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Francis Ngannou has claimed that Anthony Joshua doesn’t ‘have the strength’ to win their upcoming boxing clash.

Ngannou is set to face Joshua in Saudi Arabia on March 8, after the Brit’s bout with Deontay Wilder fell through after the American’s defeat to Joseph Parker at the ‘Day of Reckoning’ card.

Francis Ngannou during his appearance on the High Performance Podcast            The former UFC star previewed his fight with Anthony Joshua

Francis Ngannou issued a chilling warning to Anthony Joshua ahead of their bout in Saudi Arabia, during a recent appearance on the High Performance Podcast

Wilder’s defeat opened the door for former UFC champion Ngannou to take on Joshua, despite having lost the only professional boxing fight of his career.

Ngannou, 37, fell to a split decision defeat against heavyweight champion Tyson Fury in a thrilling 10-round clash back in October, where he also scored an impressive knockdown.

Despite the loss, the Cameroonian is clearly full of confidence heading into the bout with Joshua and issued a chilling warning to the British star on the High Performance Podcast.

The 37-year-old will test his abilities against Anthony Joshua in Saudi Arabia on March 8th
The 37-year-old will test his abilities against Anthony Joshua in Saudi Arabia on March 8th

During his appearance on the show, Ngannou said: ‘Never say never. Nothing is impossible. We don’t know the strength of Anthony Joshua.

‘Even though I don’t believe he has that strength, we’re going to find out. In two months, we’re going to find out. I’m going to be the one taking his soul’.

The former UFC star has been adamant that he’ll be victorious against Joshua and even fired back at the Brit’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, in a recent interview.

Matchroom Boxing promoter Hearn said he expects his fighter, Joshua, to knock Ngannou out during their match.

Anthony Joshua vs Francis Ngannou: When is the fight, how to watch and  undercard line-up

He told MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani: ‘I feel like he’s earned that shot – or certainly to continue at that level. And I fancy the fight.

‘You’ve heard me say before, I really believe AJ knocks him out. But he’s a dangerous fight. I know that this guy’s a big, big lump that can really punch, and I think he has no fear, which makes him dangerous’.

As reported by The Mirror, Ngannou fired back: ‘Eddie is a promoter, that’s like a routine for me. It’s deja vu, he said the same thing all of the time just not about Francis Ngannou but about somebody else. That’s how he talks and what he does’.

Elsewhere, during his appearance on the High Performance Podcast, Ngannou offered inspirational advice and also reflected on his journey from African to Europe.

Francis Ngannou stunned Tyson Fury and knocked him down in the third round of their clash in October
Francis Ngannou stunned Tyson Fury and knocked him down in the third round of their clash in October

He said: ‘The only person that will help you and change your life is you. It’s not somebody who helped me or anybody that help me that make me who I am.

‘Because, if you are a stupid person, they can help you as much as they want. You won’t do anything. Your life depends on you.

‘I made it in Europe inside a zodiac. The small inflatable zodiac. It was nine of us. [I did it for] The dream. I’d rather have a life without dream instead of having a dream without life.

‘You seen all those people that have been rescued or died in the ocean every day. They know all the stories, they know all the worst thing that is happening there, that you have no idea. But they have no choice’.

Anthony Joshua will be in line to challenge for Tyson Fury’s WBC world heavyweight title if he beats Francis Ngannou.

Joshua returns on March 8 in Saudi Arabia against ex-UFC champion Ngannou, in only his second boxing bout.

WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman told Gambling.com: “He has had a sensational career and if he beats Francis Ngannou, then he is number one in the WBC while Francis Ngannou is number 10 so the winner will certainly be positioned for great things in the immediate future.”

Ngannou put his MMA career on hold last year to fight Fury on his boxing debut. And he amazingly scored a knockdown only to be beaten via controversial split-decision.

Meanwhile Joshua, 34, takes on Ngannou, 37, just three weeks later.

Winners of the two super-fights could meet but as it stands, Fury and Usyk are already contracted to a rematch.

But WBC boss Sulaiman would consider altering plans if promoters requested.

He said: “The WBC already sanctioned Fury v Usyk and the rematch.

“We received the request and have already accepted a rematch if the promoters put it together so that’s where the WBC stands.

“If the promoters change their request for the rematch, we will certainly address it.”

Anthony Joshua lauded Francis Ngannou an ‘inspiration’ and won’t ‘underestimate’ him when the two come face-to-face in an eagerly-anticipated bout in Saudi Arabia

Anthony Joshua has been inspired by Francis Ngannou’s journey – even though he plans to end it in March.

Anthony Joshua celebrates victory following the Heavyweight fight between Anthony Joshua and Otto Wallin during the Day of Reckoning: Fight Night at Kingdom Arena
Anthony Joshua has lauded Francis Ngannou an ‘inspiration’

The British heavyweight star takes on the MMA fighter in a 10-round clash in Saudi Arabia. Joshua, 34, is hoping an impressive knockout can fire up interest in a Tyson Fury showdown after the Gypsy King was almost upset by Ngannou last October.

Cameroon-born Ngannou made it to the top of UFC after travelling as a refugee from Africa to Europe which included harrowing journeys by sea and truck. It’s something which has inspired Joshua. “The journey he has taken,” said ‘AJ’. “He’s a go getter. He is someone who sets a goal and goes and gets it.

Francis Ngannou
Francis Ngannou’s journey has been hailed by Anthony Joshua

He continued: “To travel across that desert. He said like people that travel across there, they fall off the car, back of the truck and they’re left to die. Think of how many people that you know that have come before you that have tried that same route and you’re going through it. It takes a lot.

“It takes a lot to travel the Mediterranean, the sea, he crossed, it’s a lot man. He said he couldn’t swim either. It is inspiration. It is someone who searched for a better life and he’s doing it in one of the toughest sports, combat sport. He’s a determined person and I find it inspirational.”

Francis Ngannou - Tyson Fury
Ngannou almost shocked the boxing world against Tyson Fury

Ngannou almost stunned the world when he floored Fury on his boxing debut in October before the Gypsy King recovered to edge out a win on points and save embarrassment. It was clear Fury gave the MMA fighter no respect and expected it to be a walkover.

Joshua added: “Would I have underestimated him? No, the problem with me is I train the same for every fight; obviously we train differently, but I do always work hard, so I wouldn’t have underestimated him.

Anthony Joshua celebrates his victory Otto Wallin in Saudi Arabia
Anthony Joshua celebrates his victory Otto Wallin in Saudi Arabia

“But now I know the guy can fight, I know. There’s no element of surprise, like, ‘He’s gonna be s***, he’s not gonna be able to move, he’s gonna have s*** footwork, his feet are gonna be like he’s stuck in the sand.’ No, he can move, he can come forward, so it’ll be good to see how I deal with that – and how he deals with me as well.”

A new report has revealed just how much AJ made in the last financial year, and his daily earnings are absolutely mental.

Anthony Joshua is clearly not going to be short of a pound or two when he hangs up his boxing gloves for the final time. His Sparta Promotions company, which channels his boxing and sponsorship earnings, posted huge turnover figures for the end of the accounting period of March 2023, with a worth of £129m.

These figures do not take into account the earnings from his last two fights either, against Otto Wallin in October and Robert Helenius last August. And Joshua will only get richer, after he agreed to face Francis Ngannou, the former UFC champion in March, set to take place in Saudi Arabia.

Joshua has previously expressed his desire to be a billionaire, and the way things appear to be going for him financially, he could yet achieve that lofty ambition.

Inside Anthony Joshua’s finances from 2023
He was making £113,000 every day
A glance at the Sparta Promotions group balance sheet shows a total equity of £129.1m for the 2022-23 financial year, broken down as assets of £130m minus £1.63m going to creditors. Sparta returned a smaller profit – of £16.1 million – in the year to March 2022 and generated £20.2 million worth of business.

The new accounts, which Joshua signed himself in December, show that Sparta had a turnover of £41.3 million. That works out at £113,000 per day. It turned a profit of £35.9 million – or £98,356 per day. The firm’s turnover included £28.3 million from boxing bouts, plus £13 million from outside the ring activities.

Joshua’s income is also bolstered by lucrative sponsorship deals with the likes of Hugo Boss, Jaguar, Land Rover, and Under Armour. He also left Sky Sports and signed an exclusive contract with DAZN that will see him take home an estimated £100m in exchange for two fights every 12 months until he retires.

