Daily Mirror

A SIGHT FOR THOR EYES

Joshua’s HAMMER makes a welcome return as his huge right detonated on Povetkin’s chin to complete his 21st knockout

- BY DAVID ANDERSONBo­xingcorres­pondent@MirrorAnde­rson

IT hadn’t been seen in all its devastatin­g power in his last two fights.

But against Alexander Povetkin, Anthony Joshua truly found his Thor hammer of a right hand again.

With one detonation of it on Povetkin’s face, Joshua blew away the Russian’s resistance and, seconds later, he was celebratin­g stoppage No .21 of his remarkable career.

Joshua had been nowhere near as destructiv­e against Carlos Takam or Joseph Parker and says he went the distance with the Kiwi to prove to his critics he could go 12 rounds.

He answered them again when they questioned his power and made his point in emphatic fashion against someone who hadn’t been stopped in his 35 previous fights.

“Twenty-two fights with 21 knockouts,” grinned unbeaten Joshua, as he sat early yesterday with the WBA Super, IBF and WBO heavyweigh­t belts laid out in front of him.

“I just listened to what people wanted. They said I couldn’t go 12 rounds, so instead of blitzing out Parker, I took my time and proved to people that I can.

“Just because in my 21st fight, I decided not to knock him out, people said, ‘We need excitement’, so I went in there against Povetkin with a different mindset.

“That’s what I mean when I say I found my right hand again because that was the punch which started the end of the fight.”

That right in the seventh shattered Povetkin’s defences. The Russian went down under a succession of combinatio­ns before referee Steve Gray waved it off when he bravely got up and Joshua unloaded again.

Povetkin had proved an awkward opponent in the six-and-a-half rounds before this stunning finale and caught Joshua too often with his overhand right.

The former WBA champ also rocked Joshua at the end of the first with a left hook which bloodied his nose.

Still, Joshua – who could face Deontay Wilder (top) or Dillian Whyte (bottom) next – was in control before his explosive finish and cleverly peppered Povetkin’s body with his jab to wear down his resistance. The stoppage was even more commendabl­e when Joshua revealed he had been struggling with flu in the past week. “It hit me last week and I only started feeling better on Friday,” he said. “I felt like a heavy gust of wind would knock me over. “But I thought to myself that I felt this way in training camp and still sparred 15 good rounds, I’ve got one geezer in the ring who will fade sooner or later, so let’s just get on with it.” As ridiculous as it sounds, Joshua needed that spectacula­r stoppage because some fans were beginning to switch off as a legacy of his displays against Takam and Parker.

Promoter Eddie Hearn admitted Povetkin had proved to be a harder sell and the several thousand empty seats at Wembley were testimony to that.

Those inside loved Joshua’s check-out, although he suspects some of the one million-plus viewers who watched on TV did so to see if he will ever lose.

“The appeal is who’s going to be the man to beat me?” he added. “That’s what people are interested in.

“Give Anthony the toughest of the toughest, get King Kong. So I have got to stay on top of my game.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? END OF THE LINE Povetkin dodges a left from Joshua before being knocked out with a right
END OF THE LINE Povetkin dodges a left from Joshua before being knocked out with a right
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom