Video: Anthony Joshua outweighs Jermaine Franklin by 21.3 pounds

Video: Anthony Joshua on Friday weighed in 21.3 pounds heavier than Jermaine Franklin for their fight Saturday in London.

Anthony Joshua came in at a career high, Jermaine Franklin at better weight than his previous few fights.

The fighters weighed in Friday afternoon for their heavyweight fight Saturday night at O2 Arena in London (DAZN), with Joshua at 255.4 pounds and Franklin at 234.1.

That’s the most Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs)) has weighed for any fight but not by much. He was 254.0 for his meeting with Carlos Takam in 2017. He weighed 244.5 for his most recent fight, a decision loss in his rematch with the relatively small, quick Oleksandr Usyk in August.

Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) will be at his lightest since he weighed 231.5 for his fight with Pavel Sour in 2019, after which he left the sport for two-plus years.

He returned much heavier, 277.5 for his comeback fight against Rodney Moore last May and 257.0 for a bout with Dillian Whyte he took on late notice in November. He lost to Whyte by a disputed majority decision.

The native of Saginaw, Michigan, has now worked himself back into shape.

[Lawrence-related id=36426,36420,36412,36392]

Can Jermaine Franklin pull an Andy Ruiz against Anthony Joshua?

Can Jermaine Franklin pull an Andy Ruiz against Anthony Joshua?

Jermaine Franklin probably won’t upset Anthony Joshua on Saturday at O2 Arena in London.

That’s the opinion of the oddsmakers, who have made Joshua around a 9-1 favorite to win the heavyweight fight. And no fan or pundit with any knowledge of the sport would argue with them, at least not vociferously.

But could they be wrong?

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) was on the unfortunate end of a massive upset only five fights ago, when Andy Ruiz Jr. put him down four times and stopped him in seven rounds. Ruiz was a bigger underdog than Franklin.

The former unified champion isn’t exactly at the top of his game, having gone 2-3 in his last five fights. He’s coming off back-to-back losses to former undisputed cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk, who won decisions in both fights.

And Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) showed us something in his last fight. The 29-year-old native of Saginaw, Michigan, lost a majority decision to longtime contender Dillian Whyte in November, his second fight after a 2½-year layoff during which he worked for a living.

Some observers – including Franklin – thought he was robbed but he received a nice consolation prize: a meeting with Joshua, one of the biggest names in the sport.

We’ll see whether Franklin has the ability and mental toughness to compete with a fighter of Joshua’s pedigree. However, it’s a good bet that he’ll be prepared physically.

He said he spent most of his training camp leading up to the Whyte fight shedding fat. For this bout, he entered camp in better physical condition, which allowed him to hone his fitness and focus more on strategy.

The 6-foot-2 Franklin weighed 257 pounds for the Whyte fight. Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, guessed that he could come in around 230 for Joshua, which could produce a quicker, more fluid fighter.

“The circumstances around this fight are very different,” Franklin said, according to The Associated Press. “For the Dillian fight, I was working a job before we got that phone call. I wasn’t in the gym.

“We took like five to seven weeks to get in shape for that fight. For the time I had, I did what I could. This time I’ve got more time to prepare and more time to get in shape.”

The fight with Whyte at the OVO Arena Wembley gave Franklin experience on a big stage in a foreign country, which will serve him well on Saturday. And he demonstrated with his solid performance that he wasn’t fazed.

He has also been calm and cool in the lead up to the fight with Joshua, as if he has taken part in many big fights. He’s confident.

“My confidence is always great,” he said Thursday at the final news conference before the fight. “You’re in the wrong business if you don’t truly believe in yourself. This isn’t the right game for you.

“You have to have … the utmost confidence. You just have to put faith in the work [you’ve done].”

The prognosticators expect Franklin to become a footnote, a stepping stone possibly leading to an all-British super fight between Joshua and titleholder Tyson Fury.

That’s what Ruiz was supposed to be, though. And we know what happened there. Joshua decided mid-fight that he couldn’t beat his opponent and signaled with his body language that he didn’t want to continue.

Franklin doesn’t have the track record of Ruiz but he has demonstrated that he’s a solid heavyweight. That fact and Joshua’s uneven performances suggest that the notion of an upset isn’t farfetched.

“I come from a place without a lot of possibilities,” he said. “I made it this far [so] anything is possible. … I believe I get my hand raised at the end of the fight.”

[lawrence-related id=36420,36412,36392,34302]

Can Jermaine Franklin pull an Andy Ruiz against Anthony Joshua?

Can Jermaine Franklin pull an Andy Ruiz against Anthony Joshua?

Jermaine Franklin probably won’t upset Anthony Joshua on Saturday at O2 Arena in London.

That’s the opinion of the oddsmakers, who have made Joshua around a 9-1 favorite to win the heavyweight fight. And no fan or pundit with any knowledge of the sport would argue with them, at least not vociferously.

But could they be wrong?

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) was on the unfortunate end of a massive upset only five fights ago, when Andy Ruiz Jr. put him down four times and stopped him in seven rounds. Ruiz was a bigger underdog than Franklin.

The former unified champion isn’t exactly at the top of his game, having gone 2-3 in his last five fights. He’s coming off back-to-back losses to former undisputed cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk, who won decisions in both fights.

And Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) showed us something in his last fight. The 29-year-old native of Saginaw, Michigan, lost a majority decision to longtime contender Dillian Whyte in November, his second fight after a 2½-year layoff during which he worked for a living.

Some observers – including Franklin – thought he was robbed but he received a nice consolation prize: a meeting with Joshua, one of the biggest names in the sport.

We’ll see whether Franklin has the ability and mental toughness to compete with a fighter of Joshua’s pedigree. However, it’s a good bet that he’ll be prepared physically.

He said he spent most of his training camp leading up to the Whyte fight shedding fat. For this bout, he entered camp in better physical condition, which allowed him to hone his fitness and focus more on strategy.

The 6-foot-2 Franklin weighed 257 pounds for the Whyte fight. Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, guessed that he could come in around 230 for Joshua, which could produce a quicker, more fluid fighter.

“The circumstances around this fight are very different,” Franklin said, according to The Associated Press. “For the Dillian fight, I was working a job before we got that phone call. I wasn’t in the gym.

“We took like five to seven weeks to get in shape for that fight. For the time I had, I did what I could. This time I’ve got more time to prepare and more time to get in shape.”

The fight with Whyte at the OVO Arena Wembley gave Franklin experience on a big stage in a foreign country, which will serve him well on Saturday. And he demonstrated with his solid performance that he wasn’t fazed.

He has also been calm and cool in the lead up to the fight with Joshua, as if he has taken part in many big fights. He’s confident.

“My confidence is always great,” he said Thursday at the final news conference before the fight. “You’re in the wrong business if you don’t truly believe in yourself. This isn’t the right game for you.

“You have to have … the utmost confidence. You just have to put faith in the work [you’ve done].”

The prognosticators expect Franklin to become a footnote, a stepping stone possibly leading to an all-British super fight between Joshua and titleholder Tyson Fury.

That’s what Ruiz was supposed to be, though. And we know what happened there. Joshua decided mid-fight that he couldn’t beat his opponent and signaled with his body language that he didn’t want to continue.

Franklin doesn’t have the track record of Ruiz but he has demonstrated that he’s a solid heavyweight. That fact and Joshua’s uneven performances suggest that the notion of an upset isn’t farfetched.

“I come from a place without a lot of possibilities,” he said. “I made it this far [so] anything is possible. … I believe I get my hand raised at the end of the fight.”

[lawrence-related id=36420,36412,36392,34302]

Anthony Joshua vs. Jermaine Franklin: Date, time, how to watch, background

Anthony Joshua vs. Jermaine Franklin: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Former heavyweight titleholder Anthony Joshua will return to the ring against Jermaine Franklin on Saturday night in London.

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-3, 22 KOS)
VS. JERMAINE FRANKLIN (21-1, 14 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, April 1
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (7 p.m. U.K. time) (main event later in show)
  • Where: O2 Arena, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 16½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Fabio Wardley vs. Michael Polite-Coffie, heavyweights; Matteo Signani vs. Felix Cash, middleweights; Austin Williams vs. River Wilson-Bent, middleweights
  • Prediction: Joshua KO 9
  • Background: Joshua returns to the ring for the first time since his back-to-back decision losses to Oleksandr Usyk, which cost him his world titles (in the first fight) and a great deal of respect. The 2012 Olympic champion from the U.K. was first revealed to be human in June 2019, when Andy Ruiz Jr. stopped him in seven rounds to take three of the four major belts. Joshua rebounded by outpointing Ruiz in the rematch the following December to regain his titles and stopped Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds in December 2020, his last victory. Then came Usyk. The gifted former undisputed cruiserweight champ defeated Joshua by a wide decision in September 2021 to become a champion in a second division and do further damage to Joshua’s reputation. The former champ performed better in the rematch last August but still lost a split decision, giving him a record of 2-3 in his last five fights. Franklin is a massive underdog but perhaps not a complete pushover. The 29-year-old from Michigan lost to longtime contender Dillian Whyte this past November but he pushed the Londoner harder than anyone had expected, coming up short by a majority decision. If Joshua wins on Saturday, he will be an attractive candidate to face any of the top heavyweights. That includes titleholder Tyson Fury now that his projected showdown with Usyk seems to be off. Deontay Wilder is another potential opponent.

[lawrence-related id=36412,36392,35560]

Anthony Joshua vs. Jermaine Franklin: Date, time, how to watch, background

Anthony Joshua vs. Jermaine Franklin: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Former heavyweight titleholder Anthony Joshua will return to the ring against Jermaine Franklin on Saturday night in London.

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-3, 22 KOS)
VS. JERMAINE FRANKLIN (21-1, 14 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, April 1
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (7 p.m. U.K. time) (main event later in show)
  • Where: O2 Arena, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 16½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Fabio Wardley vs. Michael Polite-Coffie, heavyweights; Matteo Signani vs. Felix Cash, middleweights; Austin Williams vs. River Wilson-Bent, middleweights
  • Prediction: Joshua KO 9
  • Background: Joshua returns to the ring for the first time since his back-to-back decision losses to Oleksandr Usyk, which cost him his world titles (in the first fight) and a great deal of respect. The 2012 Olympic champion from the U.K. was first revealed to be human in June 2019, when Andy Ruiz Jr. stopped him in seven rounds to take three of the four major belts. Joshua rebounded by outpointing Ruiz in the rematch the following December to regain his titles and stopped Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds in December 2020, his last victory. Then came Usyk. The gifted former undisputed cruiserweight champ defeated Joshua by a wide decision in September 2021 to become a champion in a second division and do further damage to Joshua’s reputation. The former champ performed better in the rematch last August but still lost a split decision, giving him a record of 2-3 in his last five fights. Franklin is a massive underdog but perhaps not a complete pushover. The 29-year-old from Michigan lost to longtime contender Dillian Whyte this past November but he pushed the Londoner harder than anyone had expected, coming up short by a majority decision. If Joshua wins on Saturday, he will be an attractive candidate to face any of the top heavyweights. That includes titleholder Tyson Fury now that his projected showdown with Usyk seems to be off. Deontay Wilder is another potential opponent.

[lawrence-related id=36412,36392,35560]

Can Anthony Joshua still redeem himself after multiple disappointments?

Can Anthony Joshua still redeem himself after enduring multiple disappointments?

Anthony Joshua will never again be seen as the near-perfect fighting machine who knocked out 21 of his first 22 professional opponents, including future Hall of Famer Wladimir Klitschko in 2017.

The 2012 Olympic champion’s stunning seventh-round knockout loss to Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2019 and back-to-back setbacks against former cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and last year damaged his reputation beyond complete repair.

He’s only 33, though. And he remains a significant draw, particularly in his native United Kingdom. That means he almost certainly has more big fights in his future, which will give him the opportunity to redeem himself in what he says is the final phase of his career.

[lawrence-related id=36392,36388,34219]

The most significant opportunity for him would be a shot at unbeaten titleholder Tyson Fury, assuming Joshua beats Jermaine Franklin on Saturday in London (DAZN).