In addition, Joshua also has extended his empire into the world of property. His company, 258 Commercial Investments, holds £26.5 million and 258 Investments is sitting on £12.3 million. However, 258 Commercial Investments did see a reduction in turnover in the tax year 2021-22, a period which saw Joshua lose to Oleksandr Usyk in London. In that period, the company brought in just £5.5m.

Anthony Joshua wants billionaire status one day
In a 2017 interview with GQ, he said: “When I first started, the aim was to become a multi-millionaire. But now there are ordinary people worth millions just because of property prices. So the new school of thought is that I need to be a billionaire. Being a millionaire is good, but you have to set your sights higher.”

While being savvy with his investments, Joshua is also not shy to treat himself or his family should the desire emerge. His garage, or more likely garages, contain the likes of a Rolls-Royce Phantom, Mercedes v8, and Audi A3 S-Line. While it is known that he has also bought his beloved Mum Yeta a north London home and a Rover.

Although it is unknown how many more fights Joshua has left in him, clearly he won’t have any problems lending a fiver to a mate should they ever ask!

Joshua is training for his crossover fight with former UFC champion Ngannou in March and Tom Aspinall would be willing to help the Brit in his preparations

UFC interim heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall has offered Anthony Joshua a helping hand for his Francis Ngannou training camp.

My class permanent, I'll always be among elite heavyweights, says Joshua | The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News — Sport — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

Joshua is currently preparing to fight Ngannou on March 8 in Saudi Arabia and the winner of their fight has been promised an undisputed heavyweight world title shot. Aspinall helped Tyson Fury prepare for his crossover fight against Ngannou last year which he narrowly won in a controversial decision.

“If [Joshua] needs help, give me a call and I’ll be there,” Aspinall told Matchroom Boxing. “Boxers are used to fighting boxers, so they know the patterns of a boxer. The patterns, movement and thought process of a boxer. In MMA we’re doing different stuff than a standard boxer would. We’re throwing different shots from different angles and that’s something an MMA fighter, I’m not saying just me, could definitely help out AJ with.”

Big, Scary Monster' Francis Ngannou Earns UFC Title Shot With KO Of Alistair Overeem At UFC 218

‘If you get standard boxers in that have been boxing since they’re 10 years old, they’re going to move and have the same thought process as every other boxer. As MMA fighters our patterns are different, movements are jerkier and the way we defend is different to a boxer. I’m not going to tell AJ what to do, but it would be definitely recommended to get a decent level MMA fighter in as a sparring partner.”

Ngannou wants another shot at Fury if he beats Joshua and isn’t interested in fighting for a world title after contractual issues with the UFC delayed his exit from the promotion. Aspinall, who currently holds the interim UFC belt, admitted he didn’t give Ngannou a chance against Fury but thinks his fight with Joshua could go either way.

Anthony Joshua wins in five | SuperSport

“I think it’s great what Ngannou has done, I didn’t give him a chance against Fury and I think the fight could have gone either way. I think it’s great he’s got this other massive fight coming up against Anthony Joshua and he’s getting paid loads of money. He’s obviously an absolute specimen and is a much better boxer than everyone thought,” Aspinall told OLBG.

“I think his chances are quite high, beating Joshua. If you have asked me that question one year ago I would have said Joshua would have smoked Ngannou easily – in Joshua’s last fight he looked really really good, he was really letting his hands go which we haven’t seen in a while – but it’s a 50/50 fight who, knows what happens.”

Boxing legend Johnny Nelson has issued a stark warning to Anthony Joshua, urging the former heavyweight champion to bring his absolute best to his upcoming fight against Francis Ngannou. Nelson believes that a loss to the former UFC champion could potentially spell the end of Joshua’s career.

Anthony Joshua

Speaking to Sky Sports, Nelson acknowledged Joshua’s confidence in his ability but cautioned him against underestimating the risk involved. “Anthony Joshua is part of the reason there’s so much bigger money in the heavyweight division right now,” Nelson said. “Like it or not, he’s a household name. But what’s the attraction he had? That crossover appeal. I still believe he’s a big draw, one of the biggest out there.”

