Some 16 years ago, John Ryder made a promise to his partner, Nancy, one he vows to finally honour on Saturday night
in Guadalajara, Mexico. That promise? To become a world champion boxer.
'I told her I was going to be world champion,' he told Mail Sport. 'Two kids later – we’re not married yet, that
will come – I still need to achieve that dream... She’s stuck with me so far, so she needs to see I wasn’t full of
s**t!'
On Saturday - or the early hours of Sunday morning, depending on where you're watching from - we'll find out exactly
what Ryder is made of, in what representes one of the toughest challenges in boxing: fighting Canelo Alvarez in Mexico on Cinco de Mayo weekend.
Indeed, the Echo Arena in Liverpool
can be an unforgiving battlefield, as Ryder found out when he was controversially beaten by Callum Smith in his sole world title bid to
date. But the circa 50,000 fans set to cram inside the Estadio Akron as Canelo entertains a Mexican crowd for
the first time in almost 12 years will create an entirely different atmosphere.
Likewise, the prize on offer is worlds apart. Not a world title, but four. And not a win over a domestic
rival, but a genuinely legacy-defining, all-time great British win on away soil. Pressure... or so you'd think.
'All the pressure is on Canelo,' Ryder, who has a record of 32 wins and five defeats, continued. 'There’s no
pressure on me. It’s his first time back home in 12 years. I feel like I’m coming off a career-best year, while
he’s potentially coming off a career-worst.
'I know it’s against a different level of opposition, but he lost to Dmitry Bivol and then gave a lacklustre
performance against Gennnady Golovkin. He didn’t look as he should have done.
'A lot of people were expecting him to get Golovkin out of there, but he couldn’t. He’s had surgery on his
wrist after that, so we’ll just have to see what he’s got left.'
It's true: Canelo was undoubtedly the face of boxing in November 2021 when he beat Caleb Plant to become undisputed super-middlweight champion - a title
he still holds.
Having reigned as the unified middleweight champion, and after a brief jump to light-heavyweight where he
dethroned Sergey Kovalev, Canelo embarked on a year-long mission, defeating titleholders Callum Smith, Billy Joe
Saunders and finally Plant to become the first-ever undisputed champion at 168lbs. History.
But less than two years later, his reputation has been hit somewhat. Losing emphatically to Dmitry Bivol back up at light-heavyweight was not
part of the plan. And, in truth, apoints win over a 40-year-old Gennady Golovkin wasn't quite the statement
he wanted to make. Oleksandr Usyk, Noaya Inoue and Terence Crawford now arguably sit higher in the
pound-for-pound standings.
At the same time, Ryder has continued to put together a stunning run of wins, claiming victories over Daniel Jacobs and Zach Parker and making plenty of noise while doing
so. As mandatory challenger Ryder says: 'I deserve to be in this position and I’ve earned my shot over and over
and over. I’m going to take what’s rightfully mine.'
But this isn't Ryder looking to strike while the iron's hot. The 34-year-old has wanted a fight with Canelo
for years - and he still wants to face the best version of Canelo. 'If Canelo knocked out Bivol and then
Golovkin, I’d still want this fight,' he said.
'Whether people are thinking he’s on the decline or not, I want the biggest and best fights. I think we all
expected Canelo to go in there and blast Golovkin out.
'We know Golovkin's getting on a bit now. He’s been a formidable force for years, and he’s still got that
concussive punch power, but I think we all expected Canelo to put on a real show and put that one to bed. We
didn’t get that, and then obviously it came out about the surgery on his wrist.
'I’m hoping that he’s had the surgery and he’s back to his best, because I want to fight the best version of
Canelo. I’m going to be the best version of myself on May 6, so I hope he is. I want to beat Canelo at his
best.'
As the fight's strapline 'the King is coming home' alludes to, Canelo's return to Mexico is a big deal for
his country. Their press conference on Wednesday was as much a celebration of the Mexican as an opportunity for
the two fighters to come face-to-face.
Ryder was met with polite applause, Canelo a hero's welcome. The crowd won't be so friendly towards the
challenger on Saturday night, though, but the Brit assures they won't be able to help Canelo in the ring.
'It’s going to be huge,' Ryder explained. 'It will be intimidating at times, but I’ve just got to block that
out, channel my energy into that ring. It’s just me and him in there.
'They can be as loud as they want out in the stands, but ultimately it’s me and him hitting each other. They
can’t help him that much.'
If Ryder is to be successful, the immediate question is: what's next? The 34-year-old insists fame and
fortune has not crossed his mind - but, as an Arsenal fan, he already knows where he wants the rematch.
'For me now, it’s fight by fight,' Ryder said. 'Beat Canelo, I’m sure we’ll get the rematch at the Emirates
or Las Vegas and we’ll go from there.
'I want to hold on to these titles for a while, and that starts on May 6.
'Obviously Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) fought Henry Cooper at the old Arsenal stadium, so for me to be the
first headline event at the new stadium would be a dream come true for sure.'
Original Article:
FightersTalkTV.com – Anthony Joshua has been tipped to go head-to-head with Tyson Fury later this year in a hotly-anticipated showdown. And the fate of the contest could be decided today as the duo’s teams are set for a make-or-break meeting to thrash out the final details.
Fury, 34, announced his retirement from boxing following his victory over Dillian Whyte at Wembley in April. But he has since put an offer on the table to get in the ring with Joshua. Joshua, 32, has suffered disappointment over the last 12 months after being defeated by Oleksandr Usyk at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last September, before losing the rematch in Saudi Arabia last month.
But a fight between Joshua and Fury, which could take place in Cardiff on December 3, looks to be on the cards. And the Gypsy King’s promoter Frank Warren says today is a key day. “I don’t want to get into all this publicly but there is a meeting on Monday that I think could be the final piece of the jigsaw to get it over the line,” he said.
“And that is what we have to do. They have had the contract since last Friday and it’s not the Yellow Pages. It’s a straight-forward contract and AJ is getting everything he wants in it.”
Anthony Joshua (left) and Tyson Fury
Anthony Joshua (left) could be set to go head-to-head with Tyson Fury later this year.
BT Sport and DAZN are set to attend the meeting to decide how the bout would be broadcast and how the revenues would be split. Fury is contracted to the former, with Joshua recently signing a deal with the latter.
A fight between the two has been talked about for years. And Warren thinks Joshua would be making a mistake if he were to now turn the opportunity down. “If he doesn’t take this fight, then what’s he going to do, have a couple of fights to get back in a mandatory position where he will get 20 per cent to fight one of our guys,” added the 70-year-old. “He’s getting 40 per cent off Tyson for this fight – it’s a no-brainer.”
As reported, Warren is optimistic that both sides can come to an agreement as the contract is signed.
“And then we’ve got the broadcasters. The broadcasters haven’t got together yet because we haven’t signed our contract yet, but I don’t see that being a problem.
“How can any broadcasters stop this fight from happening?
“I mean if they did that, they could not have the best interests of British boxing.
“I think our side [BT Sport], all they wanna do is make this fight happen and that’s where we’re at.
“And I’m sure the DAZN people will be the same. Why wouldn’t they want this fight to happen?”
Frank Warren is optimistic the fight between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua will happen in this year.
Warren concluded on the matter: “We’ve made this a deal you can’t refuse. And there is no reason it should be refused because AJ came out and said he wanted it.
“So if he wants it, he’s got to instruct his team to make it happen.”
He also emphasized that Fury has been more than generous with his demands in trying to get a fight with Joshua. If for whatever reason, a deal is unable to make, the fault will not lie with Fury and the team.
“Tyson is the number one heavyweight in the world. It’s his title on the line. AJ’s ranked about number six at the moment … and that’s what it is. But we’re bending over backwards – I’m sorry, Tyson’s bending over backwards to make it happen. Let’s make it happen. There’s no reason why this fight shouldn’t go on.
“If it doesn’t go on, for any reason, it won’t be from our side. If it doesn’t go on I can’t believe that AJ – after what he’s come out and said that he wants to fight – that it can be down to him (Fury). So make it happen. We only have a short window to do this. By the end of this week we need this – it’s either on or it’s not. And if it’s not we’ll move on. And they’ll do what they got to do.”
“If it doesn’t happen, do not be looking at us,” Warren warned. “Do not be blaming us.”
