Glasgow Times

Takam’sshortnoti­ce‘tricky’forAJ

Joshua retained his heavyweigh­t titles via a disputed stoppage

- By DECLAN WARRINGTON

ANTHONY Joshua acknowledg­ed the fact he had had only 12 days to prepare for Carlos Takam contribute­d to his struggle to secure the explosive knockout expected of him.

Though he consistent­ly dominated the latest defence of his IBF and WBA titles, he took until the 10th round to stop the previously little-known Frenchman, and to significan­t dissatisfa­ction.

The 36-year-old protested when referee Phil Edwards rescued him amid increasing punishment, Joshua refused to celebrate, and many of the estimated 76,000 present booed when he did so.

Takam’s resilience was even more impressive given he had replaced the injured Kubrat Pulev, a bigger and different style of fighter, with so little notice after the Bulgarian’s withdrawal through injury.

Despite neither Pulev nor Takam representi­ng an opponent even near the status of Wladimir Klitschko, who Joshua had previously stopped, a world record crowd for an in- door fight had gathered under the roof at Cardiff’s Principali­ty Stadium.

It was the entertaini­ng stoppage of Klitschko that had created such high levels of expectatio­n surroundin­g Joshua, 28, and the champion said: “Against Pulev, I’d have been able to have been a little bit more effective.

“Takam went down in the fourth; maybe Pulev wouldn’t have made it through the fourth.

“Takam was shorter, he knows how to ride that right hand; that’s what made it interestin­g with the change of opponent. He deals with guys like me every day in the gym; he’s naturally got a shorter style, and I don’t deal with guys like Takam every day.

“It was just going to be a little bit more difficult but with him, certain mis- takes I could have been making five fights ago I’m not going to make any more against someone like him. All they want to do is land one shot; he knows his durability so wants to stay in the ring for 10 rounds, 11 rounds, and try and land that one sweet haymaker. “I have to go back to 2014 to think of guys I’ve sparred who are like Takam; I’m sparring big guys every other week, be- cause there’s not so many short heavyweigh­ts.”

Joshua’s trainer Rob McCracken described the bout as “tricky” but despite recognisin­g his fighter is still developing, did not dismiss promoter Eddie Hearn’s post-fight talk of Joshua accepting a first internatio­nal fight in 2018.

“Takam wasn’t ideal with 12 days’ notice,” he said. “We’re very profession­al, and that’s not ideal to fight someone on 12 days’ notice.

“It was tricky because Takam’s short, squat, awkward, dynamic at times, but Anthony got the job done and found a way to win each round and close the show despite a bad head collision.”

 ??  ?? Lewis Hamilton celebrates crossing the line to clinch a fourth Formula One title after recovering from a dramatic incident with Sebastian Vettel to claim the championsh­ip with two rounds still to spare
Lewis Hamilton celebrates crossing the line to clinch a fourth Formula One title after recovering from a dramatic incident with Sebastian Vettel to claim the championsh­ip with two rounds still to spare
 ??  ?? Anthony Joshua defeated Carlos Takam after only having 12 days to prepare for the bout
Anthony Joshua defeated Carlos Takam after only having 12 days to prepare for the bout

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom