The Northern Advocate

Parker clinches key deal after contract drama

- Christophe­r Reive

After months of negotiatio­ns, Joseph Parker and Joe Joyce are finally going to get the chance to put their hands on one another.

The two highly ranked heavyweigh­t boxers will square off at Manchester Arena on September 25, the winner becoming mandatory challenger to the world championsh­ip.

After Parker’s emphatic unanimous decision win over Derek Chisora last December, his camp had eyed the options to see what the next step towards another shot at a world title might look like.

That came in the form of Olympic silver medallist Joyce, and reports surfaced that a bout was in the works between the two in the early months of this year.

Now in August, the fight has finally been agreed upon and contracts were signed late on Thursday night in what Parker’s manager David Higgins called “the longest contract negotiatio­n of my life”.

Negotiatio­ns were drawn out as Parker (30-2) became a free agent after his last bout against Chisora.

In trying to book the fight with Joyce (14-0), the 30-year-old Kiwi was also in discussion with Frank Warren’s Queensberr­y Promotions — Joyce’s promoter — about a multi-fight promotiona­l deal.

However, terms were not reached, and Parker eventually signed a multi-fight deal with British boxing promoter Ben Shalom and Boxxer, who are aligned with Sky Sport UK.

That deal was announced in June.

Despite not coming to terms with Warren’s promotiona­l company, the Joyce bout remained on the table and will now go down in just seven weeks’ time.

“It came down to the wire. Everyone was still trying to get concession­s and make changes at the last minute, so it was actually on a knife edge,” Higgins told the Herald of the bout finally being confirmed.

“Yesterday it could have easily fallen apart and not happened at all, so in a way it’s a relief it’s on because Joseph has been patiently waiting since he beat Chisora the second time for his next outing.

“But it’s such a high-stakes game that the contracts have to be all in order and have to be right at this level, otherwise you can sell ourself down the river.

“The money has to be right; the number of fights has to be right.

“A lot of these contracts, especially the old-time promoters, are designed to sort of kidnap the fighter for life — for want of a better word — with clauses and options for future rights on eventualit­ies, and a novice boxer, without knowing it, might sign something they then can’t get out of.

“For us it was important to have a clean fight night contract that we can then look at renewal or otherwise.

“In the end we’re happy to be aligned with Boxxer, Ben Shalom and British Sky, and this particular f i ght is going to be with Queensbury on [UK broadcaste­r] BT because the deal was done between them.

“We got there, and the fight itself is very interestin­g; it’s a genuine 50/50 match up.”

Parker is currently in the UK where he will remain for the rest of his camp, again training out of Tyson Fury’s f acilities in Morecambe with head coach Andy Lee, who has brought improvemen­ts out of the former WBO heavyweigh­t champion since they started working together in early 2021.

A win over Joyce will mean Parker takes over the 36-year-old Brit’s position as mandatory challenger for the WBO heavyweigh­t title, which would be against the winner of the rematch between unified champion Oleksandr Usyk and former champ Anthony Joshua.

That rematch is scheduled for later this month in Jeddah.

 ?? PHOTO / NZME ?? Joseph Parker.
PHOTO / NZME Joseph Parker.

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