YouTuber-turned-prizefighter Jake Paul tomorrow faces former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua in a money-spinning made-for-streaming bout that has triggered alarm across the boxing world.
Just over a year after his much-derided victory over a 58-year-old Mike Tyson, the 28-year-old American Paul is to climb into the ring at Miami’s Kaseya Center to confront a far younger — and vastly more dangerous — opponent in the 36-year-old Joshua.
The Netflix-backed spectacle, which reportedly would see the fighters split a staggering US$184 million purse, has drawn fierce criticism, with many questioning why it was allowed.
Photo: Reuters
The British Board of Control has said it would not have approved the fight on safety grounds. Other fighters have warned that given the gulf in class, physical size and talent, Paul risks serious injury.
For his most recent fight in June, the 1.85m Paul tipped the scales at 90.4kg. Britain’s Joshua, who at 1.92m towers above Paul, weighed in at 115kg for his last outing last year.
Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s long-time promoter, described tomorrow’s fight as a “catastrophic mismatch” before the contracts had even been signed.
Other voices in the boxing world though have painted a darker picture, with former world heavyweight champion David Haye warning that the fight could be Paul’s “last day on Earth.”
Amir Khan, Britain’s former light-welterweight champion, said a crushing victory for Joshua might even have lasting implications for boxing, turning viewers off the recent trend of crossover fights involving Internet celebrities such as Paul.
“I think this could be the end of YouTubers jumping in with real active fighters,” Khan told the Daily Mail. “Because it only takes one shot. One bad night, one clean shot, and someone can get seriously hurt.”
“We’ve seen the way someone’s whole life can be altered,” he added.
Khan believes Paul would have no chance if Joshua makes full use of his physical advantages and superior ringcraft, as he did when inflicting a devastating second-round knockout of novice boxer Francis Ngannou last year.
“A.J. can bang,” Khan said. “He’s a former world champion. He’s got power, size, everything.”
“If he lands clean, the damage he can do is scary. Especially when he is landing it on someone like Jake Paul. He’s not capable of taking that sort of power,” Khan said.
Paul, whose limited ring record includes 12 wins and one defeat with seven knockouts, insists he is ready to shock the world while acknowledging his ambitions are “delusional.”
“I like to challenge myself against the best. We’re going to go to war, and the best man will win,” Paul said last month.
“I have gotten to where I am today because of delusional optimism. It’s delusion until it’s not. It’s got me to where I am today,” he added.
Joshua insists he is tackling the fight as seriously as any other.
“If I’m gonna be honest, I’m gonna break his face, I’m gonna break his body up, I’m gonna stomp all over him,” Joshua said.
That gruesome scenario is precisely what some analysts fear.
Michael Bisping, the Ultimate Fighting Championship hall-of-famer and combat sports commentator, has dismissed any chance of Paul springing a David versus Goliath type upset.
“There’s no way on this Earth that this fight ends with Jake Paul knocking out Anthony Joshua,” Bisping said on his YouTube channel. “[Joshua’s] got way more experience. He hits harder. He’s the bigger man. He’s got the longer reach. He’s an Olympic champion. Jake Paul is not going to go out there and turn this into a real-life David and Goliath. That ain’t going to happen, and everybody knows that.”
Bisping said that if Joshua’s pledge to approach the fight seriously carries weight, Paul could be in peril.
“If this is a real fight — and apparently it is, so we’ll go with that — there’s a very good chance that somebody gets hurt, and I’m sorry to say it ain’t going to be Anthony Joshua,” Bisping said. “Joshua has been in there with the best of the best. [In] boxing, people die. This is not a game. You don’t play at boxing.”
The pressure was already on Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso before their 2-1 defeat to Manchester City on Wednesday in the UEFA Champions League raised further questions about his future. Arsenal remain perfect in this season’s competition and three points clear at the top of the standings after a 3-0 win against Club Brugge, while defending champions Paris Saint-Germain were held 0-0 at Athletic Bilbao. The clash between Madrid and City was the standout game of the round amid reports this week that Alonso had lost control of the locker room. Speculation over his position is likely to intensify after the latest
‘HIGH STANDARD’: The Thunder are on track for a Finals-Cup double after they scored 22 three-pointers in equaling the best 25-game start to a season in NBA history The Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday bagged a 16th straight victory, thrashing the Phoenix Suns 138-89 to romp into an NBA Cup semi-final clash with the San Antonio Spurs, who stunned the Los Angeles Lakers 132-119. NBA Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 28 points to lead the reigning NBA champions Thunder, who improved to 24-1 to equal the best 25-game start to a season in league history. They dominated from start to finish to book their place in the final four of the in-season tournament in Las Vegas, where they are tomorrow to take on the Spurs. The New York Knicks and
By the time Cameron Menzies finally left the arena on Monday, the blood gushing from the gash on his right hand had trickled down his wrist, part of his forearm and — somehow — up to his face. Smeared in crimson and regret, and already mouthing sheepish apologies to the crowd, he disappeared down the steps, pursued by a stern-looking Matt Porter, the chief executive of Professional Darts Corp (PDC). The physical scars from Menzies’ encounter with the Alexandra Palace drinks table after his 3-2 defeat against Charlie Manby at the Darts World Championship would be gone within a few weeks.
Italian Luca de Aliprandini described Saturday’s World Cup giant slalom at Val d’Isere as the hardest race of his life, coming two days after his Swiss partner Michelle Gisin suffered a heavy fall in training which required neck surgery. De Aliprandini finished 26th in the men’s event won by Loic Meillard, but the result paled into insignificance with two-time Olympic ski champion Gisin in hospital with injuries to her wrist, knee and cervical spine (neck). “It was Michelle’s wish that I race here. I couldn’t say no to her, but it was the toughest race of my entire life,” an emotional De