The Southland Times

Parker v Fa: the gloves come off

- Marvin France marvin.france@stuff.co.nz

After a respectful buildup, a long, intense stare down said everything you need to know about tonight’s allKiwi heavyweigh­t blockbuste­r in Auckland.

Joseph Parker and Junior Fa mean business.

‘‘It has always felt real but both of us needed to let everyone know that this is a fight at the end of the day,’’ Fa told Stuff after weighing-in at 118.1kg, almost 10kg heavier than the former WBO world champion.

‘‘The talk about the buildup has been how it’s too nice. Both of us know that we are civil towards to each other but at the end of the night we’re there to rip each other’s heads off. And that stare down was just to let both of us know that, bro, I’m coming to knock you out.’’

While a confident Fa (19-0) mouthed a few words towards his fellow South Aucklander, Parker remained silent as the pair stood faceto-face on stage for what seemed an age at a packed bar on Auckland’s Viaduct Harbour.

At a glance

Full fight card:

■ Joseph Parker v Junior Fa (not before 10.30pm – heavyweigh­t, 12 x 3-minute rounds)

■ Julius Long v Hemi Ahio (heavyweigh­t, 8 x 3-minute rounds)

■ David Nyika v Jesse Maio (cruiserwei­ght, 6 x 3-minute rounds)

■ Nik Charalampo­us v Panuve Helu (cruiserwei­ght, 6 x 3-minute rounds)

■ Alrie Meleisea v Lani Daniels (heavyweigh­t, 8 x 2-minute rounds – NZPBA women’s heavyweigh­t title)

■ Jerome Pampellone v Anthony Amouta (catchweigh­t 86kg, 4 x 3-minute rounds)

■ Richie Hadlow v Obedi Maguchi (catchweigh­t 62kg, 4 x 3-minute rounds)

■ John Parker v Egelani Taito (light heavyweigh­t, 4 x 3-minute rounds)

■ Phil Tele’a v Niro Iuta (corporate rule,s 3 x 2minute rounds)

Having grown up in the same area, attended the same church and fought against each other as amateurs, Parker and Fa have left the verbal sparring to their respective team members and made sure to shake hands after the face-off.

Both declined to reveal what was said on stage, but Parker agreed it was just the ticket to set the tone for what is arguably the biggest domestic bout in New Zealand history.

‘‘Now it’s time. I can’t wait,’’ he said. ‘‘He was saying a few things. To be honest, I didn’t hear what he said. But we both really want this fight.’’

Parker tipped the scales at 108.9kg, 2kg lighter than his most recent bout against Shawndell Winters 12 months ago.

While the 29-year-old is the heavy favourite heading into the bout with a significan­t edge in experience, the key physical attributes favour Fa.

Along with the weight disadvanta­ge, Parker is giving away 11cm in reach and 3cm in height. However, he was more than happy with how he measured up.

‘‘I’ve been training hard for a good weight and my body feels good,’’ Parker added. ‘‘The staredown was good, it was intense and it shows that he’s ready and confident, I’m ready and confident.’’

Fa, a regular and respected sparring partner to former WBC champion Deontay Wilder, has yet to taste to defeat in 19 pro bouts but this is the first time he’s met anyone close to the top tier of the division.

After an undergoing an undisclose­d operation late last year that forced a postponeme­nt from the original December 12 date, Fa insists he’s ready to make the big step up.

‘‘I feel a lot better. I’ve performed a lot better in this camp as opposed to the last date,’’ he said.

‘‘The training is done, the talking is done, and I’m good to go.’’

‘‘At the end of the night we’re there to rip each other’s heads off.’’ Junior Fa

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? After a buildup that was said to be ‘‘too nice’’, Junior Fa, left, and Joseph Parker exchanged intense stares at their weigh-in ahead of their heavyweigh­t contest in Auckland tonight.
GETTY IMAGES After a buildup that was said to be ‘‘too nice’’, Junior Fa, left, and Joseph Parker exchanged intense stares at their weigh-in ahead of their heavyweigh­t contest in Auckland tonight.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand