WBO opens door for Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua to fight for its belt

The WBO is no longer insisting that Anthony Joshua defend its heavyweight title against mandatory challenger Oleksandr Usyk.

Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua might fight for all four major heavyweight titles yet.

BoxingScene.com is reporting that the WBO is no longer insisting that Joshua immediately defend its title against mandatory challenger Oleksandr Usyk, which clears the way for Joshua to defend that belt against Fury.

Fury and Joshua are in talks to fight twice this year, the first time in the spring. A site reportedly has been selected but not announced.

It’s not clear whether Usyk has signed off on the move, although reports have surfaced that he’s negotiating to fight Joe Joyce for the “interim” WBO title. The Fury-Joshua winner would have to fight the Usyk-Joyce winner within 180 days, BoxingScene.com reported.

Deontay Wilder has also been an obstacle to a Fury-Joshua showdown, insisting that Fury honor a rematch clause in the contract for their second fight, which Fury won by knockout in February.

The third fight between them was supposed to have happened last year but, in part because of COVID-19, it has yet to materialize. And Fury has moved on.

A mediator reportedly couldn’t resolve the dispute. Wilder’s manager, Shelly Finkel, told Sports Illustrated that the next step is to go to arbitration in a last-ditch attempt to force Fury’s hand.

Joshua (24-1, 22 KOs) dispatched IBF mandatory challenger Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds last month.

Usyk (18-0, 13 KOs) is a former unified cruiserweight champ who is 2-0 as a heavyweight, having stopped Chazz Witherspoon in October 2019 and outpointed Derek Chisora this past October.

Joyce (12-0, 11 KOs) is coming off a break-through 10th-round knockout of Daniel Dubois in November, which put him in the title picture.

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Oleksandr Usyk could fight Joe Joyce for ‘interim’ title: Frank Warren

Oleksandr Usyk could fight Joe Joyce for the WBO ‘interim’ title, according to promoter Frank Warren.

Oleksandr Usyk vs. Joe Joyce? It’s possible.

Usyk, the mandatory challenger to Anthony Joshua’s WBO heavyweight title, has thus far refused — at least publicly — to step aside so Joshua can fight Tyson Fury for all four major belts in a two-fight series.

However, Frank Warren, Joyce’s promoter, told IFL TV that talks between his No. 2-ranked client and Usyk for the sanctioning body’s “interim” title are underway. Of course, Usyk would have to agree to that.

“We’re working on at the moment, Usyk and Joe Joyce,” Warren said. “I think the WBO will order that as an interim title fight, so we’re working hard to make that happen. The situation is that the WBO have said they’d like to do that fight as an eliminator.

“We have no objection to that, and I don’t think Usyk has. There’s been some preliminary talks and we’ll see where we go from there. I hope [the fight happen]. It’s a good fight and I think whoever wins it, based on his last performance, Joe’s looking really good.

“If he comes through it, it puts the winner in a tremendous position. The eventual winner of the two fights between Tyson and A.J. will have to defend against Joyce or Usyk, or vacate the belt.”

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Usyk (18-0, 13 KOs) has suggested he would force Joshua to vacate the title — or get stripped — rather than stepping aside.

The Ukrainian is a former unified cruiserweight champion who is 2-0 as a heavyweight, having stopped Chazz Witherspoon in October 2019 and outpointed Derek Chisora this past October.

Joyce (12-0, 11 KOs) is coming off a break-through 10th-round knockout of Daniel Dubois in November, which put him in the title picture.

Oleksandr Usyk could fight Joe Joyce for ‘interim’ title: Frank Warren

Oleksandr Usyk could fight Joe Joyce for the WBO ‘interim’ title, according to promoter Frank Warren.

Oleksandr Usyk vs. Joe Joyce? It’s possible.

Usyk, the mandatory challenger to Anthony Joshua’s WBO heavyweight title, has thus far refused — at least publicly — to step aside so Joshua can fight Tyson Fury for all four major belts in a two-fight series.

However, Frank Warren, Joyce’s promoter, told IFL TV that talks between his No. 2-ranked client and Usyk for the sanctioning body’s “interim” title are underway. Of course, Usyk would have to agree to that.

“We’re working on at the moment, Usyk and Joe Joyce,” Warren said. “I think the WBO will order that as an interim title fight, so we’re working hard to make that happen. The situation is that the WBO have said they’d like to do that fight as an eliminator.

“We have no objection to that, and I don’t think Usyk has. There’s been some preliminary talks and we’ll see where we go from there. I hope [the fight happen]. It’s a good fight and I think whoever wins it, based on his last performance, Joe’s looking really good.

“If he comes through it, it puts the winner in a tremendous position. The eventual winner of the two fights between Tyson and A.J. will have to defend against Joyce or Usyk, or vacate the belt.”

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Usyk (18-0, 13 KOs) has suggested he would force Joshua to vacate the title — or get stripped — rather than stepping aside.

The Ukrainian is a former unified cruiserweight champion who is 2-0 as a heavyweight, having stopped Chazz Witherspoon in October 2019 and outpointed Derek Chisora this past October.

Joyce (12-0, 11 KOs) is coming off a break-through 10th-round knockout of Daniel Dubois in November, which put him in the title picture.

Anthony Joshua asks Oleksandr Usyk to delay mandatory so he can unify vs. Tyson Fury

Anthony Joshua is hoping that Oleksandr Usyk will delay his mandatory challenge so A.J. can unify the heavyweight titles against Tyson Fury

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Anthony Joshua has asked Oleksandr Usyk to delay his mandatory challenge so A.J. can unify all four major titles against fellow titleholder Tyson Fury.

Joshua, who holds the IBF, WBA and WBO belts, and Fury, the WBC champion, are in talks to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship this year. However, WBO officials have made it clear they expect Usyk to get his shot before Joshua and Fury meet.

Joshua and his promoter, Eddie Hearn, have suggested that he might vacate the WBO belt in order to make the Fury fight happen and then — if he wins — challenge whomever holds the WBO to become undisputed champion.

However, Usyk, the mandatory WBO challenger for more than a year, is keen to have own title fight after the sanctioning body allowed Joshua to fight Andy Ruiz Jr. a second time and then defend his titles against Kubrat Pulev on Dec. 12.

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Usyk reportedly has indicated that he might be willing to wait a little longer if he were guaranteed a fight with the Joshua-Fury winner and, presumably, compensated financially for stepping aside.

“I think Usyk will be keen to step aside and let the fight happen,” Joshua said. “We’ve reached out to his management team. He’s a reasonable person, and he’ll understand the magnitude of this situation.”

Usyk last fought in November, when he defeated Derek Chisora to retain his mandatory designation.

If Usyk’s team does indeed insist on their title fight and force the WBO to strip Joshua, unbeaten Brit Joe Joyce — who put the first blemish on Daniel Dubois’ record in November — is the leading candidate to battle Usyk for the vacated title.

Also in the running would be the winner of Junior Fa vs. former WBO champ Joseph Parker on Feb. 27.

Anthony Joshua asks Oleksandr Usyk to delay mandatory so he can unify vs. Tyson Fury

Anthony Joshua is hoping that Oleksandr Usyk will delay his mandatory challenge so A.J. can unify the heavyweight titles against Tyson Fury

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Anthony Joshua has asked Oleksandr Usyk to delay his mandatory challenge so A.J. can unify all four major titles against fellow titleholder Tyson Fury.

Joshua, who holds the IBF, WBA and WBO belts, and Fury, the WBC champion, are in talks to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship this year. However, WBO officials have made it clear they expect Usyk to get his shot before Joshua and Fury meet.

Joshua and his promoter, Eddie Hearn, have suggested that he might vacate the WBO belt in order to make the Fury fight happen and then — if he wins — challenge whomever holds the WBO to become undisputed champion.

However, Usyk, the mandatory WBO challenger for more than a year, is keen to have own title fight after the sanctioning body allowed Joshua to fight Andy Ruiz Jr. a second time and then defend his titles against Kubrat Pulev on Dec. 12.

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Usyk reportedly has indicated that he might be willing to wait a little longer if he were guaranteed a fight with the Joshua-Fury winner and, presumably, compensated financially for stepping aside.

“I think Usyk will be keen to step aside and let the fight happen,” Joshua said. “We’ve reached out to his management team. He’s a reasonable person, and he’ll understand the magnitude of this situation.”

Usyk last fought in November, when he defeated Derek Chisora to retain his mandatory designation.

If Usyk’s team does indeed insist on their title fight and force the WBO to strip Joshua, unbeaten Brit Joe Joyce — who put the first blemish on Daniel Dubois’ record in November — is the leading candidate to battle Usyk for the vacated title.

Also in the running would be the winner of Junior Fa vs. former WBO champ Joseph Parker on Feb. 27.

Anthony Joshua destroys Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds

Anthony Joshua knocked out Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds to retain his heavyweight titles Saturday in London.

The new version of Anthony Joshua boxes more than he once did. He’s more patient. The immense power is the same, though. And once he has you hurt, well, stand by.

Joshua outboxed Kubrat Pulev on Saturday night at SSE Arena in London, much as he did in his victorious rematch with Andy Ruiz Jr. almost exactly a year ago. The heavyweight titleholder gave us more this time, though – more aggression, more passion, more big shots.

The result was impressive: four knockdowns and a ninth-round knockout in the first defense the three titles he regained by outpointed Ruiz.

Many wondered what demeanor Joshua would bring into the ring after his cautious victory over Ruiz, which followed Ruiz’s stunning knockout of Joshua six months earlier.

The champion was more disciplined than cautious, fighting behind a consistent, stiff jab to both the head and body that kept Pulev at a distance favorable to Joshua. And he waited for openings to present themselves. When they did, the Bulgarian challenger paid a price.

The first two-plus rounds were mostly a feel-out session, with Joshua jabbing and Pulev posturing. Then Joshua hurt Pulev with a right hand and everything changed instantly. A flurry of shots resulted in Pulev turning his back on Joshua and he stumbled into a corner, which referee Deon Dwarte ruled a knockdown.

Then one of many right uppercuts Joshua landed in the fight found Pulev’s chin and he went down on his behind for the second knockdown.

The challenger survived the harrowing round and proved to be resilient for a while. After having regained his senses, it was as if he were saying with his actions, “OK, I’ve taken the best you can offer and I’m still here.”

Pulev (28-2, 14 KOs) actually took the fight Joshua (24-1, 22 KOs) at times, jabbing fairly consistently and throwing his right hand periodically in an attempt the turn the tide in his favor. They rarely landed, though, making his mission almost impossible.

Meanwhile, Joshua continued to land jabs and fire off occasionally power shots – including rapid-fire uppercuts – but the fight was relatively competitive until late in Round 9.

Then another right uppercut found the mark and was the beginning of the end. Joshua followed that punch with a few more shots inside and Pulev went down again. He managed to get up even though he was hurt but, seconds later, a perfect straight right hand landed on his chin and he fell flat on his back.

This time, he didn’t get up. The fight was over at 2:58 of Round 9. The Joshua who had destroyed everything in his path was back.

“I stuck to what I do best – boxing,” said Joshua, who hadn’t scored a knockout since Alexander Povetkin more than two years ago. “I picked my shots, put them together. And when they’re successful, they’re successful. As I said, it’s just less talk and more action. I don’t even want to do the interview. I just want fans to appreciate the hard work.

“Everyone go home and have a lovely Christmas. And we’ll see reunite in 2021.”

