Oleksandr Usyk promoter: ‘Oleksandr is a natural heavyweight now’

Oleksandr Usyk’s promoter said former 200-pound champ Oleksandr Usyk ‘is a natural heavyweight’ going into his fight against Anthony Joshua.

Many believe Anthony Joshua’s size advantage over Oleksandr Usyk will be too much for the Ukrainian to overcome next Saturday in London.

After all, Joshua, 6-foot-6 and 240-plus pounds, is a massive heavyweight while Usyk moved up from cruiserweight – 200-pound limit — less than two years ago. The 6-3 Usyk weighed only 217.25 against Derek Chisora last October, a fight he won by decision.

That’s one reason Joshua is about a 2½-1 favorite. Is Usyk’s mission all but hopeless?

Well, his promoter, Alexander Krassyuk, insists that his client is not a blown up cruiserweight going into his third fight at heavyweight. And he believes the fight will come down to skill, anyway.

“He has been working hard … building his body for the heavyweight division, and he’s a true heavyweight now,” Krassyuk told ESPN. “No one can say he is a cruiserweight fighting as a heavyweight like Chris Byrd was.

“Oleksandr is a natural heavyweight now.”

And he has confidence in the ability of Usyk, who is No. 5 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list.

“Boxers can just throw a punch to the chin and hope to get lucky, and they might be once out of 10, but can they do it 10 times in a row?” Krassyuk said. “You have to box and win each and every round to win the title. Boxing is the art of defense first and foremost, landing punches and not getting anything back.

“Footwork is the basis for throwing punches and defending. This is very important for any fighter, and Oleksandr is very good at this.”

Joshua (24-1, 22 KOs) and Usyk (18-0, 13 KOs) will meet at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on DAZN.

Degrees of Separation: Linking Anthony Joshua with first British heavyweight champ, Bob Fitzsimmons

Degrees of Separation: Linking Anthony Joshua with the first British heavyweight champion of the modern era, Bob Fitzsimmons.

Six degrees of separation is a theory that everyone in the world is separated by no more than six social connections.

In other words, you know someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows Queen Elizabeth. Or so the concept goes.

We’re borrowing the six degrees concept – well, sort of loosely – to connect fighters from the past to their more contemporary counterparts in our new occasional feature, “Degrees of Separation.”

Example: Let’s connect Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Super easy; we did it in two steps. Senior fought Grover Wiley, who fought Junior.

Bob Fitzsimmons (left) is pictured in his 1897 fight against James J. Corbett. AP Photo

In this installment of the Boxing Junkie feature, we decided to link heavyweight titleholder Anthony Joshua of the U.K. to the first British heavyweight champ of the modern era, Bob Fitzsimmons.

We succeeded in 11 steps even though Fitzsimmons last fought in 1914, more than 100 years ago. Note: Fitzsimmons was born in England and spent his early years there before his family emigrated to New Zealand.

Joshua defends his titles against Oleksandr Usyk on Sept. 25 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London (DAZN).

Have a look:

Bob Fitzsimmons fought …

Jack Johnson, who fought …

Bearcat Wright, who fought …

Max Baer, who fought …

Joe Louis, who fought …

Rocky Marciano, who fought …

Archie Moore, who fought …

Muhammad Ali, who fought …

George Foreman, who fought …

Axel Schulz, who fought …

Wladimir Klitschko, who fought …

Anthony Joshua

***

Could you do it in fewer steps? Let us know via Twitter or Facebook. Or you can contact me on Twitter. And please follow us!

Read more:

Degrees of separation: Connecting John L. Sullivan to Deontay Wilder

Degrees of Separation: Linking Filipino greats Flash Elorde, Manny Pacquiao

Degrees of Separation: Linking Japanese greats Fighting Harada and Naoya Inoue

Degrees of Separation: Linking Tyson Fury to first U.K.-born heavyweight champ

Degrees of Separation: Connecting Canelo Alvarez with Mexican legends

Degrees of Separation: Linking the Mayweathers

Degrees of Separation: Linking Manny Pacquiao to Pancho Villa

 

Degrees of Separation: Linking Anthony Joshua with first British heavyweight champ, Bob Fitzsimmons

Degrees of Separation: Linking Anthony Joshua with the first British heavyweight champion of the modern era, Bob Fitzsimmons.

Six degrees of separation is a theory that everyone in the world is separated by no more than six social connections.

In other words, you know someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows Queen Elizabeth. Or so the concept goes.

We’re borrowing the six degrees concept – well, sort of loosely – to connect fighters from the past to their more contemporary counterparts in our new occasional feature, “Degrees of Separation.”

Example: Let’s connect Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Super easy; we did it in two steps. Senior fought Grover Wiley, who fought Junior.

