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Anthony Joshua is plotting his next move after undergoing successful elbow surgery.

The Watford powerhouse was knocked out by Daniel Dubois last September at Wembley Stadium and has been sidelined ever since.

The plan was for AJ to box again this summer, however, an injury to his elbow left him unable to resume full training.

Luckily, that issue has since been resolved under the knife, and Joshua is now on track to return to the ring at the back end of 2025.

“He’s had the operation, which went very well, and now he’s just sort of rehabbing it,” Joshua’s promoter Eddie Hearn told BoxingScene.

“I believe about six weeks till he can punch again properly, and that kind of lends itself to a September, October, November fight.

“That gives us a chance to see what happens with Dubois against Usyk.

“That gives us a chance to see if Mr. Fury will ever return, and maybe something else.

“But he’s definitely fighting this year and looking forward to it.”

It seems unlikely Joshua will face the winner of Oleksandr Usyk vs Dubois, with WBO interim title holder Joseph Parker lying in wait.

Meanwhile, it remains to be seen whether Tyson Fury will ever fight again.

‘The Gypsy King’ hung up his gloves in January after suffering a second consecutive defeat to Usyk.

In recent weeks, he had teased the idea of reversing his retirement.

However, he put an end to the speculation over the weekend by insisting he will ‘stay retired’.

“I hear a lot of talk about ‘The Gypsy King’ returning to boxing and I ask this question first of all: for what?” he said from a beautiful view of Lake Como in Italy.

 Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua

 

“What would I return for? More belts? I’ve won 22 of them. I’ve been rumped, that’s it, fair play to them, they got their use out of me.

“But I’m happy, I am happy, content with what I’ve done, what I have achieved and what I have accomplished.

“I’ve been around the world and back again, and here we are, this is what retirement looks like for the Gypsy King, not too shabby.

“I’m in no rush at all to come back to boxing and get my face punched in.

“For what? What would I return for? I ask that question. So here we are, I am retired and I am staying retired.

“I have nothing to prove to anybody and nothing to return for. God bless you all, and see you on the other side.”

Boxing fans have been clamouring to see the Brits lock horns for the best part of a decade.

Even if the bout is five years past its sell-by date, it remains the biggest fight in British boxing.

And regardless of where Fury’s head is at, Joshua is still holding out hope that the blockbuster showdown will happen in the not-so-distant future.

Taking to Snapchat on Saturday, he wrote: “One of these days, it will be me standing in the opposite corner, ready and fully charged spiritually.”

Former two-time world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua is not giving up on the long-anticipated all-British battle with Tyson Fury, despite Fury’s retirement from boxing.

Fury, 36, announced he was hanging up his gloves for the fifth time in January, just weeks after suffering his second consecutive defeat to Oleksandr Usyk. However, Joshua isn’t convinced that “The Gypsy King” is finished with the sport for good, and he remains hopeful their long-delayed clash will finally happen.

Posting a photo of himself watching a Fury bout on his private Snapchat, Joshua wrote:
“One of these days, I’ll be standing in the opposite corner. Ready and fully charged spiritually.”

The two heavyweight titans have been on a collision course for over a decade, but have never met in the ring. A blockbuster two-fight deal was agreed in 2020, with bouts planned for 2021.

However, those plans were derailed after former WBC champion Deontay Wilder won an arbitration case that forced Fury into a trilogy bout with him instead.

If Joshua and Fury ever step into the ring, it would finally resolve the long-standing debate over who is the better British heavyweight of this era.

Fury, though, has appeared to close the chapter on his career, expressing little motivation to return.
“I hear a lot of talk about the Gypsy King returning to boxing, and I ask this question: for what?” Fury said.

“More belts? I’ve won 22 of them. I’ve been rumped, that’s it. Fair play to them; they got their use out of me. But I’m happy; I am content with what I have achieved and accomplished. I’ve been around the world and back again.”

Former Champion Zab Judah Has No Doubt Who Wins Manny Pacquiao vs Mario Barrios Title Fight

Manny Pacquiao is two months away from making a shock return to the ring.

The 46-year-old from the Philippines will face reigning WBC welterweight champion Mario Barrios on Saturday July 19 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

‘Pac-Man’ has not fought as a professional since he suffered the eighth defeat of his career at the hands of former WBA welterweight champion Yordenis Ugas back in June 2021, although he has had two exhibition contests against Rukiya Anpo and DK Yoo respectively.

The Filipino great has received mixed reactions from members of the boxing community after announcing his comeback, with many left wondering whether the 46-year-old made the decision purely for financial gain, or whether he is looking to further cement his outstanding legacy.

Speaking to ESNEWS, retired two-division world champion Zab Judah was asked to predict who he believes will prevail when Pacquiao locks horns with Barrios in just two months time.

“[Manny] Pacquiao.”

Pacquiao has linked back up with coach Freddie Roach ahead of his return, reigniting that famous partnership which originally lasted for 16 years and just over 30 fights.

The 46-year-old could break his own record of being the oldest world welterweight champion, having already achieved this feat back in 2019 when he defeated Keith ‘One Time’ Thurman to become the WBA welterweight champion at 40-years-old.

Many celebrities’ baby news has captivated audiences with their heartwarming announcements about growing families. From Teddy Swims‘s partner, Raiche Wright, showcasing her pregnancy on the red carpet to Lily Collins and husband Charlie McDowell welcoming their first child via surrogate, these milestones reflect each couple’s personal journey to parenthood. Ronda Rousey embraced motherhood again, celebrating her second daughter’s unique arrival during a windstorm, while Ryan Edwards and fiancée Amanda Conner introduced their newborn amidst promises of growth and change.

These stories not only highlight the joys of parenthood but also underscore the diverse paths celebrities take toward building their families, which all add meaningful layers to their lives.

Carl Froch and Anthony Joshua have had a rocky relationship over the years.

The two British boxing stars first started to clash when Joshua parted ways with former Froch coach Rob McCracken after he lost on points to Usyk in 2021.

Joshua would go on to lose again to the Ukrainian the following year, and after some rebuild fights, suffered his fourth career defeat last time out at the hands Daniel Dubois, where he was brutally knocked out in the fifth round.

However, Froch believes it was ‘AJ’s first ever loss that has caused fragility in the former heavyweight champion. That came against Andy Ruiz Jr back in 2019, where the Mexican-American caused one of the biggest upsets in heavyweight boxing, putting the unified champion down several times before stopping him in the seventh round.

Speaking to BestOnlinePokerSites, ‘The Cobra’ believes ‘AJ’ quit that night and has never fully recovered.

“I’ve always said he’s a bit mentally fragile since losing to Ruiz when he got his soul took away from him that night let’s be honest.

“He quit. It goes down as a technical knockout, that’s never happened to ‘The Cobra’ by the way, which I did tell him, ‘The Cobra’ don’t get knocked out. But he quit on his feet, whichever way you want to look at it he quit on his feet. I’m not going to hold it against him because he stayed with it and he came back.

“He’s tried to be great again but he’s realised he’s not at the level, because every time he steps up to the level he gets asked a question and he gets beat.”

Joshua hasn’t fought since the Dubois fight last year due to injury and is targeting a return to the ring later this year following minor surgery. Fans hope that will come against Tyson Fury, though ‘The Gypsy King’ is adamant that he is retired.

JAKARTA Tyson Fury has confirmed that he will not make a comeback into the ring amid various speculations that continue about his possible fight with Anthony Joshua (AJ).

The fighter nicknamed Kingmen decided to retire in January after he suffered defeat against Oleksandr Usyk in a heavyweight rematch in Saudi Arabia.

However, many hope he will return to the top ring for the match against AJ. That possibility exists because this isn’t the first time Fury has announced his retirement from the boxing world.

Fury has announced retirement several times and then comeback. However, in a recent post on Instagram he made sure he would still retire.

“Why am I back? I am retired and will still retire. I don’t need to prove anything to anyone and there’s nothing I need to get,” he said, quoted by Sky Sport.

Fury and Joshua have repeatedly been linked to one of the biggest fights in British boxing history. However, negotiations to make their fight always end up failing.

Suffering from successive defeats against Usyk then made Fury decide to end his boxing career. The two defeats made him miss the opportunity to become a heavyweight champion indisputable.

“I’m happy, satisfied with what I’ve accomplished and got. I’ve been around the world and come back again and there’s a retirement period for my King,” Fury said.

Fury recently hinted that he would return to boxing when he uploaded a video of himself on the gym with coach SugarHill Steward.

If this happens, Fury and Joshua’s duel will capture who the best heavyweight fighters in England are. The clash is one that many fans have always been waiting for.

RISING heavyweight star Moses Itauma could face Otto Wallin or Jermaine Franklin – two former Anthony Joshua opponents – in his next outing, says manager Francis Warren.

The ferocious wrecking machine returned to action on Saturday, twice dropping former American footballer Mike Balogun before halting proceedings with a stunning second-round finish.

In doing so, Itauma, 12-0 (10 KOs), has now earned himself a number-one ranking with the WBO, putting a potential world title shot well within reach.

But before that, the 20-year-old must first prove himself against a mid-tier heavyweight, with both Wallin and Franklin representing sterner assignments than Balogun.

Of the two, Wallin is perhaps best known to British fight fans, as his outing with Tyson Fury, in particular, catapulted him into the spotlight back in 2019.

And to his credit, the Swedish southpaw gave a strong account of himself in their 12-round encounter after opening a horrendous cut above his opponent’s right eye.

Against Joshua, 28-4 (25 KOs), though, Wallin found himself getting cleaned out inside five rounds, before producing a far more negative display against Derek Chisora last February.

Franklin, meanwhile, took ‘AJ’ the distance – while also losing a unanimous decision – in 2023, just a few months after suffering a highly contentious points defeat to Dillian Whyte.

But still, both he and Wallin have proven themselves to be a tricky night’s work in previous performances, often displaying a level of ambition while occupying the away corner.

Either fighter could therefore step up to face dynamic puncher Itauma who, according to Warren, is set for an Oleksandr Usyk vs Daniel Dubois 2 undercard clash on July 19.

“I think Otto Wallin would be a great fight for him next,” Warren told BoxNation.

“Otto’s proven himself to be a very durable, tough opponent, who garners respect from the boxing community because of the work he’s done against Tyson [Fury] and Anthony [Joshua].

“For Moses – who wants to get rounds in – that’s probably a great shout. Jermaine Franklin’s another one that I particularly like the look of.”

American superstar Terence Crawford has offered a simple prediction for how any world title blockbuster between himself and Tim Tszyu would’ve gone, while also explaining that he never knew Australia’s pay-per-view star had Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu as his father.

The revelation comes as arguably the greatest fighter anywhere on the planet also predicted his $200 million Canelo Alvarez showdown this September can become the most watched pay-per-view in boxing history.

Speaking with Fox Sports Australia within hours of touching down in Australia on Monday, Crawford spoke about his bold quest for greatness, comparisons to Muhammad Ali, even his memories of Kostya Tszyu – a man with whom he shares a chunk of the boxing record books.

His arrival also comes at a huge time for Australian boxing, with stars like Tim Tszyu, Jai Opetaia, Liam Paro, George Kambosos and Liam Wilson all readying for big fights between now and July.

Back in 2017, Crawford created history — and not for the first time — by becoming the super lightweight division’s first undisputed king of the four-belt era.

He was the first to achieve the feat since Kostya Tszyu, who had earned the same crown back when three belts were up for grabs.

It was in 2003 where ‘The Thunder From Down Under’ etched his own name forever into the boxing record books, and Australian sporting greatness, thanks to that brutal finish of American Zab Judah.

Now more than 20 years on, Crawford says he remembers watching the Tszyu triumph as a teenager, plus several before that on an incredible run which included the likes of Sharmba Mitchell, Julio Cesar Chavez and Miguel Angel Gonzalez.

“And Kostya and I, we met up at a boxing event recently,” Crawford said on Monday, shortly after arriving for a whirlwind promotional tour. “It was in Dubai I think, and we got a photograph together.

“Kostya Tszyu, he was a great fighter.

“Great puncher.

“I remember watching his fight against Zab Judah.

“And fights on his way up to that one … he’s someone who has always been really well respected in the sport of boxing.”

Speaking with Fox Sports Australia last month, Crawford also revealed just how close he came to fighting Tim Tszyu shortly before Christmas 2023, when ‘The Soul Taker’ was still the WBO super welterweight king.

Certainly much has changed since for both men, with 30-year-old Tszyu now readying for his own return to the top of world boxing when he challenges WBO champ Sebastian Fundora in Las Vegas this July.

Terence Crawford

While Crawford has no idea what will happen with his own career after the Alvarez blockbuster – which despite much conjecture, he says will take place in Las Vegas – but confirmed the younger Tszyu had “definitely been on my radar”.

