A triangle ring and open-hand 8-ounce gloves: Triller’s Sean Wheelock details elements of Triad Combat

Triller’s Sean Wheelock details the elements of Triad Combat and the goal of evening the playing field between MMA fighters and boxers.

Triller’s upcoming Triad Combat hopes to level the playing field between MMA fighters and boxers when they compete against each other.

This new take on boxing will take place in a triangular ring, with the fighters wearing 8-ounce hybrid gloves. Aside from the usual punching techniques, fighters will be able to utilize spinning backfists and superman punches.

[autotag]Sean Wheelock[/autotag], Triller’s director of rules and regulations, helped mold this idea along with Triller co-founder Ryan Kavanagh, aiming to level the playing field between boxers and MMA fighters in this punching-only sport.

On Nov. 27 at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, former UFC heavyweight champion [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] will take on former boxing world title challenger [autotag]Kubrat Pulev[/autotag] in the main event of the first Triad Combat event.

In recent years, there has been a rise in MMA fighters testing their standup skills against legendary boxers in the ring, such as Conor McGregor vs. Floyd Mayweather and Anderson Silva vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. According to Wheelock, the idea for Triad Combat was sparked by Kavanagh following Vitor Belfort vs. Evander Holyfield in September.

Wheelock’s experience in combat sports stretches beyond the commentary booth, where most fans are familiar with his work from the early days of Bellator to today’s BKFC events and other promotions across many fighting styles. With his experience as a boxing referee and unpaid work with the Kansas Athletic Commission, Wheelock has been carving a path towards rules and regulations, which came to fruition when Triller expanded his role beyond commentary.

“I love these environments where we say, ‘Let’s do something different, let’s take a chance,'” Wheelock told MMA Junkie. “Let’s ask, ‘Why not?’ Instead of, ‘Are we allowed to?’ …Ryan (Kavanagh) was asking me, ‘What could we do to make this more even between boxers and MMA fighters?’

“If you put someone who does that as their primary sport against someone who doesn’t do that as their primary sport, no matter how good the athletes are, the advantage obviously always goes to the person that’s in their primary sport.

“If you had a home run hitting contest and you put Roger Federer in there, he’s probably not going to hit as many home runs as Major League Baseball players,” Wheelock continued. “It just kind of makes sense that way, even though he has great swing mechanics.”

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Aside from the triangular ring which will provide unique angles for the fighters to navigate, the curved 8 oz. hybrid gloves, which have exposed fingers, are a key component to Triad Combat. While fighters of both fighting backgrounds can take advantage of these gloves, they potentially open the door to accidental eye pokes, which is a concern boxers have never had to worry about.

“I looked at four different glove companies,” Wheelock explained. “I found a glove, and we worked with the manufacturer to where the fingers are naturally curved in. “That was something I worried about a lot. …It looks like an 8-ounce boxing glove on the backhand and on the front part, it looks like an MMA glove.

“Because you’re not going in open hands, looking to shoot for a takedown, or snatch a single leg, or hit a blast double, I don’t think eye pokes are going to be a problem. There was a lot of effort and due diligence put in because I do not want to see eye pokes in any fight, let alone on a card of this importance and this magnitude.”

A lot of thought went into the creation of this event, including competing at two-minute rounds, which Wheelock anticipates will create a higher-paced fight.

Rounding out the unique environment that Triller provides for combat sports events, the heavy metal band Metallica will perform a few songs to open the show on Nov. 27, and after the seven scheduled bouts conclude, will return for a full concert.

Watch Wheelock explain the full ruleset of Triad Combat in the video above.

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Mike Perry, Frank Mir featured on Triller’s inaugural Triad Combat fighting event

Triller launches a new fighting sport that’s set to debut on Nov. 27 featuring ex-UFC fighters Mike Perry and Frank Mir.

Triller is exploring new ways to fight in the combat sports world.

The organization announced on Thursday the launch of a new style of fighting called Triad Combat that’s set to inaugurate on Nov. 27 at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas.

The event is set to feature former UFC champion [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag], fan favorite ex-UFC welterweight [autotag]Mike Perry[/autotag], and former boxing heavyweight title challenger [autotag]Kubrat Pulev[/autotag]. The three will compete on the event in their respective bouts and no opponents were announced.

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Triad Combat is a new style of fighting that incorporates boxing and MMA rules.