Against whom?

Oleksander Usyk is the mandatory challenger for Joshua’s WBO title and he’s determined to get his opportunity. Everyone else, it seems, wants to see Joshua fight fellow beltholder Tyson Fury in an all-British showdown for the undisputed heavyweight championship.

That was clear during the interview when Joshua was asked whether he wants Fury next. He suggested the interviewer ask those in attendance at SSE Arena, who numbered in the thousands.

“You ask the crowd what they want to see. I’m up for anything. Look at the resume,” Joshua said.

“OK, who wants to see Anthony Joshua fight Tyson Fury in 2021?” the interviewer asked the fans, whose wild cheers made their preference clear.

“Look, when I started in this game in 2013, I’ve been chasing belts, dealing with mandatories,” Joshua said. “Of course, I want a challenge. It’s not about the opponent. It’s about legacy and the belt. Whoever has the belt, I want to compete with them.

“If that’s Tyson Fury, let it be Tyson Fury. The road to the undisputed is almost clear right now.”

Promoter Eddie Hearn, standing beside Joshua during the interview, echoed his fighter’s sentiments. He made it clear that the representatives of the fighters in question would get down to work soon.

“Since he [first] came into the office he wanted to be undisputed champion,” Hearn said. “We’re going to be friendly, we’re going to be nice. We know what we have to do. Starting tomorrow we make the Tyson Fury fight straight away. It’s the only fight to be made in boxing, it’s the biggest fight in boxing, it’s the biggest fight in British boxing history.

“I know [Joshua] wants it. He’s the best heavyweight in the world, I promise you. He’ll break him down, knock him out. … We know what we have to do. It’s about legacy. Let’s get it done.”

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Anthony Joshua destroys Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds

Anthony Joshua knocked out Kubrat Pulev in nine rounds to retain his heavyweight titles Saturday in London.

The new version of Anthony Joshua boxes more than he once did. He’s more patient. The immense power is the same, though. And once he has you hurt, well, stand by.

Joshua outboxed Kubrat Pulev on Saturday night at SSE Arena in London, much as he did in his victorious rematch with Andy Ruiz Jr. almost exactly a year ago. The heavyweight titleholder gave us more this time, though – more aggression, more passion, more big shots.

The result was impressive: four knockdowns and a ninth-round knockout in the first defense the three titles he regained by outpointed Ruiz.

Many wondered what demeanor Joshua would bring into the ring after his cautious victory over Ruiz, which followed Ruiz’s stunning knockout of Joshua six months earlier.

The champion was more disciplined than cautious, fighting behind a consistent, stiff jab to both the head and body that kept Pulev at a distance favorable to Joshua. And he waited for openings to present themselves. When they did, the Bulgarian challenger paid a price.

The first two-plus rounds were mostly a feel-out session, with Joshua jabbing and Pulev posturing. Then Joshua hurt Pulev with a right hand and everything changed instantly. A flurry of shots resulted in Pulev turning his back on Joshua and he stumbled into a corner, which referee Deon Dwarte ruled a knockdown.

Then one of many right uppercuts Joshua landed in the fight found Pulev’s chin and he went down on his behind for the second knockdown.

The challenger survived the harrowing round and proved to be resilient for a while. After having regained his senses, it was as if he were saying with his actions, “OK, I’ve taken the best you can offer and I’m still here.”

Pulev (28-2, 14 KOs) actually took the fight Joshua (24-1, 22 KOs) at times, jabbing fairly consistently and throwing his right hand periodically in an attempt the turn the tide in his favor. They rarely landed, though, making his mission almost impossible.

Meanwhile, Joshua continued to land jabs and fire off occasionally power shots – including rapid-fire uppercuts – but the fight was relatively competitive until late in Round 9.

Then another right uppercut found the mark and was the beginning of the end. Joshua followed that punch with a few more shots inside and Pulev went down again. He managed to get up even though he was hurt but, seconds later, a perfect straight right hand landed on his chin and he fell flat on his back.