So as for how it would have felt, fighting Kostya’s son?

“I actually didn’t know Tim was his son at first,” Crawford conceded with a laugh.

“It all went over my head.

“I guess, because you never see Kostya in the corner or anything like that.

“But then when Tim started fighting in the United States, that’s when people started talking about that being his father …”

And as for how a fight between you would have gone?

“I feel I would’ve beat him,” Crawford added simply.

But as for a prediction?

“It’s boxing so you never know,” he shrugged. “But of course, I’m going to have confidence in my ability.”

Undeniably, Crawford arrives Down Under with a host of big fights coming for Australian stars.

First up, Opetaia defends his IBF cruiserweight title against undefeated Italian Claudio Squeo on the Gold Coast Sunday week, while Paro and Wilson are also set to fight on what could effectively be world title eliminators atop No Limit’s historic Cairns card on June 25.

Tszyu will also look to become a two-time world champion in Las Vegas this July, with a hyped rematch of his bloodbath against towering American champ Sebastian Fundora, while Kambosos has his own title bout against IBF super lightweight champ Richard Hitchins in New York next month.

Crawford too will also head home from his Australian tour and straight into camp for a showdown with Mexican megastar Alvarez that has been compared to no less than the Fight of the Century.

Only recently, Canelo’s business manager Richard Schaefer made headlines by suggesting the pair’s upcoming $200M blockbuster could be bigger than even when Floyd Mayweather beat Manny Pacquiao in 2015.

While the MayPac showdown amassed a staggering 4.6 million pay-per-view buys, Schaefer told The Ring this week: “I’ve been involved (in boxing) 25 years and I don’t remember any fight bigger than Canelo-Crawford.

“It’s going to be the biggest fight in the sport for as long as I can remember.”

Crawford agreed, adding: “I feel if it catches fire, gets the support of the fans it could definitely do the big numbers required to surpass the great Mayweather-Pacquiao fight.”

Then with a laugh, he added: “It just depends on how many people want to steal it with piracy.”

Elsewhere this week, boxing legend Oscar De La Hoya has also suggested Crawford can become the greatest fighter ever if he beats Alvarez.

With a win, Bud will become the first man of the four-belt era to become undisputed in three separate weight classes.

While De La Hoya is backing Alvarez to win, thanks to his obvious size advantage, he suggested Crawford would usurp the greatest ever with an upset – eclipsing even names like Sugar Ray Robinson, Muhammad Ali and Joe Louis.

“If Crawford can do it,” the Hall of Famer started, “I mean, give this man the title of being the greatest ever … if he pulls it off he will be the messiah of fighters”.

Asked about suggestions a win over Alvarez will see him crowned the greatest ever, Crawford says: “It makes me feel good because I’ve been working hard in this sport for a long time.

“So to get my dues would be a beautiful thing.”

And as for his own pick for greatest ever?

“Muhammad Ali,” he says.

“I know a lot of people have got Sugar Ray Robinson but obviously I haven’t seen much of him, just because of how far back it was that he fought.

“I do know however that those who did see him fight say he’s the greatest of all time.

“But for me, it’s Muhammad Ali.

“Not only his successes in the ring but what he stood for.

“Just his stance on human rights, standing up for his people … there aren’t many people who do that.

“Him doing all those things that he did, going to jail because he didn’t want to fight people who weren’t doing any harm to him … Muhammad Ali was a stand up guy.”

Having jetted into the Gold Coast on Monday morning, Crawford will now spend the opening days of his Down Under tour in Queensland before then heading to Melbourne, and finally a stopover in Sydney.

Better, the champ said he wasn’t troubled by any jeg leg at all, grinning “I’m good … ready for whatever people throw in front of me”.

Tyson Fury has been living a life of luxury in retirement and attended the Monaco Grand Prix but managed to rub shoulders with 50 Cent before the race got underway on Sunday

Tyson Fury is living life with the stars as a jaunt to Monaco saw him partying alongside 50 Cent. The Gypsy King, alongside his wife Paris, rubbed shoulders with the hip hop star ahead of watching the Monaco Grand Prix on Sunday.

Fury linked up with former rival Dereck Chisora to see superstar 50 performing in the principality to continue a luxurious week. The ex-boxer had been taking in the sights of Como and was a guest of the football club as they faced Inter Milan on Friday evening.

