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).

Anthony Joshua says a fight between him and Deontay Wilder ‘long overdue’

Anthony Joshua says that a fight between him and Deontay Wilder is :long overdue.”

Anthony Joshua believes he will fight Deontay Wilder.

The heavyweight contender, who is set to face Jermaine Franklin on April 1 in London (DAZN), told iFL TV Thursday that the meeting between the two former world champions is “long overdue.”

Joshua is 33, Wilder 37.

“It will happen and I think it’s been long overdue,” Joshua said. “It’s a conversation that has been happening for a long time. For me to sit here and say ‘it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen’, it will feel like I’m just waffling again.

“When it does, it does, and it will. That’s just me certifying it. I don’t need to sit here and talk about it, and go on and on and on because I’ve been in that realm before, where we spoke about it and it didn’t materialize.

“When it materializes, it will happen, and I’m confident.”

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) is coming off back-to-back decision losses to Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and last August, the first of which cost him three of the four major heavyweight titles.

He has since announced that he will work with trainer Derrick James for the fight with Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs). James trains titleholders Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo.

Franklin, from Saginaw, Michigan, is coming off the only loss in his career, a majority decision against Dillian Whyte in November. He’s about a 10-1 underdog against Joshua (average of multiple outlets).

Wilder (43-2-1, 42 KOs) rebounded from back-to-back knockout losses against Tyson Fury to stop Robert Helenius in one round in October.

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Anthony Joshua says a fight between him and Deontay Wilder ‘long overdue’

Anthony Joshua says that a fight between him and Deontay Wilder is :long overdue.”

Anthony Joshua believes he will fight Deontay Wilder.

The heavyweight contender, who is set to face Jermaine Franklin on April 1 in London (DAZN), told iFL TV Thursday that the meeting between the two former world champions is “long overdue.”

Joshua is 33, Wilder 37.

“It will happen and I think it’s been long overdue,” Joshua said. “It’s a conversation that has been happening for a long time. For me to sit here and say ‘it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen’, it will feel like I’m just waffling again.

“When it does, it does, and it will. That’s just me certifying it. I don’t need to sit here and talk about it, and go on and on and on because I’ve been in that realm before, where we spoke about it and it didn’t materialize.

“When it materializes, it will happen, and I’m confident.”

Joshua (24-3, 22 KOs) is coming off back-to-back decision losses to Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and last August, the first of which cost him three of the four major heavyweight titles.

He has since announced that he will work with trainer Derrick James for the fight with Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs). James trains titleholders Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo.

Franklin, from Saginaw, Michigan, is coming off the only loss in his career, a majority decision against Dillian Whyte in November. He’s about a 10-1 underdog against Joshua (average of multiple outlets).

Wilder (43-2-1, 42 KOs) rebounded from back-to-back knockout losses against Tyson Fury to stop Robert Helenius in one round in October.

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Weekend Review: Regis Prograis delivers special performance against Jose Zepeda

Weekend Review: Regis Prograis delivered a special performance against Jose Zepeda on Saturday in Carson, California.

Editor’s note: This new feature – Weekend Review – replaces the discontinued Good, Bad, Worse. The premise is the same: A look back at the past week of boxing.

 

BIGGEST WINNER

Regis Prograis – Prograis had been a forgotten man since he lost his junior welterweight title to Josh Taylor in October 2019 because he fought only once a year after that and never on a big stage. On Saturday, he reminded us what we were missing. The 33-year-old from New Orleans gave a dazzling performance in Carson, California, stopping overmatched Jose Zepeda in 11 rounds to become a two-time 140-pound champion. Prograis (28-1, 24 KOs) gave a boxing clinic, which left a good fighter in Zepeda looking lost most of the fight. The loser landed only six-plus punches per round, according to CompuBox. And then Prograis finished the job in style, scoring a brutal knockout 59 seconds into Round 11. He left no doubt that he’s a threat to anyone at 140 pounds – including his conqueror, Josh Taylor – and could compete with the elite 147-pounders eventually. It was a special night for him.

 

BIGGEST LOSER

Jose Zepeda – Zepeda (35-3, 27 KOs) had a bad night. He had two previous losses in his career but was never dominated like he was by Prograis, who seemed to expose Zepeda’s limitations in the latter’s third failed attempt to win a major world title. The 33-year-old from the Los Angeles area never gave himself a chance to win. He should’ve gotten nasty with Prograis after it became clear he couldn’t box with a superior boxer but didn’t, although that’s easy for me to say because I’m not taking one hard punch after another from one of the best in the business. Bottom line: Zepeda was in over his head. Does he still have a realistic chance of winning a belt? That would depend on the opponent. I don’t see him beating someone at the level of Prograis or Taylor. And, of course, how many more opportunities is he going to get?