FightersTalkTV.com – Britain’s Joe Joyce walked through everything New Zealander Joseph Parker had to offer to knock him out in the 11th round of a heavyweight thriller in Manchester. Manchester’s AO Arena witnessed a breakout performance from Joe ‘The Juggernaut’ Joyce as he systematically broke down New Zealand’s former heavyweight world champion Joseph Parker.
In a fight that was dubbed a 50/50 contest heading into Saturday night, Joyce started fast to pepper out a stabbing jab and assert his authority on the smaller man Parker early on. The New Zealander certainly had a success of his own and landed a huge right-hand to the forehead of Joyce in the fourth.
Remarkably however the thirty-seven-year-old remained undeterred and continued to throw bundles of hooks of his own, a response which must have been demoralising for Parker who just seconds earlier landed the shot of the contest so far only for it to have little to no impact. As the fight reached the midway point, Parker looked to be slowing down, tiring under the relentless pressure of the man before him, his legs looking sluggish as he continued to try and evade the hounding work of the Juggernaut.
Joe Joyce needs eleven rounds for stop Joseph Parker.
Joyce took the large majority of the middle rounds as he continued to grow more and more dominant on the night, and opened a cut on the left eye of Parker in the seventh after a clean right-hand. Parker appeared to be hurt in the eighth by another punishing right, showing incredible heart and grit to stick it out as he continued to try and push Joyce back.
Parker, despite shipping a wealth of punishment already on the night, incredibly fought on and looked to regain a second wind in the tenth as Joyce finally showed a human side and looked to take a breather. The New Zealander took the round but Joyce continued to remind his opponent of his greater physicality, making Parker work every second of the round.
The eleventh, a round that seemed out of reach for Parker given the state he looked to be in halfway through the bout, finally saw the end of the contest. Perhaps an accumulation of the punishment he had shipped in the previous ten rounds as well as the sheer exhaustion of everything he had put into the contest, Parker found himself on his back in the home corner following a near perfect left-hook thrown by the Juggernaut which caught the New Zealand man flush with a minute of the round remaining.
Referee Steve Gray began to administer a count, with Parker remarkably summoning the will to regain his footing by the time the count reached eight but it was clear that there was little need for the contest to continue with the writing seemingly on the wall for the thirty-year-old. Gray eventually waved the contest off, a merciful decision after a brave showing from Parker, while Joyce gets his breakout moment to announce himself as one of the standout fighters in the division.
A crashing left-hook finally put a dent in Parker who had shown incredible heart throughout the contest.
Despite defeats to Anthony Joshua and Dillian Whyte, Joseph Parker told ID Boxing in the post-fight press conference that Joyce was his toughest challenge yet.
“At this stage of my career, Joe was the toughest challenge. As you guys saw tonight, the pressure that he put on, and every time I hit him he kept coming back, and we knew exactly what he was going to do, but, you know, I just… everything didn’t work as I thought it would, but hey, it’s boxing.”
When asked to compare Joyce to his previous opponents, Parker shared his honest opinions, “He’s very tough. Compared to other fighters, listen, you guys saw tonight, he put on a lot of pressure. So congratulations to him and he’s one hell of a fighter.”
The heavyweights went toe-to-toe in a back and forth contest before a stunning left hook landed flush on the chin of Parker.
Joyce claimed the WBO interim heavyweight title with the biggest win of his career and now has his eyes set on challenging heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk in 2023.
Joyce is now mandatory challenger for Oleksandr Usyk’s WBO title.
The Briton’s step up in class had been debated after 14 professional fights against lower-level opponents. He turned 37 this week having only turned pro when he was 31 after a late start to his amateur career.
But Joyce showed a granite chin to become the first man to stop Parker, a former world champion.
The thirty-seven-year-old Joyce then called out unified champion Oleksandr Usyk in his post-fight interview after confirming himself as the WBO mandatory for the Ukrainian in what would be a mouth-watering affair between two men who already have history after fighting in the amateur code years ago.
“Joseph Parker… what a fighter and what a fight,” Joyce said.
“It was a tough fight and praise to Parker. I really enjoyed it and I had to dig deep to get through the rounds. I hit him with everything I’ve got, I tried it all and he was still coming forward.
“I managed to drop him at the end but it was hard work. Usyk let’s get it on.”