And Fury went from one hotspot for the rich and famous to another as he next took in Monaco and partied into the night before Lando Norris’ Grand Prix win. The 36-year-old danced away to 50 Cent’s tunes and ensured he got a photograph with the performer before the night was done

Taking to Instagram, Fury showed off his night before posing for a picture with 50, Paris and fellow heavyweight Chisora in tow. He captioned the photograph: “Tyson Fury x 50 Cent. Only in Monaco.”

Fury hung up his gloves for the fifth time at the start of the year after suffering his second straight defeat to Oleksandr Usyk. Though, British rival Anthony Joshua has not given up hope of finally realising a bout with the former champion.

Joshua is not convinced that Fury’s retirement is final and appears confident that a fight could still materialise. The British pair agreed a two-bout deal in 2020 but saw plans scuppered when it was ruled Fury had to permit Deontay Wilder a trilogy fight.

Sharing an image of himself watching Fury fight on his private Snapchat account, Joshua said: “One of these days I’ll be standing in the opposite corner. Ready and fully charged spiritually.”

But Fury’s words paint another picture. Declaring he had nothing left to prove in a video filmed at Lake Como, Fury said: “I hear a lot of talk about the Gypsy King returning to boxing and I ask this question: for what? What would I return for? More belts? I’ve won 22 of them.

“I’ve been rumped, that’s it, fair play to them, they got their use out of me. But I’m happy, I am happy, content with what I have achieved and accomplished.

“I’ve been around the world and back again. And this is what retirement looks like for the Gypsy King, not too shabby.”

 Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua

Fury added: ‘I’m in no rush at all, to come back to boxing and get my face punched in. For what? What would I return for? I ask that question. I am retired and I am staying retired. I have nothing to prove to anybody and nothing to return for.”

But earlier the two-time world champion teased an imminent announcement after hinting at a potential return to the ring. In an Instagram video with his father John Fury, the Gypsy King said: “Business meeting today, dad. En-route. Incoming, incoming.”

And that video came just a few days after he shared footage from the gym with coach SugarHill Steward. “Just in the gym, happened to bump into somebody you might know,” he said on that occasion.

He then panned over to a smiling SugarHill who chimed in with: “You know what time it is!” Wrapping up the story, Fury dropped a cryptic message: “You know what’s coming.”

Mike Tyson has shared the ring with some of the best heavyweights of his generation.

However, none of them caused him as many problems as Evander Holyfield.

Tyson and Holyfield met for the first time in November 1996, just one year after ‘Iron Mike’s’ release from prison.

Just like his freshman year in boxing, Tyson enjoyed an active 16 months upon his return to action.

‘Iron Mike’ made quick work of Peter McNeeley and Buster Mathis Jr. in his first two outings before flattening Frank Bruno for the WBC belt in March 1996.

Six months later, he was forced to relinquish the green and gold strap when he chose to face WBA title holder Bruce Seldon, whom he subsequently blew away in the opening stanza.

His first defence of boxing’s oldest world title came against Holyfield at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand Arena, and it proved to be a much tougher test than his previous bouts.

Holyfield, who by this point had already enjoyed two separate reigns as heavyweight world champion, picked an aggressive Tyson off from range with sharp counter punches.

In the sixth round, he dropped Tyson courtesy of a booming left uppercut, and in the eleventh, he stopped the youngest heavyweight world champion of all time against the ropes with a blistering combination.

It marked Tyson’s second defeat of his illustrious career, and it was one he was keen to get back, so a rematch was made for June 1997.

Once again, Holyfield got the better of the action, but this time, rather than go out on his shield, Tyson opted to bite a chunk out of his adversary’s ear, resulting in a disqualification in the third round.

Tyson and Holyfield didn’t see eye to eye for a long stretch after their heated grudge matches, but in the years that followed, ‘Iron Mike’ gave considerable props to his rival.

When asked who the best opponent he faced was, Tyson told Ring Magazine: “Holyfield. Great champion: chin, heart, determination, work ethic, demeanour.

“He threw terrific shots with both hands and with bad intentions.”

Recalling their famous duels years later, he added: “He’s a good guy, I always knew he was a good guy.

“I want people to react and get in their heads, but he never reacted.

“He was an awesome counter-puncher. I’d say the best ever.

“I always wondered how he could be so good and so humble.”