This time, he didn’t get up. The fight was over at 2:58 of Round 9. The Joshua who had destroyed everything in his path was back.

“I stuck to what I do best – boxing,” said Joshua, who hadn’t scored a knockout since Alexander Povetkin more than two years ago. “I picked my shots, put them together. And when they’re successful, they’re successful. As I said, it’s just less talk and more action. I don’t even want to do the interview. I just want fans to appreciate the hard work.

“Everyone go home and have a lovely Christmas. And we’ll see reunite in 2021.”

Against whom?

Oleksander Usyk is the mandatory challenger for Joshua’s WBO title and he’s determined to get his opportunity. Everyone else, it seems, wants to see Joshua fight fellow beltholder Tyson Fury in an all-British showdown for the undisputed heavyweight championship.

That was clear during the interview when Joshua was asked whether he wants Fury next. He suggested the interviewer ask those in attendance at SSE Arena, who numbered in the thousands.

“You ask the crowd what they want to see. I’m up for anything. Look at the resume,” Joshua said.

“OK, who wants to see Anthony Joshua fight Tyson Fury in 2021?” the interviewer asked the fans, whose wild cheers made their preference clear.

“Look, when I started in this game in 2013, I’ve been chasing belts, dealing with mandatories,” Joshua said. “Of course, I want a challenge. It’s not about the opponent. It’s about legacy and the belt. Whoever has the belt, I want to compete with them.

“If that’s Tyson Fury, let it be Tyson Fury. The road to the undisputed is almost clear right now.”

Promoter Eddie Hearn, standing beside Joshua during the interview, echoed his fighter’s sentiments. He made it clear that the representatives of the fighters in question would get down to work soon.

“Since he [first] came into the office he wanted to be undisputed champion,” Hearn said. “We’re going to be friendly, we’re going to be nice. We know what we have to do. Starting tomorrow we make the Tyson Fury fight straight away. It’s the only fight to be made in boxing, it’s the biggest fight in boxing, it’s the biggest fight in British boxing history.

“I know [Joshua] wants it. He’s the best heavyweight in the world, I promise you. He’ll break him down, knock him out. … We know what we have to do. It’s about legacy. Let’s get it done.”

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Pound-for-pound: Errol Spence Jr. moves up a notch

Errol Spence Jr. has moved up a notch on the Boxing Junkie pound-for-pound list after his victory over Danny Garcia.

Errol Spence Jr. is back and on the rise.

Spence, who only 14 months earlier could’ve lost his life in a horrific car accident, defeated former two-division titleholder Danny Garcia by a clear decision — 117-111, 116-112 and 116-12 — to retain his welterweight belts on Dec. 5 in Arlington, Texas.

That victory, combined with what many believe was a so-so performance by Oleksandr Usyk against Derek Chisora on Oct. 31, resulted in a change here.

Spence, ranked No. 5 on the most-recent Boxing Junkie pound-for-pound list, and Usyk, No. 4 last time, switch places. Spence (27-0, 21 KOs) is now ranked behind only Nos. 1-3 Terence Crawford, Canelo Alvarez and Naoya Inoue.

Two more fighters on the list — No. 9 Gennadiy Golovkin and Alvarez — are back in action on Dec. 18 and 19, respectively.

Golovkin will defend his middleweight title against Kamil Szeremeta in Hollywood, Fla., and Alvarez is scheduled to challenge super middleweight champion Callum Smith in San Antonio.

Here is where the pound-for-pounders stand.

