China Daily (Hong Kong)

Joshua digs deep to vanquish Wlad Champ survives brutal knockdown to finally finish off Klitschko in 11th

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LONDON — Anthony Joshua wasn’t wrong when he raised his hands in victory after decking Wladimir Klitschko in the fifth round of their heavyweigh­t title fight in front of 90,000 fans at Wembley Stadium on Saturday.

He was just celebratin­g a little too early.

The rookie mistake allowed Klitschko to rally, as the two 6-foot-6 sluggers took a classic battle to the 11th round — four more than any Joshua fight had ever gone.

That’s when Joshua unleashed a vicious uppercut that spun Klitschko around, leading to a TKO triumph that set off nationwide celebratio­ns in Britain and cemented the 27-year-old’s status as boxing’s new superstar.

Klitschko, who had barely thrown any power punches over the first five rounds, decked Joshua in the sixth with a brutal textbook straight right.

With an entire country screaming for him to get up, Joshua — who had KO’d all his previous 18 opponents by the seventh round — rose at the count of three and weathered the storm until the bell.

Klitschko didn’t go down after the big uppercut in the 11th, but Joshua was all over the stunned former champ and finally dropped him with a left hook.

Klitschko got up, only to be sent crashing to the canvas again after absorbing a sixpunch flurry.

Klitschko had his hands down and was taking unanswered punches to the head when referee David Fields moved in to stop the fight with 35 seconds left in the 11th.

At the time of the stoppage, Joshua was ahead 96-93 and 95-93 on two scorecards, while Klitschko led 95-93 on the third.

“When you go to the trenches, that’s when you find out who you really are,” Joshua said.

“In this small little ring here, there’s nowhere to hide.”

Klitschko’s effort was inspiring. After dropping Joshua in the sixth, he gave no quarter until the stoppage, repeatedly scoring with counter rights while coping with a nasty cut above his right eye.

The Ukrainian, who reigned over the heavyweigh­t division for a decade, was fighting both Joshua and Father Time at the age of 41. He looked to be overmatche­d in the early rounds, but fought his best after he kissed the canvas in the fifth.

“As I said, I’m not perfect but I’m trying,” said Joshua, the 2012 Olympic gold medalist who was fighting for only the 19th time as a pro.

Klitschko, in his 29th worldtitle fight, seemed to be gaining the upper hand in the later rounds, until the uppercut sent him spinning across the ring.

“It was really sad I didn’t make it tonight,” Klitschko said. “I was planning to do it. It didn’t work. But all respect to Anthony.”

Joshua rose to the occasion in a bout that more than lived up to its billing as the best heavyweigh­t matchup in more than a decade.

Klitschko fell to 64-5 in a long career that began in 1996 after he won Olympic gold in Atlanta.

Joshua’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, said he now envisages the charismati­c champion, who owns the IBF, WBA and IBO titles, emulating his idol, Muhammad Ali, by showcasing his talent around the globe.

Unbeaten Deontay Wilder (38-0, 37 KO) of the US owns the WBC title while New Zealand’s Joseph Parker (22-0, 18 KO) is the WBO champion.

Hearn has plans for Joshua to light up new venues in China, the Middle East and possibly Africa.

“In terms of worldwide stardom, I told him, ‘You win this fight and you become the biggest star in British sport and the biggest star in world boxing’,” Hearn said.

“Yet there’s so much more improvemen­t to come. By consolidat­ing the championsh­ip, I think we have completed phase two of the four phases in A J’s career.”

Next, he said, would be bigmoney defenses around the globe.

“The plan, rather than just keep going in the UK, is to explore and break new mar- kets and boundaries – like the Middle East and China,” Hearn said.

“I could see AJ fighting in the Bird’s Nest in Beijing and maybe in Africa. I want to go worldwide with him.

“He wants to do what Ali did. That’s his inspiratio­n.”

“Great Britain aged 5 years during that fifth round. Thank God Joshua found a second wind.”

Former England soccer star Michael Owen

“What a fight @anthonyfjo­shua you Sir are different class. That was incredible...wow... what a way to get back up and knock him out...”

British golfer Ian Poulter

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 ?? ANDREW COULDRIDGE / REUTERS ?? Anthony Joshua celebrates the first of his three knockdowns against Wladimir Klitschko during their heavyweigh­t title bout at London’s Wembley Stadium on Saturday. Joshua defended his IBF crown and added the WBA and IBO titles to his collection with an...
ANDREW COULDRIDGE / REUTERS Anthony Joshua celebrates the first of his three knockdowns against Wladimir Klitschko during their heavyweigh­t title bout at London’s Wembley Stadium on Saturday. Joshua defended his IBF crown and added the WBA and IBO titles to his collection with an...

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