Weekend Herald

TIME TO CROWN THE KING

Fa’s final taunt to Parker Bizarre brouhaha before bout Five keys that will decide the fight

- Boxing Liam Napier

“This will be the fifth time I beat you.”

Junior Fa seized the final chance to lock eyes with Joseph Parker to fire that taunt at his former amateur foe.

Tension was palpable as Parker and Fa squared off one last time before they come to blows at Spark Arena on Saturday night, headlining a card that includes David Nyika’s profession­al debut.

Pre-fight staredowns always set the scene for the fight to follow but Friday’s at a packed Headquarte­rs bar in Auckland’s viaduct added spice to this eagerly anticipate­d heavyweigh­t contest.

Parker and Fa’s tense staredown lingered long after MC Mike Angove told the fighters to face the front and pose for photograph­s — Parker clenching his jaw tighter, while Fa muttered something not audible for those close at hand.

Asked afterwards what he said to Parker, Fa would only say: “He knows what I said.

“It’s good for the people to see. The talk in the build-up is that we’re both too nice but both of us know we’re going to be hurting each other and that staredown really communicat­es that. It was for both of us to show we mean business.”

Fa’s willingnes­s to taunt Parker speaks to his quiet confidence.

“On the inside, I know I possess what it takes to win — that’s where the confidence comes from, my own selfbelief. This is the most important fight I’ve ever had in my life.”

Fa’s coach, Doug Viney from City Kickboxing, revealed Fa referenced his amateur record with Parker which was split 2-2.

“Do you want to know what Junior was saying to him? He said ‘this is going to be the fifth time I beat you’,” Viney said. “He got ripped off in those fights. The man is confident.”

Mind games in boxing are nothing new, with Viney liking it to courting the opposite sex.

“It’s kind of like you meeting a beautiful girl for the first time — you’ve got to work up the confidence to ask ‘can I buy you a drink?’

“Once you get that ball rolling, you’re on fire. Once Junior starts landing on him, his confidence is going to keep pouring in.”

Parker weighed in almost 10kg lighter — 108.9kg to Fa’s 118.1kg — and will have an 11cm reach disadvanta­ge, yet he appears in his usual relaxed, assured pre-fight state despite the pressure attached to being the $1.12 favourite with the bookies.

“He was saying a few things to me during the staredown, but because of the noise and because I was focused on being intense, I don’t know what he said,” Parker said.

“You want to show I’m here for business. The staredown is almost the beginning of the fight. People were asking me what he said but I have no idea. I was going to say something but I decided to let my eyes do the talking. I felt like he’s ready.”

Elements of the unknown add intrigue to this domestic scrap.

With the WBO’s third (Parker) and fifth-ranked fighters facing off, the result carries major ramificati­ons for the unbeaten South Auckland contenders of Tongan (Fa) and Samoan (Parker) heritage.

Fa (undisclose­d surgery) and Parker (dual elbow operations) both went under the knife late last year; they’ve both been out of the ring for over a year and the disruption caused by postponing the fight by two months may also have an impact.

“When you haven’t been in the ring for a year — him longer — there’s always going to be ring rust,” Parker admits. “I’ve done over 100 rounds of sparring. That’s great, but we’ll soon find out how not being in the ring will affect him and me.”

Prevailing wisdom is Parker’s higher level of opposition will enable him to better handle the occasion and therefore assert his strengths to get on the inside and dictate terms.

Fa, though, has done everything he can to counter his comparativ­e lack of bright-light experience.

“That’s something I’m really looking forward to, how I deal with that,” Fa said. “I go to Spark Arena every now and then just to soak in the atmosphere — visualise and take my mind there, so it’s not so foreign.”

The time for visualisat­ion to turn into action is now. Tonight will crown the king of New Zealand heavyweigh­t boxing, and chart two potentiall­y contrastin­g career paths.

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 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Joseph Parker (right) insisted he didn’t hear what Junior Fa said due to the noise and “because I was focused on being intense”.
Photo / Photosport Joseph Parker (right) insisted he didn’t hear what Junior Fa said due to the noise and “because I was focused on being intense”.

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