Hasim Rahman Jr.: Jake Paul ‘made a mistake picking me’

Hasim Rahman Jr. said Aug. 6 pay-per-view opponent Jake Paul “made a mistake picking me.”

Yoel Judah, the trainer of Hasim Rahman Jr., believes his fighter is exactly where he should be five years and 13 fights into his pro career. In three years, Judah said, Rahman will be fighting for a major world title.

In other words, Rahman and his team believe he’s much farther along than his Aug. 6 pay-per-view opponent, Jake Paul.

“There’s nothing Jake Paul does that concerns me,” said Rahman, who will face Paul at Madison Square Garden in New York. “I’m just super confident going into this fight. I feel like this guy is not at my level. He made a mistake picking me.”

Rahman (12-1, 6 KOs) is about a 2-1 underdog but many believe he has a decent chance of becoming the first to beat Paul (5-0, 4 KOs) for a simple reason: He’s the first boxer Paul will have faced.

Trainer Yoel Judah (right) believes Hasim Rahman Jr. is too skillful for Jake Paul. Al Powers / Showtime Boxing.

Paul’s previous five opponents were a fellow YouTuber, a retired basketball player and two MMA stars, the last of whom (Tyron Woodley) he beat twice.

That’s the main reason Rahman and Co. are so confident even though he was stopped in five rounds by James McKenzie Morrison, the son of Tommy Morrison, in his most recent fight, in April.

Hasim Rahman Sr., the conqueror of Lennix Lewis, believes his son will record a knockout.

“I feel like when you get a certain status you start feeling you’re invincible,” the elder Rahman said of Paul. “… But it’s one thing to say something and another thing to go out there and do it. When he has to go out and do it, he’s going to realize it wasn’t as easy as he thought it was going to be. …

“I just feel like we don’t have to look for a KO. I just feel like we have superior boxing skills. His boxing IQ is much great than Jake Paul’s and I just personally feel like the knockout is going to come.”

What about Paul’s power?

The social media star has his critics, who point to his lack of experience. However, many believe he has been blessed with impressive punching power. Most recently, he took out Woodley with one punch.

Judah isn’t worried.

“We’re not really concerned with Jake Paul’s power,” he said. “We don’t need to show how good our chin is. We don’t need to show what his right hand can do. What we can do is take his right hand away from him.

“We aren’t going to get hit with the right hand, but if we do, we are going to fire back with our own counter. It’s going to be an interesting fight. Jake Paul can fight. Don’t get it twisted. But I’m not impressed by the knockouts he’s had. I don’t really feel like he’s knocked out a fighter yet.”

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Hasim Rahman Jr.: Jake Paul ‘made a mistake picking me’

Hasim Rahman Jr. said Aug. 6 pay-per-view opponent Jake Paul “made a mistake picking me.”

Yoel Judah, the trainer of Hasim Rahman Jr., believes his fighter is exactly where he should be five years and 13 fights into his pro career. In three years, Judah said, Rahman will be fighting for a major world title.

In other words, Rahman and his team believe he’s much farther along than his Aug. 6 pay-per-view opponent, Jake Paul.

“There’s nothing Jake Paul does that concerns me,” said Rahman, who will face Paul at Madison Square Garden in New York. “I’m just super confident going into this fight. I feel like this guy is not at my level. He made a mistake picking me.”

Rahman (12-1, 6 KOs) is about a 2-1 underdog but many believe he has a decent chance of becoming the first to beat Paul (5-0, 4 KOs) for a simple reason: He’s the first boxer Paul will have faced.

Trainer Yoel Judah (right) believes Hasim Rahman Jr. is too skillful for Jake Paul. Al Powers / Showtime Boxing.

Paul’s previous five opponents were a fellow YouTuber, a retired basketball player and two MMA stars, the last of whom (Tyron Woodley) he beat twice.

That’s the main reason Rahman and Co. are so confident even though he was stopped in five rounds by James McKenzie Morrison, the son of Tommy Morrison, in his most recent fight, in April.

Hasim Rahman Sr., the conqueror of Lennix Lewis, believes his son will record a knockout.

“I feel like when you get a certain status you start feeling you’re invincible,” the elder Rahman said of Paul. “… But it’s one thing to say something and another thing to go out there and do it. When he has to go out and do it, he’s going to realize it wasn’t as easy as he thought it was going to be. …

“I just feel like we don’t have to look for a KO. I just feel like we have superior boxing skills. His boxing IQ is much great than Jake Paul’s and I just personally feel like the knockout is going to come.”

What about Paul’s power?

The social media star has his critics, who point to his lack of experience. However, many believe he has been blessed with impressive punching power. Most recently, he took out Woodley with one punch.

Judah isn’t worried.

“We’re not really concerned with Jake Paul’s power,” he said. “We don’t need to show how good our chin is. We don’t need to show what his right hand can do. What we can do is take his right hand away from him.

“We aren’t going to get hit with the right hand, but if we do, we are going to fire back with our own counter. It’s going to be an interesting fight. Jake Paul can fight. Don’t get it twisted. But I’m not impressed by the knockouts he’s had. I don’t really feel like he’s knocked out a fighter yet.”

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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.’

Special feature: 10 unforgettable heavyweight rematches

Will the rematch between Andy Ruiz Jr. and Anthony Joshua join the most-memorable sequels in history? That’s no easy task.

The rematch between Andy Ruiz Jr. and Anthony Joshua on Saturday is as compelling as it gets because of their first fight.

Ruiz, a replacement opponent known as much for his paunch as his ability, pulled off one of the great upsets by putting Joshua down four times and stopping him in Round 7 on June 1 at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Can Ruiz do it again in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia, the site of the rematch? Or will Joshua have made the necessary adjustments and avenge his career-changing setback?

Of course, we can only imagine whether Ruiz-Joshua II will live up to the original. Some sequels are as good or better than the first fight, some fall short.

Here are 10 heavyweight rematches – or third fights – that remain in our consciousness for reasons unique to each of the fights.