Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Klitschko fight does not faze Joshua

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ANTHONY Joshua (right) says he is unfazed by the prospect of facing Wladimir Klitschko in front of 90,000 fans at Wembley Stadium after their world heavyweigh­t title unificatio­n showdown was sealed for April 29.

Klitschko clambered into the ring after Joshua’s three-round demolition of Eric Molina i n Manchester on Saturday night to confirm the pair have agreed the details of what will be a recordbrea­king post-war showdown.

It will be a mark of how far the 27-year-old Londoner has progressed since his Wembley Stadium debut on the undercard of Carl Froch’s bout with George Groves i n May 2014, when he dispatched Matt Legg in his sixth profession­al bout.

Joshua said: “The last time I fought at Wembley it was in front of about 3,000 people at half-past five in the afternoon. But it’s a fight and whether it’s in front of 90,000 people or nine people, it makes no difference.

“I remember the ring was tiny and, before I knew it, he was in my corner swinging hooks. I was a bit raw then so I took a few and I managed to get him out of there. I was happy to go on first so I could watch Froch against Groves later on.”

Three years later, Joshua’s status will be rather different, after a series of clinical demolition­s of the likes of Molina which captured him the IBF version of the title and underlined his position as one of the undoubted rising stars of the sport.

Joshua’s success was enough to convince Klitschko to travel to Manchester to witness his developmen­t at first hand, and the Ukrainian made the unusual step of taking the ring announcer’s microphone to confirm their contest.

Molina played his part as the last hapless obstacle to be swept aside, barely landing a shot as Joshua set about his work with almost casual intensity, hammering home a left hook in round two before opening up to finish it in the third.

A brutal right hand knocked Molina to the canvas and, although the 34-year-old Texan gamely scrambled to his feet, referee Steve Gray wisely saw enough in the inevitable barrage that followed and waved the contest off.

While Molina was no Klitschko, there was a readily-available worldclass comparison in the fact he had lasted nine rounds against reigning WBC champion Deontay Wilder last year, whereas Joshua’s assault lasted less than nine minutes.

“The difference between Molina and Klitschko is that Molina wasn’t giving me opportunit­ies, so I had to create them, but Klitschko will be standing in front of me and giving me those chances,” added Joshua.

“A lot of this fight was asking about what’s going to happen in the future and I always said let’s focus on this fight first. But it was always buzzing about and to see Klitschko here made it real and I can now focus on 2017.”

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