The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘I want to cement my legacy’: Joshua plans history bid

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LONDON: Anthony Joshua has set his sights on joining boxing’s all-time greats as the heavyweigh­t champion builds up to his title defence against Russia’s Alexander Povetkin.

Joshua, the reigning WBA, IBF and WBO champion, faces mandatory challenger Povetkin at Wembley on Sept 22 amid mounting expectatio­n the British fighter will then get in the ring with WBC champion Deontay Wilder.

Negotiatio­ns between Joshua’s camp and Wilder’s team are still on-going and the unificatio­n clash could be lined up for April 13, with Wembley reportedly booked for that date.

Before that, former Olympic gold medallist Joshua must put his belts on the line when he tangles with Povetkin.

Joshua isn’t over-looking the 38year-old Povetkin, also a former Olympic champion, but he has reached the stage in his career where it is his legacy that motivates him rather than emerging unscathed from individual duels.

It’s not just about Povetkin and Wilder. It’s about proving my worth as a heavyweigh­t champion It’s about me, my legacy and achieving my potential. Anthony Joshua, heavyweigh­t champion

“It’s not just about Povetkin and Wilder. It’s about proving my worth as a heavyweigh­t champion It’s about me, my legacy and achieving my potential,” Joshua told a press conference at Wembley on Wednesday.

“Now it’s more, I know I’m good at this. I’ve built my mindset over the last 10 years.

“I’ve got 10 years left in boxing and I want to cement my legacy.

“(George) Foreman, Bernard Hopkins, (Wladimir) Klitschko went on until 40. I believe I can do that with the advances in sports science.

“I’ve been 12 rounds, I’ve been dropped, I’ve put on weight, I’ve lost weight, I’ve learnt boxing specific training.

“I think back to the gold medal. It was a tournament I had to get through. I’m back in the tournament. It’s great. It resonates with people.”

Promoter Eddie Hearn agrees that Joshua is more than capable of adding more polish to his already glittering CV.

“The pace that this young man is moving at and the challenge he is wiling to take is fantastic for the sport of boxing,” Hearn said. “Anthony wants to create a legacy and the only way you do that is by fighting real fighters.”

Joshua won his first world title in 2016 and has made five defences, taking his record to 21-0 with 20 knockouts. The 28-year-old beat Joseph Parker of New Zealand by unanimous points decision in Cardiff on March 31. — AFP

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 ??  ?? (From left) Promoter Eddie Hearn, Anthony Joshua, Alexander Povetkin and Povetkin’s manager Vadim Kornilov pose for a photograph after the press conference. — Reuters photo
(From left) Promoter Eddie Hearn, Anthony Joshua, Alexander Povetkin and Povetkin’s manager Vadim Kornilov pose for a photograph after the press conference. — Reuters photo

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