Bob Fitzsimmons (left) is pictured in his 1897 fight against James J. Corbett. AP Photo

In this installment of the Boxing Junkie feature, we decided to link heavyweight titleholder Anthony Joshua of the U.K. to the first British heavyweight champ of the modern era, Bob Fitzsimmons.

We succeeded in 11 steps even though Fitzsimmons last fought in 1914, more than 100 years ago. Note: Fitzsimmons was born in England and spent his early years there before his family emigrated to New Zealand.

Joshua defends his titles against Oleksandr Usyk on Sept. 25 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London (DAZN).

Have a look:

Bob Fitzsimmons fought …

Jack Johnson, who fought …

Bearcat Wright, who fought …

Max Baer, who fought …

Joe Louis, who fought …

Rocky Marciano, who fought …

Archie Moore, who fought …

Muhammad Ali, who fought …

George Foreman, who fought …

Axel Schulz, who fought …

Wladimir Klitschko, who fought …

Anthony Joshua

***

Could you do it in fewer steps? Let us know via Twitter or Facebook. Or you can contact me on Twitter. And please follow us!

Read more:

Degrees of separation: Connecting John L. Sullivan to Deontay Wilder

Degrees of Separation: Linking Filipino greats Flash Elorde, Manny Pacquiao

Degrees of Separation: Linking Japanese greats Fighting Harada and Naoya Inoue

Degrees of Separation: Linking Tyson Fury to first U.K.-born heavyweight champ

Degrees of Separation: Connecting Canelo Alvarez with Mexican legends

Degrees of Separation: Linking the Mayweathers

Degrees of Separation: Linking Manny Pacquiao to Pancho Villa

 

Pound-for-pound: Top boxers getting busy as end of year approaches

Pound-for-pound: Many of the top boxers are getting busy as the end of year approaches.

Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list could look different by the end of the year.

That’s because so many ranked fighters are in action over the next few months. Specifically, seven of the 20 boxers on the list (including five Honorable Mentions) have bouts scheduled and another five are in serious negotiations.

That includes No. 1-ranked Terence Crawford, who is set to face Shawn Porter on Nov. 20 in his first significant test as a welterweight.

Two other Top 5 boxers also have fights coming up. No. 2 Canelo Alvarez will face Caleb Plant on Nov. 6 and we’re closing in on the fight between No. 5 Oleksandr Usyk and Anthony Joshua, which is scheduled for Sept. 25.

Here is where the pound-for-pounders stand.

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – Scheduled to defend his WBO welterweight title against Shawn Porter on Nov. 20 Las Vegas.
  2. Canelo Alvarez – Scheduled to fight Caleb Plant to unify all four major 168-pound titles on Nov. 6 in Las Vegas.
  3. Naoya Inoue – No fight scheduled.
  4. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  5. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to challenge heavyweight titleholder  Anthony Joshua on Sept. 25 in London.
  6. Teofimo Lopez – Scheduled to defend his undisputed lightweight championship against George Kambosos on Oct. 4 in New York City.
  7. Vasiliy Lomachenko – In talks to fight Richard Commey on Dec. 11 at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
  8. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to defend his WBC heavyweight title against Deontay Wilder on Oct. 9 in Las Vegas.
  9. Juan Francisco Estrada – In talks to defend his WBA and WBA junior bantamweight titles in what would be a third fight against Roman Gonzalez in November.
  10. Gennadiy Golovkin – In talks to fight Ryota Murata in a middleweight title-unification fight on Dec. 28 in Tokyo.
  11. Mikey Garcia – Scheduled to fight Sandor Martin on Oct. 16 in Fresno, Calif.
  12. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  13. Josh Taylor – Tentatively scheduled to defend his undisputed junior welterweight championship against mandatory challenger Jack Catterall on Dec. 18 in Glasgow, Scotland.
  14. Artur Beterbiev – The light heavyweight titleholder has been ordered to defend against Marcus Browne but no deal has been reached.
  15. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Mairis Briedis (scheduled to fight Artur Mann on Oct. 16 in Riga, Latvia), Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled), Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (Sor Rungvisai is expected to meet Carlos Cuadras as part of a junior bantamweight tournament but nothing is official), Yordenis Ugas (no fight scheduled) and Oscar Valdez (no fight scheduled).

[lawrence-related id=23800,22506,22006]

Pound-for-pound: Top boxers getting busy as end of year approaches

Pound-for-pound: Many of the top boxers are getting busy as the end of year approaches.

Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list could look different by the end of the year.

That’s because so many ranked fighters are in action over the next few months. Specifically, seven of the 20 boxers on the list (including five Honorable Mentions) have bouts scheduled and another five are in serious negotiations.

