The New Zealand Herald

Promoter offers Joshua re-match carrot as Brits warm to Parker

- Patrick McKendry in London

Joseph Parker has been warmly welcomed by the British public at an open workout in London before his fight against Dillian Whyte in London on Sunday, with rival promoter Eddie Hearn confirming the Kiwi could easily earn himself a re-match with Anthony Joshua depending on his performanc­e.

Parker was cheered and mobbed for autographs and pictures before and after he got in the ring in a large, busy shopping mall in Stratford, east London; his friendly manner and gracious presence before and after his defeat to Joshua in Cardiff in April earning him a lot of new supporters.

“I think he conducted himself in a good manner last time,” Hearn, who promotes Whyte and Joshua, said.

“He lost and he took it on the chin. He didn’t moan, he said a few things about the ref but Joe ultimately said ‘I wasn’t good enough’, and Brits like that and they like the fact he’s taken a fight like this because neither guy really had to, but it’s great for boxing that they’re willing to step up.”

Parker and trainer Kevin Barry went through the motions in the ring set up near a food court in front of a crowd of more than 500 people. They don’t want to give anything away before the fight at the O2 Arena, which will be filled with a crowd of 18,000, but Parker did enough to make an impression on Hearn.

“He looks well,” Hearn said. “He looks a lot heavier. He looks more built for a tear-up than for speed last time. I think last time he might have taken too much weight off because

everything was about speed. Although he was just messing about with Kevin, you could see him working on the inside and I hope that’s a sign of things to come because if we get that kind of fight it’s going to be an absolute barn-burner.

“The winner of this fight goes on to a great position. But the winner of this fight, if it’s a brilliant fight with great performanc­es, takes it to a whole other level and Parker can’t afford another lacklustre performanc­e.

“He has to express himself and enjoy himself and fight free and if he can do that it will be a hell of a fight.

“If he wins against Whyte he has the chance for a Joshua re-match. It’s just a case of when.”

Hearn clearly enjoyed catching up with his old sparring partner David Higgins, Parker’s promoter, the pair’s relationsh­ip formed during negotiatio­ns for the Joshua fight allowing them to seal this one in 48 hours — a remarkable achievemen­t in profession­al boxing.

“We’ve always had a good relationsh­ip. Not a lot of people trust others in boxing.

“After the first fight, which was a huge success and nearly broke the pay per view records here, they

He has to express himself and enjoy himself and fight free and if he can do that it will be a hell of a fight. Promoter Eddie Hearn

[Joshua and Parker] both made a fortune. There was a great feeling about it afterwards. Joe lost his title but he is secure for life.

“Higgins, although he’s a bit quirky at times, is smart, he’s a lateral thinker and he’s a character. The public here like him.”

Parker said afterwards: “The reception’s great here — it doesn’t even feel like we’re away from home.

“There’s a lot of love — I can see a lot of New Zealanders here.”

Whyte, who has also lost to fellow Englishman Joshua, probably needs a knockout in order to beat Parker.

The 30-year-old is an aggressive and emotional character — and although he is ranked No 2 by the WBC, a loss in an all-action performanc­e probably won’t hurt his career too much.

“Everyone knows I’m coming for a scrap,” Whyte said. “It is what it is.”

“If it’s an entertaini­ng fight it’s not the end of the world,” Hearn said of 26-year-old Parker.

“If Joe loses in a good fight the public will want to see him back.

“I don’t believe they [Team Parker] were as confident as they made out before Joshua.

“I do believe they are confident about this one.”

 ??  ?? Joseph Parker
Joseph Parker

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