If Joshua meets Fury in the ring and loses – particularly if he loses badly – that could be the end of his career as an elite fighter. If he gets that opportunity and wins? Well, that could significantly change the way he’s perceived.

He’ll always be the guy who went down four times and essentially quit in his first fight with Ruiz and lost two decisions to the talented, but much smaller Usyk. However, if he beats Fury, he’ll also be seen as the guy who persevered and recorded the biggest victory in his career after many had written him off.

Fans and pundits alike love a great comeback story and this one would be compelling.

Of course, Joshua would have to get a fight with Fury. Can he? I think so. The matchup has always been attractive to the colorful champion, who knows the all-British showdown could generate a fortune for all parties involved.

In fact, they were expected to meet in December but talks broke down and Fury ended up fighting Derek Chisora instead. Nevertheless, the fact Fury entered serious negotiations indicates he wants the fight.

And the chances of it happening got better after a projected title-unification bout between Fury and Usyk fell apart over the terms of a rematch clause. Fury will be looking for a big fight. And no fight, at least in the U.K., is bigger than Fury vs. Joshua.

A bigger question: Can Joshua beat Fury? Probably not.

Fury (33-0-1, 24 KOs) is bigger, a better boxer and arguably mentally tougher than Joshua. Fury got up from four knockdowns to stop Deontay Wilder twice and draw with him once, which contrasts sharply with Joshua’s performance in his first fight with Ruiz.

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) has his strengths, though. He got up from a knockdown to stop Klitschko, he outpointed Ruiz in their rematch (although he fought carefully) and he performed better in his second fight with Usyk than he did in the original.

And while he’s not as skillful or athletic as Fury is, he’s a well-schooled, experienced boxer who punches as hard as almost anyone in the sport. Twenty-two knockouts in 24 victories speak loudly. Yes, he would have a chance to have his hand raised against Fury.

If he that happens, he would be a three-time titleholder with more options than ever. Imagine Joshua defeating Fury and then doing the same against Wilder, who also has expressed an interest in facing him. Then who knows? Maybe the third time would be the charm against Usyk.

Is such a string of victories over the top big men in the sport likely? Probably not. At the same time, good fighters who are determined to realize what they see as their destiny sometimes surprise us.

Can Anthony Joshua still redeem himself after multiple disappointments?

Can Anthony Joshua still redeem himself after enduring multiple disappointments?

Anthony Joshua will never again be seen as the near-perfect fighting machine who knocked out 21 of his first 22 professional opponents, including future Hall of Famer Wladimir Klitschko in 2017.

The 2012 Olympic champion’s stunning seventh-round knockout loss to Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2019 and back-to-back setbacks against former cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and last year damaged his reputation beyond complete repair.

He’s only 33, though. And he remains a significant draw, particularly in his native United Kingdom. That means he almost certainly has more big fights in his future, which will give him the opportunity to redeem himself in what he says is the final phase of his career.

[lawrence-related id=36392,36388,34219]

The most significant opportunity for him would be a shot at unbeaten titleholder Tyson Fury, assuming Joshua beats Jermaine Franklin on Saturday in London (DAZN).

If Joshua meets Fury in the ring and loses – particularly if he loses badly – that could be the end of his career as an elite fighter. If he gets that opportunity and wins? Well, that could significantly change the way he’s perceived.

He’ll always be the guy who went down four times and essentially quit in his first fight with Ruiz and lost two decisions to the talented, but much smaller Usyk. However, if he beats Fury, he’ll also be seen as the guy who persevered and recorded the biggest victory in his career after many had written him off.

Fans and pundits alike love a great comeback story and this one would be compelling.

Of course, Joshua would have to get a fight with Fury. Can he? I think so. The matchup has always been attractive to the colorful champion, who knows the all-British showdown could generate a fortune for all parties involved.

In fact, they were expected to meet in December but talks broke down and Fury ended up fighting Derek Chisora instead. Nevertheless, the fact Fury entered serious negotiations indicates he wants the fight.

And the chances of it happening got better after a projected title-unification bout between Fury and Usyk fell apart over the terms of a rematch clause. Fury will be looking for a big fight. And no fight, at least in the U.K., is bigger than Fury vs. Joshua.

