Daily Mail

JOSHUA: I LET MYSELF DOWN WITH RANT

Tearful Joshua’s vow to return to ring after defeat

- JEFF POWELL Boxing Correspond­ent in Jeddah

ANTHONY JOSHUA admitted last night he

‘let himself down’ with his erratic behaviour in the immediate aftermath of his world heavyweigh­t title defeat by oleksandr usyk. Joshua grabbed usyk’s WBA and Ring Magazine belts and dropped them outside the ropes before picking up the microphone and launching into a confused rant. Supermiddl­eweight legend Carl Froch accused him of stealing usyk’s moment while Joshua’s gym-mate Frazer Clarke said he should have been ‘saved from himself’ by his team, who ‘hung him out to dry’.

Joshua said: ‘I’ll be the first to admit, I let myself down. I acted out of pure passion and emotion and when not controlled it ain’t great. I love this sport so, so much and I’ll be better from this point on. ‘yesterday I had to mentally take myself into a dark place to compete for the

They say it takes a strong man to cry and Anthony Joshua proved them right as he covered his eyes and wept with the emotion of having fought like a warrior king yet failed to regain his crown.

Morning was close to breaking but so was his heart.

We had not seen him like this before. Not even in previous defeats. This one, on a split decision, proved to be the most despairing. Because he had worked so hard to prepare and then come so close.

It was a poignant moment and there were dry throats in an audience of sometimes cynical critics as he explained his reaction to this loss.

Tossing into the crowd the belts which Oleksandr Usyk had spirited away from him in September and now kept through some adversity here was out of character.

Usyk’s revelation that Joshua had been on the brink of lunging into bare- knuckle slugging with some of his team was another surprise.

The Ukrainian made light of it, saying: ‘I advised him against it. My men are some of the toughest street fighters in the world.’

AJ made amends by extolling

Usyk, leading the packed crowd in the arena in three hip hip hoorays for his nemesis.

‘It was the passion running over after all I’d put into weeks of training,’ said Joshua.

So can he bring himself to go through it all again? The potential for disappoint­ment included?

‘I’ll be back in the ring come November or December,’ he said — dispelling speculatio­n that at 33 in October and after 10 years of combat he would retire.

‘I’ll be a fighter for life,’ he said. ‘Understand that fighters are not normal people. We live for this.’

So who could possibly be next after Usyk, the best boxer on the planet?

‘Come one, come all,’ Joshua proclaimed. ‘ One fight this year, three more in 2023. Then I truly believe I will become a three-time world heavyweigh­t champion.’

That ambition was the subplot to his burning desire to end Usyk’s unbeaten reign. But there would be no parting of the Red Sea through which Joshua might charge to the immortalit­y which the gods of the ring confer upon the previous few all-time multiple winners of boxing’s holy grail.

No miracle to be conjured from the shifting sands of fortune in this land of mystery, of which this long night will be one of the most unforgetta­ble.

Joshua fought in vain to the end, but victory remained a tantalisin­g mirage in the desert.

yet there was redemption of a spiritual kind. he put in a far, far better fight than he did in the one in which he surrendere­d to Oleksandr The Great 11 soul-searching months ago.

Upon his leave of absence from the front line of war, Usyk found the englishman he had mesmerised into oblivion in the new Tottenham hotspur Stadium was back with a will to fight for his lost crown in this, the most royal and ancient city in Arabia.

The first three rounds were a reversal of September’s fortunes, with Joshua winning them all.

Usyk would admit that he had felt heavy with the burden ‘ of fighting for an imperative victory for my country at this difficult time for Ukraine’.

he shook off the yoke the longer it went, but the crux of this captivatin­g contest came in the ninth and 10th rounds.

Joshua’s new Mexican trainer Robert Garcia had realigned him to direct the fistic direction of traffic towards Usyk’s allegedly fragile torso.

Sometimes those bad intentions strayed below the belt line, incurring warnings from the referee.

But it was Joshua’s trademark right crosses to the head which had the former undisputed cruiserwei­ght champion reeling in the ninth. Usyk confessed: ‘ I was worried in the ninth. he began using his height and strength.

‘But in a fight like this it’s not size that matters. It’s spirit.’

he pumped up that spirit to almost inhumane levels in the 10th, with his astonishin­g response to adversity.

That was where the fight was lost and won. Where Joshua recovered the respect born of his winning UK gold at the London Olympics in 2012 but which had waned partly because of his infrequent activity.

That will not happen again. Not with his new, busier schedule.

Much of the internet trolling has given way to herogrammi­ng. The British like little better than heroic losers.

The man who gave British boxing the kiss of life is back in favour.

One hot albeit foiled night on the dunes and lo and behold, the Joshua legacy is secured.

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 ?? ?? PICTURE: KEVIN QUIGLEY
Bravery: a spirited Joshua is punished by Usyk in Jeddah
PICTURE: KEVIN QUIGLEY Bravery: a spirited Joshua is punished by Usyk in Jeddah
 ?? KEVIN QUIGLEY/AP ?? Roar emotion: Joshua hears the result and throws two belts (right)
KEVIN QUIGLEY/AP Roar emotion: Joshua hears the result and throws two belts (right)
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