Truro News

Joshua has big plans for 2018

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Anthony Joshua has big plans for 2018 now that he is the biggest draw in heavyweigh­t boxing.

A unificatio­n fight against Deontay Wilder or Joseph Parker. A first fight in the United States, or maybe Africa or the Middle East. Even an all-British super-fight against Tyson Fury, if the former champion regains his license.

Before that, though, Joshua must deal with more routine matters: a mandatory defence of his WBA and IBF belts against an opponent few outside the boxing fraternity will have heard of.

Saturday’s fight in Cardiff against Carlos Takam — a late replacemen­t for the injured Kubrat Pulev — is hardly getting the pulse racing. Joshua’s status is in a new stratosphe­re after his dramatic victory over Wladimir Klitschko in April in one of the best heavyweigh­t contests this century, so fighting a French journeyman like Takam is something of an anticlimax.

No wonder much of the buildup has been about who Joshua will be fighting next.

“The plan is for AJ to unify the belts in 2018,” said Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, “and we really would like to create three massive fights next year.”

Losing to Takam would obviously derail all the best-laid Anthony Joshua fights Carlos Takam on Saturday in a mandatory defence of his WBA and IBF heavyweigh­t belts.

plans, but it is highly unlikely. The unbeaten Joshua is discipline­d and profession­al, and says he isn’t getting carried away by his elevation to the top of the division. He has also only been taken beyond the third round in three of 19 profession­al fights, including to the

11th round by Klitschko at Wembley Stadium.

Still — and maybe it is for PR reasons, given that 70,000 people are expected to watch the fight at the Principali­ty Stadium — Joshua is trying not to look beyond the 36-year-old Takam and has been building him up as an awkward opponent.

“People have said, ‘Josh, what round? What round?”’ Joshua said. “I think we’re going for a 10-to-12-round fight because this guy’s head is like a block of cement.”

Joshua has had only two weeks to adapt to a change of opponent, following Pulev’s withdrawal because of a shoulder injury. Takam, who has been stopped only once in 39 fights and has 35 wins, gets in closer to his opponents than Pulev and does more work on the body.

“I need to work on my inside game and stand in a phone box,” said Joshua, who described Takam as “durable.”

“He dishearten­s you. Imagine throwing your best shots and they are still in front of you. It’s dishearten­ing. To do that for 12 rounds takes a lot of energy so sometimes I’ll have to stand in front of him, trade with him, and go to war.”

Takam had been on standby since the Joshua-Pulev fight was announced in early September. Still, it came as a shock to Takam when a friend from New Zealand texted him to say Pulev was injured and he’d be replacing him.

“I don’t know whether I’m excited, stressed, confused, but I’m definitely ready for the fight,” he said. “It will be a proper fight.”

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AP PHOTO

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