A bigger question: Can Joshua beat Fury? Probably not.

Fury (33-0-1, 24 KOs) is bigger, a better boxer and arguably mentally tougher than Joshua. Fury got up from four knockdowns to stop Deontay Wilder twice and draw with him once, which contrasts sharply with Joshua’s performance in his first fight with Ruiz.

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) has his strengths, though. He got up from a knockdown to stop Klitschko, he outpointed Ruiz in their rematch (although he fought carefully) and he performed better in his second fight with Usyk than he did in the original.

And while he’s not as skillful or athletic as Fury is, he’s a well-schooled, experienced boxer who punches as hard as almost anyone in the sport. Twenty-two knockouts in 24 victories speak loudly. Yes, he would have a chance to have his hand raised against Fury.

If he that happens, he would be a three-time titleholder with more options than ever. Imagine Joshua defeating Fury and then doing the same against Wilder, who also has expressed an interest in facing him. Then who knows? Maybe the third time would be the charm against Usyk.

Is such a string of victories over the top big men in the sport likely? Probably not. At the same time, good fighters who are determined to realize what they see as their destiny sometimes surprise us.

Anthony Joshua says his second comeback will be his last

Anthony Joshua said that his second comeback will be the last of his boxing career.

Anthony Joshua evidently is embarking on the final run of his boxing career.

The 2012 super heavyweight Olympic champion is no longer the young, can’t-miss future Hall of Famer. He’s 33 now. And things haven’t gone quite as well as expected. He’s won major titles on two occasions only to lose them in ignominious fashion.

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) begins his second comeback against Jermaine Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) on Saturday in London (DAZN), his first fight since back-to-back losses to Oleksandr Usyk.

“This run is like, what can it go on for? Three, four years?” he said, according to The Independent. “If I was going to do another run after this, you’re talking about fighting into my 40s and I truly believe that boxing’s a young man’s sport.

“It takes a real solid character like Bernard Hopkins, [George] Foreman, [Wladimir] Klitschko, [Alexander] Povetkin to go on into their 40s and stuff. But I think this is a run I want to make successful and then, you know, hopefully go out on top.”

Joshua was a juggernaut as recently as 2019, one of the two best big men in the sport with Tyson Fury.

Then disaster struck in June of that year in New York City. Andy Ruiz Jr., a pudgy, but capable heavyweight from the U.S., turned in one of the biggest upsets in recent memory: He knocked out Joshua to take the Englishman’s three world titles.

And it wasn’t a lucky punch or anything like it that turned the trick. Joshua went down four times in the fight before essentially deciding to quit.

He bounced back by boxing carefully and outpointing Ruiz in their December 2019 rematch to regain his belts and then stopped aging Kubrat Pulev in his first defense, regaining a measure of the respect he had lost.

Then came disaster No. 2 (and No. 3): Usyk, the former undisputed cruiserweight champion, defeated Joshua by a clear decision to take the same titles in September 2021. Joshua performed better in the rematch last August but again was outpointed.

Joshua had lost his aura of greatness. And he knew it.

“The thing is, I do and I did want respect from people in the industry that I admire, ex-legends in the game, and when you’re not a champion anymore, you feel like that goes away,” he said.

“So that was definitely something I was yearning for, the respect from ex-champions, and when I’d lost it, it was like, ‘F—, I’ve lost that invincibility.’ But it’s all good. We move forward. I’m not really doing it for that purpose anymore because I’m not in that position, but the desire?

“One is definitely to become champion, which I think is possible within the next 16 months.”

Indeed, Joshua remains a big draw in the U.K. If he beats Frankin – and he’s a massive favorite – he’ll be an attractive opponent for the top heavyweights.

Joshua’s longtime promoter, Eddie Hearn, is already saying a long-awaited meeting with titleholder and countryman Tyson Fury is likely after Fury’s talks with Usyk for a unification bout collapsed, although Fury’s handlers are saying Hearn is jumping the gun. Fury and Joshua were expected to fight in December but talks broke off and Fury ended up fighting Derek Chisora instead.

Still, there is little doubt that a Fury-Joshua rematch could pack Wembley Stadium. That’s a motivating factor to get the fight made.

