Herald on Sunday

How to build a career: Parker’s biggest bouts before title showdown

- By Patrick McKendry

June 13, 2013 v Francois Botha (SA) (48-9-3) at Trusts Arena, Waitakere Result: Rd 2 TKO

Joseph Parker’s fight against veteran South African Frans Botha was a watershed in the early stage of his profession­al career.

He had just joined trainer Kevin Barry in Las Vegas when he was presented with the opportunit­y to fight Botha, a man who had been in the ring with (and lost to) Wladimir Klitschko, Lennox Lewis, Mike Tyson, and Evander Holyfield.

Barry’s reaction to Parker’s promoters was “Thanks a lot!”, but Parker, who smiled all the way to the ring in his first headline fight at the age of 22, shocked virtually everyone with the brutality of his finish against the “White Buffalo”.

Parker: “This was four weeks after the Coe fight [a warm-up bout]. A lot changed for me.

“I lost a lot of weight. I had a lot of hard training behind me and going into the fight I was confident but a little nervous.

“Francois is an experience­d guy. Finishing it in two rounds felt like the real turning point in my career. It was special. That’s when more people starting taking interest in me.”

April 26, 2014 v Marcelo Luiz Nascimento (BRA) (17-5-0) at Koenig Pilsener Arena, Oberhausen, Germany Result: Rd 7 TKO

This fight was a very important learning experience for Parker and his promoters Duco Events.

It was held in Germany on the undercard of the Wladimir Klitschko v Alex Leapai heavyweigh­t title fight, a lesson in itself, but Parker also had to fight back from adversity.

The hard-punching Nascimento burst one of Parker’s ear drums but the young Kiwi finished strongly, forcing the referee to stop the fight as he threw a lightning flurry of combinatio­ns that the Brazilian had no answer to.

Parker: “The whole event was different. We were used to fighting in New Zealand. I dropped Nascimento in the first round but he came back and I had to dig really deep because he was gaining the whole time.

“He ruptured my left ear drum with a right hand in the fifth round which caused a few hearing problems but I was able to overcome it.”

Parker and his promoters saw firsthand how Aussie-Samoan Leapai struggled in the spotlight of the world’s media.

Duco Events resolved to prepare Parker thoroughly in this area should he get a similar chance.

October 16, 2014 v Sherman Williams (BAH) (36-13-2) at Trusts Arena, Waitakere Result: Unanimous decision

“Bullets and gunsmoke”, was Williams’ catchline during the buildup to this fight but it was the Caribbean Tank who received the most damaging hits.

Parker stated he would knock Williams out, the first and, so far, last time he would make such a prediction.

Williams, hiding behind his big left shoulder and occasional­ly throwing overhand rights, went the distance reasonably comfortabl­y, but Parker was the clear winner on points. It was the first time he had been taken the distance.

Afterwards, Williams grabbed the microphone, stating he had won and demanding a re-match, an entertaini­ng finish to the bout.

Parker: “I landed more punches than he did, including some clever ones. He thought he won but we knew we had it in the bag.

“I would have loved the knockout, but sometimes you have to be tested. I landed big shots, threw combinatio­ns, and proved my endurance was good in going 10 rounds.”

December 6, 2014 v Irineu Beato Costa Junior (BRA) (15-1-0) at Claudeland­s Arena, Hamilton Result: Rd 4 KO

Parker’s performanc­e against the big Costa Junior was one of the best of his career up to that point.

Parker was happy afterwards, but trainer Barry was ecstatic, such

was the statement his fighter made with a big right-hand finish, a spectacula­r one-punch knockout.

Parker: “That was a good end to the year, my final exam.

“In that fight I executed correctly. Everything went to plan.”

Costa Junior, the Brazilian champion, walked on to Parker’s right hand and was unconsciou­s before he hit the floor. It was a stunning finish, and proved Parker has power to go with his speed.

Afterwards his dressing room was packed with those eager to be a part of the young man’s success — a sign of things to come.

May 21, 2016 v Carlos Takam (CAM) (33-2-1) at Vodafone Events Centre, Manukau Result: Unanimous decision

Easily Parker’s most important fight up to that point, there was plenty at stake in this one in South Auckland.

The winner was guaranteed a mandatory title challenge for the IBF heavyweigh­t belt and Parker was forced to dig deeper than ever before. Takam was relatively defensive and Parker struggled to hurt him.

When Takam came forward he scored against Parker, and won several rounds comfortabl­y, the first time the New Zealander had been put under such consistent pressure.

It was a flat performanc­e from Parker, who later complained about an over-long training camp during which he “crashed” physically, but just as it seemed his chance was slipping away, back he came.

The eighth round was phenomenal, with Parker landing punch after punch on Takam, who wobbled, but didn’t go down.

Parker deserved the decision over the 12 rounds, but it was a close fight.

Parker: “When I look back at the fight I wasn’t really impressed with my performanc­e.

“It was good getting the victory because of what it meant to getting the mandatory position. But looking back, and I watched the fight twice, I felt like it was rubbish.”

October 1, 2016 v Alexander Dimitrenko (UKR) (38-2) at Vodafone Events Centre, Manukau Result: Rd 3 KO

A brutal performanc­e from Parker from start to finish.

Dimitrenko had a good profession­al record, and at 2.01m was the tallest fighter Parker had faced, but as soon as he felt the power that the home favourite had in both hands he didn’t want to know.

Dimitrenko was knocked down once in the first round and twice in the second. In the third, he was felled by a body punch when he had a knee on the canvas.

He stayed down looking for a disqualifi­cation, but the referee, rightly, wasn’t having any of those antics.

Parker: “I did more weight training for Dimitrenko — we saw the big difference in sparring, everything felt stronger, it felt like the movement was much better, we were able to execute the plan in the Dimitrenko fight.”

Looking ahead, Parker added: “[We’ve been] trying different things. The whole body feels stronger.

“I think with this Ruiz Jr fight you are going to see a little step up from the Dimitrenko fight.

“I think [new training] has helped my speed and movement. I put on a little bit of weight, but I believe it was muscle.”

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