Fighters will compete in a triangular ring and under two-minute rounds. The idea is to set professional boxers against professional MMA fighters in an environment that’s “leveling the playing field.” Holding and clinching will be allowed. No specifics on the types of holds were revealed. The gloves in which fighters will compete in will also be different and it’s expected to be a mix between MMA and boxing.

The event is set to be featured on pay-per-view. A musical act is expected from Metallica along with other celebrity guests.

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Anthony Joshua vs. Oleksandr Usyk: date, time, how to watch, background

Anthony Joshua vs. Oleksandr Usyk: date, time, how to watch, background.

HEAVYWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER ANTHONY JOSHUA RETURNS TO THE RING AGAINST FORMER CRUISERWEIGHT CHAMP OLEKSANDR USYK ON SATURDAY IN LONDON.

***

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-1, 22 KOs) VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (18-0, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 25
  • Time: 10 a.m. (main event approximately 2 p.m.)
  • Where: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight
  • Weights: Joshua 240 pounds, Usyk 221.25
  • At stake: Joshua’s IBF, WBA and WBO titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Lawrence Okolie vs. Dilan Prasovic, cruiserweights (for Okolie’s WBO title); Callum Smith vs. Lenin Castillo, light heavyweights
  • Prediction: Joshua UD 12
  • Background: Joshua was expected to meet British rival and fellow titleholder Tyson Fury in his next fight, which arguably would be the biggest possible event in boxing. Instead, after Fury was forced to fight Deontay Wilder a third time, Joshua will defend against mandatory challenger Usyk. Joshua is two fights removed from the biggest nightmare of his career, a stunning seventh-round knockout loss against Andy Ruiz Jr. in June 2019 that cost him his belts and raised questions about his toughness. He responded by outpointing an ill-prepared Ruiz six months to regain his titles and right his ship. He then blew out Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds this past December, his most-recent fight. Usyk is trying to follow in the footsteps of Evander Holyfield and David Haye, cruiserweight titleholders who went on to become heavyweight champion. The 2012 Olympic gold medalist from Ukraine has fought twice as a heavyweight, stopping Chazz Witherspoon in seven rounds in October 2019 and defeating Derek Chisora by a decision in a competitive fight a year later. He has the ability to compete with Joshua but a size disadvantage might be an issue, although his handlers insist he has grown into the division. Joshua is 6-foot-6, 240-plus pounds; Usyk is 6-3 and last fought at 217¼. The winner on Saturday could face the winner of the Oct. 9 Fury-Wilder fight.

[lawrence-related id=24043,24037,23997,23853,22006,23867]

Anthony Joshua vs. Oleksandr Usyk: date, time, how to watch, background

Anthony Joshua vs. Oleksandr Usyk: date, time, how to watch, background.

HEAVYWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER ANTHONY JOSHUA RETURNS TO THE RING AGAINST FORMER CRUISERWEIGHT CHAMP OLEKSANDR USYK ON SATURDAY IN LONDON.

***

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-1, 22 KOs) VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (18-0, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 25
  • Time: 10 a.m. (main event approximately 2 p.m.)
  • Where: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight
  • Weights: Joshua 240 pounds, Usyk 221.25
  • At stake: Joshua’s IBF, WBA and WBO titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Lawrence Okolie vs. Dilan Prasovic, cruiserweights (for Okolie’s WBO title); Callum Smith vs. Lenin Castillo, light heavyweights
  • Prediction: Joshua UD 12
  • Background: Joshua was expected to meet British rival and fellow titleholder Tyson Fury in his next fight, which arguably would be the biggest possible event in boxing. Instead, after Fury was forced to fight Deontay Wilder a third time, Joshua will defend against mandatory challenger Usyk. Joshua is two fights removed from the biggest nightmare of his career, a stunning seventh-round knockout loss against Andy Ruiz Jr. in June 2019 that cost him his belts and raised questions about his toughness. He responded by outpointing an ill-prepared Ruiz six months to regain his titles and right his ship. He then blew out Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds this past December, his most-recent fight. Usyk is trying to follow in the footsteps of Evander Holyfield and David Haye, cruiserweight titleholders who went on to become heavyweight champion. The 2012 Olympic gold medalist from Ukraine has fought twice as a heavyweight, stopping Chazz Witherspoon in seven rounds in October 2019 and defeating Derek Chisora by a decision in a competitive fight a year later. He has the ability to compete with Joshua but a size disadvantage might be an issue, although his handlers insist he has grown into the division. Joshua is 6-foot-6, 240-plus pounds; Usyk is 6-3 and last fought at 217¼. The winner on Saturday could face the winner of the Oct. 9 Fury-Wilder fight.

[lawrence-related id=24043,24037,23997,23853,22006,23867]

Anthony Joshua: 5 fights that have defined the heavyweight champ

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in December. *** Anthony Joshua has crammed a lot of drama into a relatively short amateur career and 24 professional bouts. A.J. has won an Olympic gold medal, captured a pro world title at only …

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in December.

***

Anthony Joshua has crammed a lot of drama into a relatively short amateur career and 24 professional bouts.

A.J. has won an Olympic gold medal, captured a pro world title at only 26, survived a spirted effort against an all-time great, lost his championship in one of the sport’s greatest upsets and then rebounded to become a titleholder again.

It definitely hasn’t been boring.

Joshua returns to the ring against Kubrat Pulev in defense of his three major titles Saturday at SSE Arena in London (DAZN), a fight that could lead to more drama: a showdown with countryman and fellow titleholder Tyson Fury next year.

In this article, we look back on Joshua’s career and give you five fights that have defined him.

***

ROBERTO CAMMARELLE

Anthony Joshua (left) celebrates after winning the super heavyweight gold medal in the 2012 Olympics. Damien Meyer /  AFP/Getty Images

When: Aug. 12, 2012

Where: Excel London, London (Olympics)

Result: 18-18 (decided by countback)

Background: Joshua became a star, at least in the U.K., before he threw a punch as a professional. A.J. had a reported 43 amateur fights when he stepped into the ring to face defending Olympic champion Roberto Cammarelle in the super heavyweight gold medal match in the London Games. Cammarelle, capable and experienced, built a lead after two rounds but a determined Joshua battled back and evened the score by the final bell. The winner was decided by a countback, in which the scores of all five judges (not just the three median scores) are taken into account. The 22-year-old from Watford was the Olympic champion in the Games’ most-glamourous division, which gave him an enormous head start in a professional career that began in October of 2013. He wasn’t just a successful amateur making the transition to the paid ranks. He was Anthony Joshua, gold medalist. Of course, with that name recognition comes pressure to have great success. He would feel the full weight of that pressure in 2019.

***

CHARLES MARTIN

When: April 9, 2016

Where: O2 Arena, London

Result: KO 2

Background: This was more of a coronation than a competitive fight. Charles Martin was making the first defense of his IBF title, which he won by knockout in his previous fight against Vyacheslav Glazkov less than three months earlier. He would have one of the shortest title reigns – 85 days — in heavyweight history. Martin was overmatched and quickly overwhelmed against Joshua, going down twice from right hands to the head in the second round and failing to make it out of the round. Just like that, Joshua fulfilled his destiny in only his 16th professional fight. And he was everything he was billed to be – fast, athletic, explosive and as powerful as any heavyweight since countryman Lennox Lewis ruled the division a generation earlier. He was the best big man in the world and it seemed as if he’d hold that position well into the future. Three fights later it all almost came crashing down.

***

WLADIMIR KLITSCHKO

When: April 29, 2017

Where: SSE Arena, London

Result: TKO 11

Background: Klitschko, 41, seemed to be finished as an elite heavyweight after his one-sided decision loss to Tyson Fury the previous November. However, the former long-reigning champion, whipped himself into prime condition to give it one more go against an opponent he thought would be less elusive and more willing to engage than Fury was. He was right. And he took advantage. Klitschko got up from a fifth-round knockdown to put Joshua on the canvas – and hurt him — in the sixth with a vintage right hand. A younger Klitschko might’ve been able to finish him off; this version couldn’t. Five rounds later, in the 11th, it was Joshua who ended the fight early. He put Klitschko down twice and the fight was stopped with the old champion’s back against the ropes and taking unanswered punches. Joshua had his biggest victory. And he proved he could overcome adversity, although he wouldn’t be able to do so four fights later.

