The New Zealand Herald

Joseph Parker’s secret surgery ahead of title fight

Secret elbow surgery boosts Kiwi camp’s confidence ahead of unificatio­n bout

- Boxing writer Patrick McKendry is in London and Cardiff to cover the Joshua v Parker fight for NZME. Patrick McKendry in London

Joseph Parker had secret double elbow surgery in December to improve his performanc­e, the

Herald can reveal. The procedure has helped his movement and power significan­tly. Parker and his team believe it will be a game-changer for his fight against Anthony Joshua.

The Parker camp had been desperate to keep his operation under wraps, firstly, for fear of upsetting the delicate and lucrative negotiatio­ns with Joshua and his promoter Eddie Hearn late last year, and secondly, because the New Zealand heavyweigh­t was eager to use it as a piece of mental warfare before their world title unificatio­n bout in Cardiff on April 1.

Parker and his promoter David Higgins will go in to detail at a press conference in London late on Friday night regarding the reasons for the surgery in Auckland, and the many benefits he has received from it.

Duco Events have given no details but have promised a revealing video at the press briefing, and that it will be newsworthy.

Parker had complained of issues with his left elbow the past few years, and it had apparently got to the point where he couldn’t throw his trademark lightning double jab without extreme discomfort.

He remained stoic — and discrete (as have his team) — but apparently he would finish sparring sessions and fights in pain. It is believed the surgery on his left elbow went so well, he was determined to get his other done, too.

It is also significan­t that Parker, 26, has knocked out only two of his last six opponents, and that he has looked flat in several bouts, in particular his last two against Hughie Fury last September and Razvan Cojanu last May.

While going 12 rounds against Carlos Takam and Andy Ruiz Jr — for the WBO world title — plus Cojanu and Fury proved Parker can go the distance (something knockout artist Joshua is yet to do), Parker was desperate to stop Fury. His disappoint­ment was clear before the relief of the announceme­nt of the majority decision.

It is believed the elbow trouble could have contribute­d slightly to the weight gains Parker made before this camp. He has also recently made mention of factors that have prevented him showing his true potential without explaining what they were.

The true value and quality of his recent camp in Las Vegas will only be known in hindsight following his fight at the Principali­ty Stadium in front of a record crowd of 80,000 people and TV audience of millions, but Parker and his trainer Kevin Barry have said it has been the best of his career.

Parker looks trim, particular­ly around his face, after arriving in London, and is apparently on track to tip the scales at the 107kg or 108kg he is targeting.

He was 111.1kg for his last fight against Fury, a bout in which he landed several right hands on the Englishman’s chin without appearing to make too much of an impact.

The speed and one-punch knockout power is apparently back now, and that is why he and Barry have arrived in London supremely confident of pulling off one of the great upsets in the sport.

Hearn has wondered aloud in recent months why WBO world champion Parker and his team were so confident of pulling off a victory against Joshua, the holder of the IBF, IBO and WBA belts who has won all 20 of his profession­al fights early.

The surgery, and the freedom and power it has brought back to Parker’s punches is the reason why.

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