ll lose the fight,” Lewis said. “… He felt he wasn’t in the best shape (in the first fight), so he’s gotten himself in great shape. That gives him confidence. He was 50 percent in the first fight and was able to hurt Ruiz but couldn’t take him out. Now he’s 100 percent. Now if he hurts the guy, he will be able to take him out.

“That’s what will be in his head, ‘I’m a better boxer than him and I’ll show him.’

Andy Ruiz Jr. stuns us again: Weighs 283.7 for Anthony Joshua rematch?

Andy Ruiz Jr. weighed 283.7 pounds — 15-plus more than in their first fight — for his rematch with Anthony Joshua on Saturday.

283.7 pounds?

Any Ruiz Jr., who had talked about slimming down for his rematch with Anthony Joshua on Saturday in Saudi Arabia, weighed in today at 283.7 pounds. That’s 15 more than he weighed for their first fight, in June, and the most he’s weighed for a fight since he came in at 292½ for his second pro bout.

Joshua weighed 237.8, roughly 10 pounds less than he weighed for their first fight. That’s his lightest since he weighed 236½ when he fought Denis Bakhtov in 2014, which presumably means he’ll be more nimble in the fight.

Ruiz stunned the boxing world by putting Joshua down four times and stopping him the seventh round to win three of the four major heavyweight titles at Madison Square Garden in New York.

“They made us wait until 4:30, almost 5 p.m. here,” Ruiz said. “I already had ate breakfast, lunch and dinner. I had on a sombrero and all my clothes. A lot of people are saying that I came overweight or this and that. We had to wait so long. I probably put on like 10 pounds just eating and drinking normally today.”

Ruiz insists that he didn’t let his weight get away from him.

Andy Ruiz Jr (left) weighed in 45.9 pounds more than Anthony Joshua for their rematch Saturday in Saudi Arabia. Dave Thompson / Matchroom Boxing

“We were lighter during camp,” he said, “but then I thought being the same weight or heavier would be an advantage. We did so many 12 rounds of sparring, so the conditioning is still there.”

Ruiz’s trainer, Manny Robles, had said on a conference call Thursday that his fighter would weigh around 268 again. It was clear then that Ruiz hadn’t slimmed down.


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However, the 283.7 figure was surprising.

What does it mean? Can we assume that Ruiz didn’t take his training seriously? After all, even if we believe that he put on 10 pounds eating today, he hasn’t weighed in the 270s for a fight in five years.

Or does that weight not matter as much as we presume? Ruiz has always been fat yet has had quick hands and moved well.

Of course, we’ll know a lot more when they step into the ring.

The card, in Diriyah, will be streamed live on DAZN.

 

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