***

ANDY RUIZ JR. I

When: June 1, 2019

Where: Madison Square Garden, New York

Result: TKO L 7

Background: Late replacement Andy Ruiz Jr. had no chance to win this fight. The chubby American, as much as a 30-1 underdog, had some ability and quick hands but he was in the ring with the best heavyweight in the business. Then came a crazy Round 3 and Joshua would never be the same. The champion put Ruiz down with a left hook less than a minute into the round, prompting TV analyst Chris Mannix to say, “Anthony Joshua is a composed and ferocious finisher. Watch this.” Watch this, indeed. Ruiz took a big right and then, moments later, landed a left hook to side of Joshua’s head that shook him badly. A few punches later the discombobulated champion was down. He never fully recovered. Joshua fought bravely the next few rounds but went down two more times in Round 7 and, with no answers to Ruiz’s onslaught, he more or less gave up. Referee Michael Griffin stopped the fight at 1:27 of the round, making Ruiz the heavyweight champ and raising serious questions about Joshua.

***

ANDY RUIZ JR. II

When: Dec. 7, 2019

Where: Diriyah Arena, Diriyah, Saudi Arabia

Result: UD 12

Background: Joshua’s career as an elite heavyweight was on the line in this fight. A second consecutive loss to Ruiz would be difficult to overcome; a victory, particularly a clear one, would allow him to regain his titles and a good portion of the status he lost the first time around. He took no chances. Joshua boxed more than he fought, using his height, superior skill set and athleticism to win rounds and ultimately the fight by a clear decision – 118-110, 118-110 and 119-109 — against an ill-prepared opponent who came in 15½ pounds heavier than he had in the first fight. Joshua was champion again, he had reclaimed at least some of the momentum he had established after winning the gold medal, he was back on track. But what are we to make of this cautious Joshua? Is this the fighter we will see going forward? We’ll get a better idea about that when he steps into the ring to face Kubrat Pulev on Saturday.

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Anthony Joshua: 5 fights that have defined the heavyweight champ

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in December. *** Anthony Joshua has crammed a lot of drama into a relatively short amateur career and 24 professional bouts. A.J. has won an Olympic gold medal, captured a pro world title at only …

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in December.

***

Anthony Joshua has crammed a lot of drama into a relatively short amateur career and 24 professional bouts.

A.J. has won an Olympic gold medal, captured a pro world title at only 26, survived a spirted effort against an all-time great, lost his championship in one of the sport’s greatest upsets and then rebounded to become a titleholder again.

It definitely hasn’t been boring.

Joshua returns to the ring against Kubrat Pulev in defense of his three major titles Saturday at SSE Arena in London (DAZN), a fight that could lead to more drama: a showdown with countryman and fellow titleholder Tyson Fury next year.

In this article, we look back on Joshua’s career and give you five fights that have defined him.

***

ROBERTO CAMMARELLE

Anthony Joshua (left) celebrates after winning the super heavyweight gold medal in the 2012 Olympics. Damien Meyer /  AFP/Getty Images

When: Aug. 12, 2012

Where: Excel London, London (Olympics)

Result: 18-18 (decided by countback)

Background: Joshua became a star, at least in the U.K., before he threw a punch as a professional. A.J. had a reported 43 amateur fights when he stepped into the ring to face defending Olympic champion Roberto Cammarelle in the super heavyweight gold medal match in the London Games. Cammarelle, capable and experienced, built a lead after two rounds but a determined Joshua battled back and evened the score by the final bell. The winner was decided by a countback, in which the scores of all five judges (not just the three median scores) are taken into account. The 22-year-old from Watford was the Olympic champion in the Games’ most-glamourous division, which gave him an enormous head start in a professional career that began in October of 2013. He wasn’t just a successful amateur making the transition to the paid ranks. He was Anthony Joshua, gold medalist. Of course, with that name recognition comes pressure to have great success. He would feel the full weight of that pressure in 2019.

***

CHARLES MARTIN

When: April 9, 2016

Where: O2 Arena, London

Result: KO 2

Background: This was more of a coronation than a competitive fight. Charles Martin was making the first defense of his IBF title, which he won by knockout in his previous fight against Vyacheslav Glazkov less than three months earlier. He would have one of the shortest title reigns – 85 days — in heavyweight history. Martin was overmatched and quickly overwhelmed against Joshua, going down twice from right hands to the head in the second round and failing to make it out of the round. Just like that, Joshua fulfilled his destiny in only his 16th professional fight. And he was everything he was billed to be – fast, athletic, explosive and as powerful as any heavyweight since countryman Lennox Lewis ruled the division a generation earlier. He was the best big man in the world and it seemed as if he’d hold that position well into the future. Three fights later it all almost came crashing down.

***

WLADIMIR KLITSCHKO

When: April 29, 2017

Where: SSE Arena, London

Result: TKO 11

Background: Klitschko, 41, seemed to be finished as an elite heavyweight after his one-sided decision loss to Tyson Fury the previous November. However, the former long-reigning champion, whipped himself into prime condition to give it one more go against an opponent he thought would be less elusive and more willing to engage than Fury was. He was right. And he took advantage. Klitschko got up from a fifth-round knockdown to put Joshua on the canvas – and hurt him — in the sixth with a vintage right hand. A younger Klitschko might’ve been able to finish him off; this version couldn’t. Five rounds later, in the 11th, it was Joshua who ended the fight early. He put Klitschko down twice and the fight was stopped with the old champion’s back against the ropes and taking unanswered punches. Joshua had his biggest victory. And he proved he could overcome adversity, although he wouldn’t be able to do so four fights later.

***

ANDY RUIZ JR. I

When: June 1, 2019

Where: Madison Square Garden, New York

Result: TKO L 7

Background: Late replacement Andy Ruiz Jr. had no chance to win this fight. The chubby American, as much as a 30-1 underdog, had some ability and quick hands but he was in the ring with the best heavyweight in the business. Then came a crazy Round 3 and Joshua would never be the same. The champion put Ruiz down with a left hook less than a minute into the round, prompting TV analyst Chris Mannix to say, “Anthony Joshua is a composed and ferocious finisher. Watch this.” Watch this, indeed. Ruiz took a big right and then, moments later, landed a left hook to side of Joshua’s head that shook him badly. A few punches later the discombobulated champion was down. He never fully recovered. Joshua fought bravely the next few rounds but went down two more times in Round 7 and, with no answers to Ruiz’s onslaught, he more or less gave up. Referee Michael Griffin stopped the fight at 1:27 of the round, making Ruiz the heavyweight champ and raising serious questions about Joshua.

***

ANDY RUIZ JR. II

When: Dec. 7, 2019

Where: Diriyah Arena, Diriyah, Saudi Arabia

Result: UD 12

Background: Joshua’s career as an elite heavyweight was on the line in this fight. A second consecutive loss to Ruiz would be difficult to overcome; a victory, particularly a clear one, would allow him to regain his titles and a good portion of the status he lost the first time around. He took no chances. Joshua boxed more than he fought, using his height, superior skill set and athleticism to win rounds and ultimately the fight by a clear decision – 118-110, 118-110 and 119-109 — against an ill-prepared opponent who came in 15½ pounds heavier than he had in the first fight. Joshua was champion again, he had reclaimed at least some of the momentum he had established after winning the gold medal, he was back on track. But what are we to make of this cautious Joshua? Is this the fighter we will see going forward? We’ll get a better idea about that when he steps into the ring to face Kubrat Pulev on Saturday.

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Fight Week: Anthony Joshua returns against Oleksandr Usyk

Fight Week: Anthony Joshua returns against Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday in London.

FIGHT WEEK

HEAVYWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER ANTHONY JOSHUA RETURNS TO THE RING AGAINST FORMER CRUISERWEIGHT CHAMP OLEKSANDR USYK ON SATURDAY IN LONDON.

***

JA’RICO O’QUINN (14-0-1, 8 KOs) VS. SAUL SANCHEZ (16-1, 9 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Sept. 24
  • Where: Central Park Community Center, Broken Arrow, Okla.
  • TV/Stream: Showtime (ShoBox)
  • Division: Bantamweight
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Jayvon Garnett vs. Luis Reynaldo Nunez, featherweights; Alejandro Guerrero vs. Otar Eranosyan, junior lightweights.
  • Prediction: Joshua UD 12

Background: The three-fight “ShoBox: The New Generation” telecast will feature six young fighters with a combined record of 72-2-1. Ja’Rico O’Quinn, a 26-year-old from Detroit, faces Los Angeles-area native Saul Sanchez, 24, in the scheduled 10-round bantamweight main event. O’Quinn hasn’t fought since January of last year, meaning he will have been out of the ring for 20 months. Sanchez has fought four times during that period, the last time in March, when he stopped Frank Gonzalez in one round. Sanchez is ranked by two sanctioning bodies at junior bantamweight. Also, Jayvon Garnett (10-0, 5 KOs) of Cincinnati will take on Dominican Luis Reynaldo Nunez (11-0, 8 KOs) in a 10-round featherweight bout. Nunez is ranked No. 11 by the WBA at junior featherweight. And Otar Eranosyan (9-0, 6 KOs) of Akhalkalaki, Georgia will face Texan Alejandro Guerrero (12-1, 9 KOs) in a scheduled eight-round junior lightweight fight. Eranosyan is ranked No. 9 by the WBA at junior lightweight.

***

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-1, 22 KOs) VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (18-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Sept. 25
  • Where: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight
  • At stake: Joshua’s IBF, WBA and WBO titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Lawrence Okolie vs. Dilan Prasovic, cruiserweights (for Okolie’s WBO title); Callum Smith vs. Lenin Castillo, light heavyweights
  • Prediction: Joshua UD 12
  • Background: Joshua was expected to meet British rival and fellow titleholder Tyson Fury in his next fight, which arguably would be the biggest possible event in boxing. Instead, after Fury was forced to fight Deontay Wilder a third time, Joshua will defend against mandatory challenger Usyk. Joshua is two fights removed from the biggest nightmare of his career, a stunning seventh-round knockout loss against Andy Ruiz Jr. in June 2019 that cost him his belts and raised questions about his toughness. He responded by outpointing an ill-prepared Ruiz six months to regain his titles and right his ship. He then blew out Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds this past December, his most-recent fight. Usyk is trying to follow in the footsteps of Evander Holyfield and David Haye, cruiserweight titleholders who went on to become heavyweight champion. The 2012 Olympic gold medalist from Ukraine has fought twice as a heavyweight, stopping Chazz Witherspoon in seven rounds in October 2019 and defeating Derek Chisora by a decision in a competitive fight a year later. He has the ability to compete with Joshua but a size disadvantage might be an issue, although his handlers insist he has grown into the division. Joshua is 6-foot-6, 240-plus pounds; Usyk is 6-3 and last fought at 217¼. The winner on Saturday could face the winner of the Oct. 9 Fury-Wilder fight.

Also fighting this weekend: Kenshiro Teraji (18-0, 10 KOs) will defend his WBC junior flyweight title against Masamichi Yabuki (12-3, 11 KOs) on Wednesday in Kyoto, Japan (no TV in U.S.).

[lawrence-related id=23853,22006,20508,20376]

Fight Week: Anthony Joshua returns against Oleksandr Usyk

Fight Week: Anthony Joshua returns against Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday in London.

FIGHT WEEK

HEAVYWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER ANTHONY JOSHUA RETURNS TO THE RING AGAINST FORMER CRUISERWEIGHT CHAMP OLEKSANDR USYK ON SATURDAY IN LONDON.

***

JA’RICO O’QUINN (14-0-1, 8 KOs) VS. SAUL SANCHEZ (16-1, 9 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Sept. 24
  • Where: Central Park Community Center, Broken Arrow, Okla.
  • TV/Stream: Showtime (ShoBox)
  • Division: Bantamweight
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Jayvon Garnett vs. Luis Reynaldo Nunez, featherweights; Alejandro Guerrero vs. Otar Eranosyan, junior lightweights.
  • Prediction: Joshua UD 12

Background: The three-fight “ShoBox: The New Generation” telecast will feature six young fighters with a combined record of 72-2-1. Ja’Rico O’Quinn, a 26-year-old from Detroit, faces Los Angeles-area native Saul Sanchez, 24, in the scheduled 10-round bantamweight main event. O’Quinn hasn’t fought since January of last year, meaning he will have been out of the ring for 20 months. Sanchez has fought four times during that period, the last time in March, when he stopped Frank Gonzalez in one round. Sanchez is ranked by two sanctioning bodies at junior bantamweight. Also, Jayvon Garnett (10-0, 5 KOs) of Cincinnati will take on Dominican Luis Reynaldo Nunez (11-0, 8 KOs) in a 10-round featherweight bout. Nunez is ranked No. 11 by the WBA at junior featherweight. And Otar Eranosyan (9-0, 6 KOs) of Akhalkalaki, Georgia will face Texan Alejandro Guerrero (12-1, 9 KOs) in a scheduled eight-round junior lightweight fight. Eranosyan is ranked No. 9 by the WBA at junior lightweight.

