Andy Ruiz Jr. back in gym amid talk of Dillian Whyte fight

Andy Ruiz Jr. is back in the gym just six weeks after his rematch loss to Anthony Joshua on Dec. 7 in Saudi Arabia.

Andy Ruiz Jr. promised he’d be back. Fulfilling that promise figures to be long and difficult. But the task looks to be underway.

Ruiz is back at work, just six weeks after his rematch loss to Anthony Joshua Dec. 7 in Saudi Arabia.

Ruiz posted photos and video of his return to the gym four days ago on Instagram, saying “The journey back is going to be sweet. Back to basics.’’

An embarrassing loss by a one-sided decision in Diriyah left lots of doubt about what’s next for Ruiz, the first fighter of Mexican descent to win a heavyweight title with a stunning seventh-round stoppage of Joshua on June 1 at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

For the rematch, he admitted he had partied more than he had trained. He apologized. Now it looks as if he has gone to work at doing more than just saying sorry.

He’s also been given some motivation from promoter Eddie Hearn, who reportedly has offered Ruiz (33-2, 20 KOs) a seven-figure purse to fight Dillian Whyte (27-1, 18 KOs) March 28 in the U.K. on DAZN.

Two days after Hearn’s offer was reported, Ruiz was back in the gym, looking as if he might have shed some of the 283.7 pounds he carried into the ring for the Joshua rematch. Hard to tell. There were reports – and probably a few photo-shopped pictures — of a new, slimmed down version of Ruiz before he came in for the rematch looking more obese than chubby. But it’s a beginning.

Povetkin, Hunter fight to draw; Whyte outpoints Wach on Ruiz-Joshua card

Alexander Povetkin and Michael Hunter fought to a draw on the Andy Ruiz Jr.-Anthony Joshua card. Dillian Whyte won his comeback fight.

Other heavyweights on the Anthony Joshua-Andy Ruiz Jr. card Saturday in Saudi Arabia tried to put their best foot forward. Dillian Whyte succeeded, Alexander Povetkin and Michael Hunter not as much.

Povetkin (35-2-1, 24 knockouts) and Hunter (18-1-1, 12 KOs) fought to a draw in the co-feature, which would’ve put the winner in the mandatory position for one of Joshua’s heavyweight titles. They both had their moments in a fiercely fought bout but neither could separate from the other.

The scores were 115-113, 113-115 and 114-114.

Povetkin, a former Olympic champion who is now 40, is hoping for one more shot at a world title.

Hunter, 31, is a former cruiserweight contender trying to make his mark in the sport’s glamour division. A solid performance against a veteran like Povetkin was a positive step even though he didn’t have his hand raised.

Hunter’s only loss was a wide decision to Oleksandr Usyk in 2017, his last 200-pound fight.

Whyte, a late addition to the card, weighed a career-high 271 but it didn’t matter against Mariusz Wach, who was outpointed 98-93, 97-93, 97-93 in a 10-rounder.

Whyte has been mired in controversy. He failed a pre-fight drug test but, for unknown reasons, was allowed to fight Oscar Rivas on July 20. On Friday, U.K. Anti-doping dropped its case against Whyte.

And, in another heavyweight fight, prospect Filip Hrgovic (10-0, 8 KOs) of Croatia stopped veteran Eric Molina (27-6, 19 KOs) in the third round.