Western Daily Press

Joshua overcame flu before title fight

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ANTHONY Joshua had felt like a gust of wind would knock him down ahead of his successful world heavyweigh­t title defence last Saturday, due to a bout of flu.

Joshua could face Deontay Wilder or Dillian Whyte in his next fight - and there is also the prospect of a bout with Tyson Fury - after clinically stopping Alexander Povetkin to retain his IBF, WBA and WBO heavyweigh­t titles.

But a debilitati­ng head cold meant the 28-year-old Watford fighter was worried he would not be in condition to perform at Wembley.

“I’ve been ill this last week,” he said in a number of national newspapers.

“And you know when you start thinking to yourself ‘these signs are bad’, but I pulled through.

“It hit me last week Friday. I had it over the weekend and I thought by Wednesday it would be gone. But I only started feeling better on Friday.

“It was still there in my head, I had a head cold. I felt like a heavy gust of wind could knock me over.

“On my way to the stadium, I was thinking I can have one more sleep.

“But I felt this way in training camp and still sparred 15 good rounds, so I’ve got one geezer in the ring who will fade sooner or later, so let’s just get on with it.”

Joshua is looking for an opponent for his April 13, 2019 date at Wembley - and Barry Hearn has warned Fury’s promoter Frank Warren that a 50-50 purse split is not acceptable.

A prospectiv­e all-British superfight would be an intriguing and tantalisin­g prospect to many, but Hearn, head of Joshua’s promoters Matchroom, responded furiously to an assertion from Warren on BBC 5 Live’s Sportsweek programme that the pair would share the proceeds of the bout.

Fury is set to face WBC champion Wilder in the United States in December and it is widely assumed the winner will then open negotiatio­ns for a contest to unify the belts early next year.

Hearn, who watched Joshua dispatch Povetkin at Wembley on Saturday night, said: “It’s not a 50-50 split against the best heavyweigh­t in the world - you can forget that completely.”

Hearn believes Wilder will beat Fury in December, which would pave the way for what would appear to be a much more straight-forward series of negotiatio­ns with the American’s camp.

Warren insisted if Fury does pull off an upset over Wilder, Joshua will be unable to escape the pressure to square off against his domestic rival.

“I believe Tyson Fury will be the winner of that fight so why on earth would anyone want to stand in its way?” Warren added.

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