***

ANTHONY JOSHUA (24-1, 22 KOs) VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (18-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Sept. 25
  • Where: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight
  • At stake: Joshua’s IBF, WBA and WBO titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Joshua 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Lawrence Okolie vs. Dilan Prasovic, cruiserweights (for Okolie’s WBO title); Callum Smith vs. Lenin Castillo, light heavyweights
  • Prediction: Joshua UD 12
  • Background: Joshua was expected to meet British rival and fellow titleholder Tyson Fury in his next fight, which arguably would be the biggest possible event in boxing. Instead, after Fury was forced to fight Deontay Wilder a third time, Joshua will defend against mandatory challenger Usyk. Joshua is two fights removed from the biggest nightmare of his career, a stunning seventh-round knockout loss against Andy Ruiz Jr. in June 2019 that cost him his belts and raised questions about his toughness. He responded by outpointing an ill-prepared Ruiz six months to regain his titles and right his ship. He then blew out Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds this past December, his most-recent fight. Usyk is trying to follow in the footsteps of Evander Holyfield and David Haye, cruiserweight titleholders who went on to become heavyweight champion. The 2012 Olympic gold medalist from Ukraine has fought twice as a heavyweight, stopping Chazz Witherspoon in seven rounds in October 2019 and defeating Derek Chisora by a decision in a competitive fight a year later. He has the ability to compete with Joshua but a size disadvantage might be an issue, although his handlers insist he has grown into the division. Joshua is 6-foot-6, 240-plus pounds; Usyk is 6-3 and last fought at 217¼. The winner on Saturday could face the winner of the Oct. 9 Fury-Wilder fight.

Also fighting this weekend: Kenshiro Teraji (18-0, 10 KOs) will defend his WBC junior flyweight title against Masamichi Yabuki (12-3, 11 KOs) on Wednesday in Kyoto, Japan (no TV in U.S.).

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Anthony Joshua prepared to move on to Oleksandr Usyk

Promoter Eddie Hearn said Anthony Joshua is prepared to move on to Oleksandr Usyk if Tyson Fury must fight Deontay Wilder a third time.

Anthony Joshua and his team remain hopeful that he’ll fight Tyson Fury on Aug. 14 but they already are making plans to fight someone else this summer, most likely Oleksandr Usyk.

A deal was in place for Fury and Joshua to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship on that date in Saudi Arabia. However, an arbitrator ruled on Monday that a rematch clause in the contract for Fury’s fight with Deontay Wilder last year is binding.

In the wake of that news, Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter, said his client will face Wilder a third time rather than pay the American to step aside so Fury-Joshua could go forward.

Fury and Joshua could then meet in December, assuming Fury beats Wilder and Joshua doesn’t lose an interim fight.

Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, held a news conference Tuesday morning in the U.K. to address the situation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLFIW619_Vo

“We’re here, we’re breathing,” he said. “[Joshua is] still the champion. We know what we want to do. We want to win the undisputed heavyweight championship, we want to fight Tyson Fury. But, really, if his hands are tied, we have to look elsewhere.

“I have been focusing on Plan A,” he said. “The only fight we had our mind on was Tyson Fury. I hope it will still take place on Aug. 14 but the game changed last night and we have to have a Plan B in place, and probably a Plan C as well.”

Plan B could be Usyk, the mandatory challenger to Joshua’s WBO title.

The sanctioning body had agreed to postpone enforcement of the mandatory defense so Fury-Joshua could take place but, in light of Monday’s news, a door seems to be open for Usyk to get his title shot immediately.

Hearn said he hopes Joshua can maintain his three belts so he and Joshua can still fight for all four major titles late this year if Fury ends up defending his WBC belt against Wilder in his next fight.

Arum said he has reserved Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on July 24, the presumed target site and date for Fury-Wilder III.

“We have a couple of different options,” Hearn said. “Of course, the one that springs to mind immediately is the WBO mandatory of Oleksandr Usyk. They’ve been quiet patient and I think, really, we’re in a situation now that if Team Fury don’t’ get themselves together, don’t’ get their act together by the end of this week, we will have no option but to look for an alternative fight.

“AJ wants to fight this summer. Oleksandr Usyk is the mandatory.”

Hearn said he spoke with Usyk’s promoter Alexander Krassyuk on Tuesday morning.

“I just sort of said to him, and I was very honest, I said, ‘Look, Team Fury are trying to resolve the issue. If they don’t, there’s a very good chance we could be fighting you,” Hearn said.

Krassyuk spoke to Sky Sports on Tuesday.

“There is no other reasonable excuse for AJ now,” he told the outlet. “If he is not avoiding Usyk, it is high time to face the mandatory. Two London Olympic champions to face each other, nine years later. What a story.

“We are now in the position to make the fight happen as soon as possible.”

One problem: Where do they fight?