And a matchup between Joshua and fellow former champion Deontay Wilder also would do well in the U.K. given Wilder’s epic three-fight series with Fury. Joshua has expressed interest in that matchup.

“I think we’ve got to see what happens this year with the belts,” Joshua said. “… We’ll see where the belts land. Then just stay consistent, stay focused on improving for these next 12 to 16 months while I’m in title contention.”

If he loses to Franklin? That could be the last we see him.

[lawrence-related id=36388,35560]

Anthony Joshua says his second comeback will be his last

Anthony Joshua said that his second comeback will be the last of his boxing career.

Anthony Joshua evidently is embarking on the final run of his boxing career.

The 2012 super heavyweight Olympic champion is no longer the young, can’t-miss future Hall of Famer. He’s 33 now. And things haven’t gone quite as well as expected. He’s won major titles on two occasions only to lose them in ignominious fashion.

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) begins his second comeback against Jermaine Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) on Saturday in London (DAZN), his first fight since back-to-back losses to Oleksandr Usyk.

“This run is like, what can it go on for? Three, four years?” he said, according to The Independent. “If I was going to do another run after this, you’re talking about fighting into my 40s and I truly believe that boxing’s a young man’s sport.

“It takes a real solid character like Bernard Hopkins, [George] Foreman, [Wladimir] Klitschko, [Alexander] Povetkin to go on into their 40s and stuff. But I think this is a run I want to make successful and then, you know, hopefully go out on top.”

Joshua was a juggernaut as recently as 2019, one of the two best big men in the sport with Tyson Fury.

Then disaster struck in June of that year in New York City. Andy Ruiz Jr., a pudgy, but capable heavyweight from the U.S., turned in one of the biggest upsets in recent memory: He knocked out Joshua to take the Englishman’s three world titles.

And it wasn’t a lucky punch or anything like it that turned the trick. Joshua went down four times in the fight before essentially deciding to quit.

He bounced back by boxing carefully and outpointing Ruiz in their December 2019 rematch to regain his belts and then stopped aging Kubrat Pulev in his first defense, regaining a measure of the respect he had lost.

Then came disaster No. 2 (and No. 3): Usyk, the former undisputed cruiserweight champion, defeated Joshua by a clear decision to take the same titles in September 2021. Joshua performed better in the rematch last August but again was outpointed.

Joshua had lost his aura of greatness. And he knew it.

“The thing is, I do and I did want respect from people in the industry that I admire, ex-legends in the game, and when you’re not a champion anymore, you feel like that goes away,” he said.

“So that was definitely something I was yearning for, the respect from ex-champions, and when I’d lost it, it was like, ‘F—, I’ve lost that invincibility.’ But it’s all good. We move forward. I’m not really doing it for that purpose anymore because I’m not in that position, but the desire?

“One is definitely to become champion, which I think is possible within the next 16 months.”

Indeed, Joshua remains a big draw in the U.K. If he beats Frankin – and he’s a massive favorite – he’ll be an attractive opponent for the top heavyweights.

Joshua’s longtime promoter, Eddie Hearn, is already saying a long-awaited meeting with titleholder and countryman Tyson Fury is likely after Fury’s talks with Usyk for a unification bout collapsed, although Fury’s handlers are saying Hearn is jumping the gun. Fury and Joshua were expected to fight in December but talks broke off and Fury ended up fighting Derek Chisora instead.

Still, there is little doubt that a Fury-Joshua rematch could pack Wembley Stadium. That’s a motivating factor to get the fight made.

And a matchup between Joshua and fellow former champion Deontay Wilder also would do well in the U.K. given Wilder’s epic three-fight series with Fury. Joshua has expressed interest in that matchup.

“I think we’ve got to see what happens this year with the belts,” Joshua said. “… We’ll see where the belts land. Then just stay consistent, stay focused on improving for these next 12 to 16 months while I’m in title contention.”

If he loses to Franklin? That could be the last we see him.

[lawrence-related id=36388,35560]

Fight Week: Anthony Joshua will try to get back on track vs. Jermaine Franklin

Fight Week: Former heavyweight champ Anthony Joshua will try to get back to winning ways against Jermaine Franklin on Saturday in London.