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford — No fight scheduled.
  2. Canelo Alvarez — Scheduled to challenge 168-pound titleholder Callum Smith on Dec. 19.
  3. Naoya Inoue — No fight scheduled.
  4. Errol Spence Jr. — No fight scheduled.
  5. Oleksandr Usyk — No fight scheduled.
  6. Teofimo Lopez — No fight scheduled.
  7. Vasiliy Lomachenko — No fight scheduled.
  8. Tyson Fury — No fight scheduled.
  9. Gennadiy Golovkin — Scheduled to defend his 160-pound title against Kamil Szeremeta on Dec. 18.
  10. Juan Francisco Estrada — No fight scheduled.
  11. Mikey Garcia — No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev — Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Adam Deines on Jan. 30.
  13. Manny Pacquiao — No fight scheduled
  14. Jermell Charlo — No fight scheduled.
  15. Gervonta Davis — No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Miguel Berchelt (no fight scheduled), Mairis Briedis (no fight scheduled), Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled), Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (no fight scheduled) and Josh Taylor (no fight scheduled).

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Pound-for-pound: Errol Spence Jr. moves up a notch

Errol Spence Jr. has moved up a notch on the Boxing Junkie pound-for-pound list after his victory over Danny Garcia.

Errol Spence Jr. is back and on the rise.

Spence, who only 14 months earlier could’ve lost his life in a horrific car accident, defeated former two-division titleholder Danny Garcia by a clear decision — 117-111, 116-112 and 116-12 — to retain his welterweight belts on Dec. 5 in Arlington, Texas.

That victory, combined with what many believe was a so-so performance by Oleksandr Usyk against Derek Chisora on Oct. 31, resulted in a change here.

Spence, ranked No. 5 on the most-recent Boxing Junkie pound-for-pound list, and Usyk, No. 4 last time, switch places. Spence (27-0, 21 KOs) is now ranked behind only Nos. 1-3 Terence Crawford, Canelo Alvarez and Naoya Inoue.

Two more fighters on the list — No. 9 Gennadiy Golovkin and Alvarez — are back in action on Dec. 18 and 19, respectively.

Golovkin will defend his middleweight title against Kamil Szeremeta in Hollywood, Fla., and Alvarez is scheduled to challenge super middleweight champion Callum Smith in San Antonio.

Here is where the pound-for-pounders stand.

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford — No fight scheduled.
  2. Canelo Alvarez — Scheduled to challenge 168-pound titleholder Callum Smith on Dec. 19.
  3. Naoya Inoue — No fight scheduled.
  4. Errol Spence Jr. — No fight scheduled.
  5. Oleksandr Usyk — No fight scheduled.
  6. Teofimo Lopez — No fight scheduled.
  7. Vasiliy Lomachenko — No fight scheduled.
  8. Tyson Fury — No fight scheduled.
  9. Gennadiy Golovkin — Scheduled to defend his 160-pound title against Kamil Szeremeta on Dec. 18.
  10. Juan Francisco Estrada — No fight scheduled.
  11. Mikey Garcia — No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev — Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Adam Deines on Jan. 30.
  13. Manny Pacquiao — No fight scheduled
  14. Jermell Charlo — No fight scheduled.
  15. Gervonta Davis — No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Miguel Berchelt (no fight scheduled), Mairis Briedis (no fight scheduled), Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled), Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (no fight scheduled) and Josh Taylor (no fight scheduled).

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Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Oleksandr Usyk a legitimate heavyweight?

Oleksandr Usyk defeated the much bigger Derek Chisora by a unanimous decision in his second heavyweight fight Saturday night at Wembley Arena in London. Usyk withstood considerable pressure applied by Chisora – taking everything the Londoner landed …

Oleksandr Usyk defeated the much bigger Derek Chisora by a unanimous decision in his second heavyweight fight Saturday night at Wembley Arena in London.

Usyk withstood considerable pressure applied by Chisora — taking everything the Londoner landed — and outboxed him to win 117-112, 115-113 and 115-113, a solid victory for the Ukrainian.

But did the former cruiserweight champ demonstrate that he’s a threat to the likes of giants Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua?

In this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora, courtesy of DAZN, hosts Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora tackle that question.

Here’s what they had to say.

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