The Scotsman

Seismic defeat plunges golden boy

● Wilder and Fury the big winners as Briton’s negotiatin­g power is shredded by shock loss

- Kevin Garside

FEBRUARY 1990 n Tyson was regularly being described as the finest heavyweigh­t of all time when he travelled to Tokyo for what was supposed to be a routine defence of his IBF, WBA and WBC titles. Douglas was a 42/1 underdog, but he forced not only an exceptiona­l fight , but what is considered the greatest upset of all time when he refused to be bullied by Tyson, resisted his aggression and capitalise­d on his poor preparatio­n to stop him in the tenth. An t ho ny Jo s h ua d i d n’t k n ow wha t round it was. He didn’t know anything about the shot that put him on the floor for the first time in round three. At the end of the fight, three further knockdowns later in the seventh, Joshua didn’t know what day it was, where he was, or maybe even who he was such was the scale of the shock that had taken hold.

When he is fully returned to his senses he will discover a world painfully shorn of the certaintie­s he had known before Andy Ruiz Jnr disabused him of his deceptions. Though a rematch clause has already been triggered, the golden thread from Olympic champion to world title invincibil­ity is fractured. Not just broken, shredded. And with it his economic power has gone, too.

This was not so much a defeat, as a shellackin­g. Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury have left Joshua’s orbit at warp speed to occupy another planet. Even if he were to avenge the loss to Ruiz – and on the basis of what passed in New York that is a sizeable if – any negotiatio­ns with Wilder of Fury would be conducted on their terms. Joshua’s American debut was imagined as a coming out, an unveiling pregnant with promise. He would dazzle Madison Square Garden before moving westward to the grand palazzos in Las Vegas and the big halls of LA. America, he said, would never forget his name.

He was right for all the wrong reasons. This was a heavyweigh­t apocalypse as seismic as any boxing has seen since Buster Douglas uprooted Mike Tyson in Tokyo almost 30 years ago. Like Iron Mike, Joshua met an opponent so ill considered he could barely fill out the underdog label that hung around his neck. The outcome was the more remarkable for the tumble taken by Ruiz, who was first to hit the deck in the third. Thirt y seconds later, Joshua was a fighter stripped of his motor functions.

Ruiz dropped him with an anvil to the temple. Joshua had no means of resetNOVEM­BER 2015 n The great Klitschko had reigned as champion for nine years, and against the enigmatic Fury was expected to make his latest routine title defence, but Fury travelled to Germany and out-fought and outthought him to win thanks to scores of 115-112 , 115-112 and 116-111 from the three judges. Klitschko had not lost since 2004 and had made 19 successful title defences.

“Joshua’s American debut was imagined as a coming out, an unveiling pregnant with promise. America, he said, would never forget his name. He was right for all the wrong reasons. This was a heavyweigh­t apocalypse”

ting or recovering equilibriu­m. He was whacked senseless. It was disturbing to witness the exchanges with trainer Rob eret Mccracken, who talked but could not penetrate the fog. His prompts urging Joshua to regroup behind boxing’s old one-two – “Come on, jab, right hand, jab right hand” – were met by scrambled, unconnecte­d responses. “What shot was it?” Joshua asked. And later at the end of the sixth: “What round is it?”

The shots that flo ored Ruiz land - ed bang on the chin, raw bone, first a right uppercut then a left hook. Though Ruiz went over clean, the neurologic­al pathways suffered no great disruption. Not so in the case of Joshua. Ruiz was caught with two more big right hands but somehow stood his ground and with a reactive left hook smacked Joshua on the side of the head. The champion was turned to jelly, his arms and legs acquiring a life of their own.

What happened thereafter was a consequenc­e of that blow. Though boasting an impressive one pack about his middle, Ruiz is as game as they come, and knows his way around a ring.

Over the next couple of rounds he sensed the transforma­tion in Joshua from opponent to fear to a boxer on the ragged edge.

Ruiz had Joshua out on his feet in the sixth. In the seventh, Johsua’s reign was over, heavyweigh­t boxing demonstrat ing yet again its unparallel­ed capaci t y for violent inversion and blo o dy romance.

Joshua must now adjust to the new setting. He is arguably more interest ing as a flawed fighter as opposed to the superhero specimen hitherto cul tivated. He is, therefore, momentaril­y returned to pastures old, a big lad with a point to prove. The imperative is to be honest about his failings and seek the right remedies. “Trust me, where I was in life, I’ve dealt with more shi than this, with some real big losses, and bounced back.”

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