 

MOST FORTUNATE

Dillian Whyte – The longtime heavyweight contender eked out a majority decision over relative unknown Jermaine Franklin (21-1, 1 KOs) on Saturday in London, a fight that some believe Franklin did enough to win. Had Whyte lost, he would’ve fallen in back-to-back fights (he was stopped by Tyson Fury in his previous outing) and been 2-3 in his last five. The 35-year-old Londoner would’ve been hard-pressed to bounce back from that. As it was, Whyte (29-3, 19 KOs) had his hand raised. And now he seems to be on track to face Anthony Joshua in a rematch next year. If he can find a way to win that fight, people will have forgotten his cold streak and he’ll be back in legitimate title contention.

 

BEST PROSPECT

Bakhodir Jalolov – The 6-foot-7 Uzbek seems to have all the ingredients necessary to become a heavyweight champion, which was evident once again during his fourth-round knockout of Curtis Harper on the Prograis-Zepeda card. The 2020 Olympic gold medalist has a vast amateur background, which gives him an outstanding fundamental foundation. He can box. And 12 knockouts in as many pro fights supports the notion that he can crack. One question mark is his chin. We’ll see what happens when he’s caught by another big puncher. As it stands, the Brooklyn-based Jalolov is on a short list of rising big men who could one day soon dominate the division. Among the others: Joe Joyce, Jared Anderson and Frank Sanchez. Stay tuned.

 

BIGGEST LETDOWN

John Ryder vs. Zach Parker – The British super middleweight contenders were engaged in a compelling fight when, after four rounds, the previously unbeaten Parker (22-1, 16 KOs) quit because of an injured (broken?) right hand Saturday in London. Ryder (32-5, 18 KOs) was baffled initially but then celebrated, which makes sense: He’s now the mandatory challenger to Canelo Alvarez’s WBO title. For Parker, there was nothing to celebrate. He had his own dreams of challenging Alvarez but will now have to take time off to heal and then begin the rebuilding process. And some observers undoubtedly wonder whether Parker should’ve tried to continue, which is harsh judgment because we don’t know the extent of the injury. Nevertheless, the unfortunate ending contributed to a disappointing night for a good boxer.

 

GUTSIEST PERFORMANCE

Yokasta Valle – The strawweight titleholder from Costa Rican moved up in weight to challenge junior flyweight titleholder Evelin Bermudez on the Prograis-Zepeda card, leaving her at what seemed to be at a physical disadvantage. That didn’t deter her. She used a combination of ability, hustle and sheer guts to outwork her Argentine opponent and win a majority decision, become a three-division champion and make it clear that she’s one of the best female fighters pound for pound. Valle (27-2, 9 KOs) is a former atomweight champ. The prideful Bermudez (17-1-1, 6 KOs) has nothing to be ashamed of. She gave a good effort. And she’s only 26. She’ll be back.

 

BEST BOXING FAMILY.

The Vargases – Former junior middleweight titleholder Fernando Vargas has produced a brood of promising boxers. His three sons – Fernando Jr., Emiliano and Amado – have a combined record of 14-0 (11 KOs) in their young careers after Junior and Amado won their fights on the Prograis-Zepeda card. Of course, it’s early. The second-generation Vargases, who are trained by their famous father, are just started out. However, having been around boxing their entire lives, they have a good feel for the sport and have inherited dad’s fighting spirit. I won’t be surprised if one or more of them succeeds long term.

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Weekend Review: Regis Prograis delivers special performance against Jose Zepeda

Weekend Review: Regis Prograis delivered a special performance against Jose Zepeda on Saturday in Carson, California.

Editor’s note: This new feature – Weekend Review – replaces the discontinued Good, Bad, Worse. The premise is the same: A look back at the past week of boxing.

 

BIGGEST WINNER

Regis Prograis – Prograis had been a forgotten man since he lost his junior welterweight title to Josh Taylor in October 2019 because he fought only once a year after that and never on a big stage. On Saturday, he reminded us what we were missing. The 33-year-old from New Orleans gave a dazzling performance in Carson, California, stopping overmatched Jose Zepeda in 11 rounds to become a two-time 140-pound champion. Prograis (28-1, 24 KOs) gave a boxing clinic, which left a good fighter in Zepeda looking lost most of the fight. The loser landed only six-plus punches per round, according to CompuBox. And then Prograis finished the job in style, scoring a brutal knockout 59 seconds into Round 11. He left no doubt that he’s a threat to anyone at 140 pounds – including his conqueror, Josh Taylor – and could compete with the elite 147-pounders eventually. It was a special night for him.

 

BIGGEST LOSER

Jose Zepeda – Zepeda (35-3, 27 KOs) had a bad night. He had two previous losses in his career but was never dominated like he was by Prograis, who seemed to expose Zepeda’s limitations in the latter’s third failed attempt to win a major world title. The 33-year-old from the Los Angeles area never gave himself a chance to win. He should’ve gotten nasty with Prograis after it became clear he couldn’t box with a superior boxer but didn’t, although that’s easy for me to say because I’m not taking one hard punch after another from one of the best in the business. Bottom line: Zepeda was in over his head. Does he still have a realistic chance of winning a belt? That would depend on the opponent. I don’t see him beating someone at the level of Prograis or Taylor. And, of course, how many more opportunities is he going to get?

 

MOST FORTUNATE

Dillian Whyte – The longtime heavyweight contender eked out a majority decision over relative unknown Jermaine Franklin (21-1, 1 KOs) on Saturday in London, a fight that some believe Franklin did enough to win. Had Whyte lost, he would’ve fallen in back-to-back fights (he was stopped by Tyson Fury in his previous outing) and been 2-3 in his last five. The 35-year-old Londoner would’ve been hard-pressed to bounce back from that. As it was, Whyte (29-3, 19 KOs) had his hand raised. And now he seems to be on track to face Anthony Joshua in a rematch next year. If he can find a way to win that fight, people will have forgotten his cold streak and he’ll be back in legitimate title contention.

 

BEST PROSPECT

Bakhodir Jalolov – The 6-foot-7 Uzbek seems to have all the ingredients necessary to become a heavyweight champion, which was evident once again during his fourth-round knockout of Curtis Harper on the Prograis-Zepeda card. The 2020 Olympic gold medalist has a vast amateur background, which gives him an outstanding fundamental foundation. He can box. And 12 knockouts in as many pro fights supports the notion that he can crack. One question mark is his chin. We’ll see what happens when he’s caught by another big puncher. As it stands, the Brooklyn-based Jalolov is on a short list of rising big men who could one day soon dominate the division. Among the others: Joe Joyce, Jared Anderson and Frank Sanchez. Stay tuned.

 

BIGGEST LETDOWN

John Ryder vs. Zach Parker – The British super middleweight contenders were engaged in a compelling fight when, after four rounds, the previously unbeaten Parker (22-1, 16 KOs) quit because of an injured (broken?) right hand Saturday in London. Ryder (32-5, 18 KOs) was baffled initially but then celebrated, which makes sense: He’s now the mandatory challenger to Canelo Alvarez’s WBO title. For Parker, there was nothing to celebrate. He had his own dreams of challenging Alvarez but will now have to take time off to heal and then begin the rebuilding process. And some observers undoubtedly wonder whether Parker should’ve tried to continue, which is harsh judgment because we don’t know the extent of the injury. Nevertheless, the unfortunate ending contributed to a disappointing night for a good boxer.

 

GUTSIEST PERFORMANCE

Yokasta Valle – The strawweight titleholder from Costa Rican moved up in weight to challenge junior flyweight titleholder Evelin Bermudez on the Prograis-Zepeda card, leaving her at what seemed to be at a physical disadvantage. That didn’t deter her. She used a combination of ability, hustle and sheer guts to outwork her Argentine opponent and win a majority decision, become a three-division champion and make it clear that she’s one of the best female fighters pound for pound. Valle (27-2, 9 KOs) is a former atomweight champ. The prideful Bermudez (17-1-1, 6 KOs) has nothing to be ashamed of. She gave a good effort. And she’s only 26. She’ll be back.

 

BEST BOXING FAMILY.

The Vargases – Former junior middleweight titleholder Fernando Vargas has produced a brood of promising boxers. His three sons – Fernando Jr., Emiliano and Amado – have a combined record of 14-0 (11 KOs) in their young careers after Junior and Amado won their fights on the Prograis-Zepeda card. Of course, it’s early. The second-generation Vargases, who are trained by their famous father, are just started out. However, having been around boxing their entire lives, they have a good feel for the sport and have inherited dad’s fighting spirit. I won’t be surprised if one or more of them succeeds long term.

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Dillian Whyte survives scare against Jermaine Franklin, eyes Anthony Joshua

Dillian Whyte on Saturday survived a test against Jermaine Franklin that sets up a possible rematch with Anthony Joshua.

It wasn’t convincing, but Dillian Whyte got the job done.

The longtime heavyweight contender defeated relative unknown, but determined American Jermaine Franklin by a majority decision in a competitive fight Saturday at OVO Arena in London.

The victory could set up a rematch with Anthony Joshua, who was at ringside and reportedly has been receptive to Whyte’s wish to fight him next year.

Whyte (29-3, 19 KOs) had lost two of his previous three fights, including a sixth-round knockout against titleholder Tyson Fury in April.

Still, Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) wasn’t given much of a chance against a veteran of so many big-time events. Then the fight started.

Neither man was able to gain a clear advantage in a grueling, back-and-forth fight, although two judges evidently were convinced that Whyte had outworked his stubborn opponent.

The 35-year-old Londoner won 116-112 — eight rounds to four — on two scorecards. The third judge scored it 115-115.

Some believe that the cards favoring Whyte were too wide, including Franklin, who thought he deserved the victory.

“I felt like I got robbed, I felt like I did enough to get the decision,” he said, according to The Mirror. “I felt like I won the earlier rounds. I just felt like I got robbed on the decision.”

Nevertheless, it’s Whyte who had his hand raised and took a step toward a bigger fight.

Whyte was stopped by Joshua in seven rounds back in 2015, before Joshua became a world titleholder. He would like to avenge that setback. More important, a victory over Joshua would make him a candidate to fight for a title one more time.

Dillian Whyte survives scare against Jermaine Franklin, eyes Anthony Joshua

Dillian Whyte on Saturday survived a test against Jermaine Franklin that sets up a possible rematch with Anthony Joshua.

It wasn’t convincing, but Dillian Whyte got the job done.

The longtime heavyweight contender defeated relative unknown, but determined American Jermaine Franklin by a majority decision in a competitive fight Saturday at OVO Arena in London.

The victory could set up a rematch with Anthony Joshua, who was at ringside and reportedly has been receptive to Whyte’s wish to fight him next year.

Whyte (29-3, 19 KOs) had lost two of his previous three fights, including a sixth-round knockout against titleholder Tyson Fury in April.

Still, Franklin (21-1, 14 KOs) wasn’t given much of a chance against a veteran of so many big-time events. Then the fight started.

Neither man was able to gain a clear advantage in a grueling, back-and-forth fight, although two judges evidently were convinced that Whyte had outworked his stubborn opponent.

The 35-year-old Londoner won 116-112 — eight rounds to four — on two scorecards. The third judge scored it 115-115.

Some believe that the cards favoring Whyte were too wide, including Franklin, who thought he deserved the victory.

“I felt like I got robbed, I felt like I did enough to get the decision,” he said, according to The Mirror. “I felt like I won the earlier rounds. I just felt like I got robbed on the decision.”

Nevertheless, it’s Whyte who had his hand raised and took a step toward a bigger fight.

Whyte was stopped by Joshua in seven rounds back in 2015, before Joshua became a world titleholder. He would like to avenge that setback. More important, a victory over Joshua would make him a candidate to fight for a title one more time.

Dillian Whyte vs. Jermaine Franklin: date, time, how to watch, background

Dillian Whyte vs. Jermaine Franklin: date, time, how to watch, background.

Longtime heavyweight contender Dillian Whyte returns to the ring against Jermaine Franklin on Saturday in London.

DILLIAN WHYTE (28-3, 19 KOs) vs. JERMAINE FRANKLIN (21-0, 14 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Nov. 26
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (7 p.m. GMT) (main event later in show)
  • Where: OVO Arena, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Cost: DAZN is $19.99 per month or $149.99 annually
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • Weights: Whyte 238 pounds, Franklin 252
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Whyte 9½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Fabio Wardley vs. Nathan Gorman, heavyweights; Craig Richards vs. Ricards Bolotniks, light heavyweights; Sandy Ryan vs. Magali Rodriguez, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Whyte KO 7
  • Background: Whyte, a 35-year-old perennial contender, begins another comeback against an unbeaten, but unproven American. The Londoner is coming off a sixth-round knockout loss to titleholder Tyson Fury this past April, his first shot at a major belt. That followed back-to-back fights against Alexander Povetkin, who stunned the boxing world by stopping Whyte with one punch in the fifth round in August 2020 and was stopped himself in the fourth round of the rematch the following March. Whyte has said he’d like to fight Anthony Joshua a second time if he can get past Franklin. Joshua handed Whyte his first loss, a seventh-round knockout in 2015. Franklin, a 29-year-old from Saginaw, Michigan, has passed every test in his career but has not faced a fighter of Whyte’s stature. He last fought in May, when he stopped journeyman Rodney Moore in five rounds. This will be Franklin’s first fight outside the United States. He might have a chance to fight Joshua if he has his hand raised Saturday.