That includes No. 1-ranked Terence Crawford, who is set to face Shawn Porter on Nov. 20 in his first significant test as a welterweight.

Two other Top 5 boxers also have fights coming up. No. 2 Canelo Alvarez will face Caleb Plant on Nov. 6 and we’re closing in on the fight between No. 5 Oleksandr Usyk and Anthony Joshua, which is scheduled for Sept. 25.

Here is where the pound-for-pounders stand.

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – Scheduled to defend his WBO welterweight title against Shawn Porter on Nov. 20 Las Vegas.
  2. Canelo Alvarez – Scheduled to fight Caleb Plant to unify all four major 168-pound titles on Nov. 6 in Las Vegas.
  3. Naoya Inoue – No fight scheduled.
  4. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  5. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to challenge heavyweight titleholder  Anthony Joshua on Sept. 25 in London.
  6. Teofimo Lopez – Scheduled to defend his undisputed lightweight championship against George Kambosos on Oct. 4 in New York City.
  7. Vasiliy Lomachenko – In talks to fight Richard Commey on Dec. 11 at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
  8. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to defend his WBC heavyweight title against Deontay Wilder on Oct. 9 in Las Vegas.
  9. Juan Francisco Estrada – In talks to defend his WBA and WBA junior bantamweight titles in what would be a third fight against Roman Gonzalez in November.
  10. Gennadiy Golovkin – In talks to fight Ryota Murata in a middleweight title-unification fight on Dec. 28 in Tokyo.
  11. Mikey Garcia – Scheduled to fight Sandor Martin on Oct. 16 in Fresno, Calif.
  12. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  13. Josh Taylor – Tentatively scheduled to defend his undisputed junior welterweight championship against mandatory challenger Jack Catterall on Dec. 18 in Glasgow, Scotland.
  14. Artur Beterbiev – The light heavyweight titleholder has been ordered to defend against Marcus Browne but no deal has been reached.
  15. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Mairis Briedis (scheduled to fight Artur Mann on Oct. 16 in Riga, Latvia), Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled), Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (Sor Rungvisai is expected to meet Carlos Cuadras as part of a junior bantamweight tournament but nothing is official), Yordenis Ugas (no fight scheduled) and Oscar Valdez (no fight scheduled).

[lawrence-related id=23800,22506,22006]

Joe Joyce knocks out Carlos Takam in sixth round

Joe Joyce knocked out Carlos Takam in the sixth round to solidify his position as a prime heavyweight title contender Saturday in London.

Joe Joyce solidified his position as a next-in-line heavyweight title contender.

The 35-year-old Londoner stopped veteran Carlos Takam in the sixth round of a scheduled 12-rounder that was billed as a WBC title eliminator Saturday at SSE Arena in London.

Joyce (13-0, 12 KOs) already was the mandatory challenger for Anthony Joshua’s WBO title.

The 2016 silver medalist was coming off a break-through 10th-round stoppage of local rival Daniel Dubois this past November, which made him the WBO mandatory.

Takam (39-6-1, 28 KOs) had won four consecutive fights since back-to-back knockout losses against Joshua and Derek Chisora in 2017 and 2018 but he was no match for his taller, bigger and more-talented opponent on Saturday night.

Joe Joyce celebrates after stopping Carlos Takam on Saturday. Press Association via AP Images

The Cameroon-born Frenchman, 40, was competitive for much of the short fight. Joyce pushed the action but both fighters landed scoring punches for four-plus rounds.

Takam, perhaps tired, seemed to slow down somewhat in Round 5 but he continued to exchange punches with Joyce and hold his own.

Then came the punch that led to Takam’s demise. Joyce hurt him with a straight right seconds after the bell to begin Round 6 and followed with a barrage of hard, unanswered punches that lasted around 45 seconds.

Referee Steve Gray finally decided that Takam couldn’t defend himself and stopped the fight. The official time was 49 seconds into Round 6.

Joyce is now a prime candidate to challenge one of the winners of the Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder (Oct. 9) and Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk (Sept. 25) fights for a share of the heavyweight championship.

After the fight, he made his preference clear: “What I want is AJ or Usyk!”

Joe Joyce knocks out Carlos Takam in sixth round

Joe Joyce knocked out Carlos Takam in the sixth round to solidify his position as a prime heavyweight title contender Saturday in London.

Joe Joyce solidified his position as a next-in-line heavyweight title contender.

The 35-year-old Londoner stopped veteran Carlos Takam in the sixth round of a scheduled 12-rounder that was billed as a WBC title eliminator Saturday at SSE Arena in London.

Joyce (13-0, 12 KOs) already was the mandatory challenger for Anthony Joshua’s WBO title.

The 2016 silver medalist was coming off a break-through 10th-round stoppage of local rival Daniel Dubois this past November, which made him the WBO mandatory.