FIGHT WEEK

Former heavyweight titleholder Anthony Joshua will return to the ring against Jermaine Franklin on Saturday night in London.

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-3, 22 KOS)
VS. JERMAINE FRANKLIN (21-1, 14 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, April 1
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (7 p.m. U.K. time) (main event later in show)
  • Where: O2 Arena, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 9-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Fabio Wardley vs. Michael Polite-Coffie, heavyweights; Matteo Signani vs. Felix Cash, middleweights; Austin Williams vs. River Wilson-Bent, middleweights
  • Prediction: Joshua KO 9
  • Background: Joshua returns to the ring for the first time since his back-to-back decision losses to Oleksandr Usyk, which cost him his world titles (in the first fight) and a great deal of respect. The 2012 Olympic champion from the U.K. was first revealed to be human in June 2019, when Andy Ruiz Jr. stopped him in seven rounds to take three of the four major belts. Joshua rebounded by outpointing Ruiz in the rematch the following December to regain his titles and stopped Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds in December 2020, his last victory. Then came Usyk. The gifted former undisputed cruiserweight champ defeated Joshua by a wide decision in September 2021 to become a champion in a second division and do further damage to Joshua’s reputation. The former champ performed better in the rematch last August but still lost a split decision, giving him a record of 2-3 in his last five fights. Franklin is a massive underdog but perhaps not a complete pushover. The 29-year-old from Michigan lost to longtime contender Dillian Whyte this past November but he pushed the Londoner harder than anyone had expected, coming up short by a majority decision. If Joshua wins on Saturday, he will be an attractive candidate to face any of the top heavyweights. That includes titleholder Tyson Fury now that his projected showdown with Usyk seems to be off. Deontay Wilder is another potential opponent.

 

ROBEISY RAMIREZ (11-1, 7 KOS)
VS. ISAAC DOGBOE (24-2, 15 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, April 1
  • Time: 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Vacant WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 5½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Joet Gonzalez vs. Jose Enrique Vivas, featherweights
  • Prediction: Ramirez UD
  • Background: Ramirez, the two-time Olympic champion from Cuba, lost a stunning split decision to journeyman Adan Gonzalez in his four-round pro debut in 2019 but has been untouchable since (including a shutout decision over Gonzalez in a rematch). The slick 29-year-old southpaw is coming off a ninth-round knockout of veteran Jose Matias Romero last October. He will be fighting for his first major title. Dogboe, a former 122-pound beltholder, is enjoying a bit of a renaissance. The 28-year-old from Ghana appeared to hit his ceiling when he lost his title to Emanuel Navarrete by a unanimous decision in December 2018 and then was stopped by Navarrete in the 12th round of the rematch the following May. He then moved up to 126 and has won four consecutive fights, including a split decision over capable Joet Gonzalez last July to earn him a shot at another belt.

 

ROY JONES JR. (66-9, 47 KOS)
VS. ANTHONY PETTIS (0-0, 0 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, April 1
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fiserv Forum, Milwaukee
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view (UFC Fight Pass)
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Vitor Belfort vs. Ronaldo Souza, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Jones KO 6
  • Background: He’s back? Jones is 54. The once-great Hall of Famer hasn’t taken part in a sanctioned bout since 2018, when he outpointed journeyman Scott Sigmon. He hasn’t even been in the ring since 2020, when he looked his age in an exhibition with Mike Tyson. Yet Jones made the decision to take part in a real match and the authorities in Wisconsin inexplicably gave him the go ahead. He said he took the fight because he always wanted to face an MMA fighter with a big name, such as Pettis. Uh, OK. Jones might actually defeat Pettis, a 36-year-old former UFC lightweight champion with no boxing experience. Still, you can bet a lot of people are asking a legitimate question right about now: “Should a 54-year-old be taking part in an actual professional fight?” Probably not.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

SATURDAY

  • Floyd Masson vs. Fabio Turchi, cruiserweights, Brisbane, Australia (FITE).
  • Adrian Pinheiro vs. Demetrius Banks, cruiserweights, Orlando, Florida (BoxTV.com).