“We’re in a situation where we just don’t know how likely it is to get a full venue in August in the U.K.,” Hearn said. “That was one of the reasons it was ruled out for the Fury fight. We couldn’t get confirmation from Wembley [Stadium] and other venues that they would be allowed full capacity [because of COVID-19].

“But we’ll move forward we that and continue to have talks with Alex Krassyuk this week.”

Fury knocked out Wilder in seven rounds in February of last year, the British fighter’s most-recent fight. The two fought to draw in December 2018.

Joshua regained his titles – IBF, WBA and WBO – from Andy Ruiz Jr. by a wide decision in December 2019. He successfully defended them this past December against Kubrat Pulev, who was stopped in nine rounds.

[lawrence-related id=20373,20366]

Anthony Joshua prepared to move on to Oleksandr Usyk

Promoter Eddie Hearn said Anthony Joshua is prepared to move on to Oleksandr Usyk if Tyson Fury must fight Deontay Wilder a third time.

Anthony Joshua and his team remain hopeful that he’ll fight Tyson Fury on Aug. 14 but they already are making plans to fight someone else this summer, most likely Oleksandr Usyk.

A deal was in place for Fury and Joshua to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship on that date in Saudi Arabia. However, an arbitrator ruled on Monday that a rematch clause in the contract for Fury’s fight with Deontay Wilder last year is binding.

In the wake of that news, Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter, said his client will face Wilder a third time rather than pay the American to step aside so Fury-Joshua could go forward.

Fury and Joshua could then meet in December, assuming Fury beats Wilder and Joshua doesn’t lose an interim fight.

Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, held a news conference Tuesday morning in the U.K. to address the situation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLFIW619_Vo

“We’re here, we’re breathing,” he said. “[Joshua is] still the champion. We know what we want to do. We want to win the undisputed heavyweight championship, we want to fight Tyson Fury. But, really, if his hands are tied, we have to look elsewhere.

“I have been focusing on Plan A,” he said. “The only fight we had our mind on was Tyson Fury. I hope it will still take place on Aug. 14 but the game changed last night and we have to have a Plan B in place, and probably a Plan C as well.”

Plan B could be Usyk, the mandatory challenger to Joshua’s WBO title.

The sanctioning body had agreed to postpone enforcement of the mandatory defense so Fury-Joshua could take place but, in light of Monday’s news, a door seems to be open for Usyk to get his title shot immediately.

Hearn said he hopes Joshua can maintain his three belts so he and Joshua can still fight for all four major titles late this year if Fury ends up defending his WBC belt against Wilder in his next fight.

Arum said he has reserved Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on July 24, the presumed target site and date for Fury-Wilder III.

“We have a couple of different options,” Hearn said. “Of course, the one that springs to mind immediately is the WBO mandatory of Oleksandr Usyk. They’ve been quiet patient and I think, really, we’re in a situation now that if Team Fury don’t’ get themselves together, don’t’ get their act together by the end of this week, we will have no option but to look for an alternative fight.

“AJ wants to fight this summer. Oleksandr Usyk is the mandatory.”

Hearn said he spoke with Usyk’s promoter Alexander Krassyuk on Tuesday morning.

“I just sort of said to him, and I was very honest, I said, ‘Look, Team Fury are trying to resolve the issue. If they don’t, there’s a very good chance we could be fighting you,” Hearn said.

Krassyuk spoke to Sky Sports on Tuesday.

“There is no other reasonable excuse for AJ now,” he told the outlet. “If he is not avoiding Usyk, it is high time to face the mandatory. Two London Olympic champions to face each other, nine years later. What a story.

“We are now in the position to make the fight happen as soon as possible.”

One problem: Where do they fight?

“We’re in a situation where we just don’t know how likely it is to get a full venue in August in the U.K.,” Hearn said. “That was one of the reasons it was ruled out for the Fury fight. We couldn’t get confirmation from Wembley [Stadium] and other venues that they would be allowed full capacity [because of COVID-19].

“But we’ll move forward we that and continue to have talks with Alex Krassyuk this week.”

Fury knocked out Wilder in seven rounds in February of last year, the British fighter’s most-recent fight. The two fought to draw in December 2018.

Joshua regained his titles – IBF, WBA and WBO – from Andy Ruiz Jr. by a wide decision in December 2019. He successfully defended them this past December against Kubrat Pulev, who was stopped in nine rounds.

[lawrence-related id=20373,20366]