Takam (39-6-1, 28 KOs) had won four consecutive fights since back-to-back knockout losses against Joshua and Derek Chisora in 2017 and 2018 but he was no match for his taller, bigger and more-talented opponent on Saturday night.

Joe Joyce celebrates after stopping Carlos Takam on Saturday. Press Association via AP Images

The Cameroon-born Frenchman, 40, was competitive for much of the short fight. Joyce pushed the action but both fighters landed scoring punches for four-plus rounds.

Takam, perhaps tired, seemed to slow down somewhat in Round 5 but he continued to exchange punches with Joyce and hold his own.

Then came the punch that led to Takam’s demise. Joyce hurt him with a straight right seconds after the bell to begin Round 6 and followed with a barrage of hard, unanswered punches that lasted around 45 seconds.

Referee Steve Gray finally decided that Takam couldn’t defend himself and stopped the fight. The official time was 49 seconds into Round 6.

Joyce is now a prime candidate to challenge one of the winners of the Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder (Oct. 9) and Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk (Sept. 25) fights for a share of the heavyweight championship.

After the fight, he made his preference clear: “What I want is AJ or Usyk!”

Update: Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder III has been postponed: report

Update: Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder III has been postponed after Fury tested positive for COVID-19, according to a report.

Tyson Fury has tested positive for COVID-19 and his third fight against Deontay Wilder, set for July 24 in Las Vegas, has been postponed.

Boxing writer Dan Rafael, citing a “source,” broke the news on Twitter.

Rafael said he was told that Fury received one dose of the vaccine but not the second. He also reported that at least three others in the Fury camp also tested positive.

The Athletic has reported that as many as 10 people in Fury’s gym contracted the virus.

A new date has not been determined. It could take place in September. That would put the Fury-Wilder winner on the same time table as titleholder Anthony Joshua, who is finalizing a deal to face Oleksandr Usyk on Sept. 25.

Others have speculated that October is more realistic.

Fury was expected to fight Joshua for the undisputed heavyweight championship this summer but an arbitrator ruled that Fury must honor a rematch clause in the contract for Fury-Wilder II.

Fury and Wilder fought to a draw in December 2018. Fury won the rematch, in February of last year, by seventh-round knockout.

[lawrence-related id=21094,20961,20769,20478,20431,20416,20389,20373,20366]

 

 

Update: Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder III has been postponed: report

Update: Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder III has been postponed after Fury tested positive for COVID-19, according to a report.

Tyson Fury has tested positive for COVID-19 and his third fight against Deontay Wilder, set for July 24 in Las Vegas, has been postponed.

Boxing writer Dan Rafael, citing a “source,” broke the news on Twitter.

Rafael said he was told that Fury received one dose of the vaccine but not the second. He also reported that at least three others in the Fury camp also tested positive.

The Athletic has reported that as many as 10 people in Fury’s gym contracted the virus.

A new date has not been determined. It could take place in September. That would put the Fury-Wilder winner on the same time table as titleholder Anthony Joshua, who is finalizing a deal to face Oleksandr Usyk on Sept. 25.

Others have speculated that October is more realistic.

Fury was expected to fight Joshua for the undisputed heavyweight championship this summer but an arbitrator ruled that Fury must honor a rematch clause in the contract for Fury-Wilder II.

Fury and Wilder fought to a draw in December 2018. Fury won the rematch, in February of last year, by seventh-round knockout.

[lawrence-related id=21094,20961,20769,20478,20431,20416,20389,20373,20366]

 

 

Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder III could be postponed over COVID-19 outbreak

Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder III could be postponed over a COVID-19 outbreak in Fury’s camp, according to reports.

The third fight between heavyweight titleholder Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, scheduled for July 24 in Las Vegas, could be postponed because of a COVID-19 outbreak in Fury’s camp, according to reports.

The Athletic has reported that as many as 10 people in Fury’s gym have tested positive. It’s not clear whether Fury is among the 10.

The fighters’ handlers reportedly are assessing the situation. No decisions have been made.

“We continue to monitor the health status of Tyson and his team, and the status of the event has not changed to date,” Top Rank, Fury’s promoter, said in a statement.

The fight could be postponed until September, which would put the Fury-Wilder winner on the same time table as titleholder Anthony Joshua, who is finalizing a deal to face Oleksandr Usyk on Sept. 25.

Fury was expected to fight Joshua for the undisputed heavyweight championship this summer but an arbitrator ruled that Fury must honor a rematch clause in the contract for Fury-Wilder II.

Fury and Wilder fought to a draw in December 2018. Fury won the rematch, in February of last year, by seventh-round knockout.

[lawrence-related id=21094,20961,20769,20478,20431,20416,20389,20373,20366]