Nelson, however, disagrees with Ngannou’s current position as a potential challenger for the undisputed heavyweight title. “There are fighters ahead of him in the top ten rankings who have proven themselves,” he stated.

Despite his reservations about Ngannou’s position, Nelson believes Joshua has a clear advantage in terms of experience and boxing knowledge. “When he boxes Ngannou,” Nelson said, “to me that should be a given. Anthony Joshua knows a lot more than Ngannou about boxing. But in this sport, one punch changes everything.”

Anthony Joshua Reveals Less Muscular Physique Ahead of Comeback

Nelson emphasized the potential consequences of a Joshua defeat. “If that one punch lands and Ngannou gets the win,” he said, “which I don’t believe could happen, then Ngannou would be in a position that I think other fighters deserve. Fighters who have worked their way up, fought former champions, and earned their rankings the right way, not by jumping from one spot to another.”

For Joshua, the stakes couldn’t be higher. “He can’t afford that to happen,” Nelson insisted. “He needs to be on his A-game when he fights Ngannou. He needs to learn from Tyson Fury’s mistake. If Anthony Joshua gets this job done, it could be a cash grab, but I think the risk far outweighs the reward. If he gets turned over, the multi-million deal, that multi-million fight against the winner of Usyk and Tyson Fury, is gone.”

My class permanent, I'll always be among elite heavyweights, says Joshua |  The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News — Sport — The Guardian  Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

Nelson’s message is clear: Joshua needs to approach this fight with the utmost seriousness and focus. His career, and his future in the heavyweight division, hang in the balance.

Anthony Joshua insists he’s still at the top of the boxing scene despite a rocky few years for the former world heavyweight champion.
Anthony Joshua insists he has “never left” the top of heavyweight boxing as he prepares for his March clash against Francis Ngannou.

Anthony Joshua

Joshua will fight former UFC heavyweight champion Ngannou on March 8 in Saudi Arabia.
Two-time world champion Joshua lost his WBO, IBF, and WBA belts to Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 before losing a rematch to the Ukrainian the following year.
He has since beaten Jermaine Franklin, Robert Helenius and, in his most recent bout on December 23, Otto Wallin, when the Swedish fighter was pulled out by his corner after five rounds

In an interview with Sky News’ Jacquie Beltrao, Joshua said of his place in the top level of boxing: “I’ve never left!
“I’ll always be [there]. From the minute I’ve laced up these gloves from the amateurs until now, I’ve managed to keep my name at the top of the amateur scene and the professional scene.“It’s just the truth, it’s just how it is, and I think it’ll be that way until I don’t want to fight anymore.”

Asked by Sky News if belts still mattered in boxing or it was now about making matches, Joshua said: “I think that there is that element as well because for the fans at home they just want to see matches. At the same time, it’s like ‘I don’t care, just get the fight done’.

Staggering sum Anthony Joshua earned per DAY last year revealed as boxing  champ's fortune hits £180 million | The Sun

“You will never know what it’s like or what it feels like to be a champion until you become one and, for me, belts will always matter because it’s something that you set your goals out to achieve as a little kid. If you are a tennis fan you win your trophies, footballer you win a trophy, boxing you win a title.”

Ngannou produced one of boxing’s shock moments of 2023 when, in his first professional bout, the 37-year-old floored Fury in a 10-round non-title bout, although the WBC heavyweight champion won the fight on a controversial split decision.

On his next fight against Joshua, Ngannou said of his target: “Maybe make him look ordinary.

Anthony Joshua seals unanimous points win against American opponent  Jermaine Franklin in London - Eurosport

“When extraordinary people meet, they might just look ordinary.

“Of course, I think I can beat him. I called for the fight and I’m here really to beat him and that’s why I came over here. I’ve been calling for those fights for four years. I’m not here to show up, I’m here to take over.”

Joshua, 34, countered: “It’s always easier said than done.

“I look through a lot of my fights and what people have said. Let’s just look at my most recent one with my last opponent [Wallin]. I’m this, I’m that, and the other – I broke his eye socket and broke his nose and sent him packing after five rounds.

“You can say what you want to say but when leather starts landing, I think people do think different about their approach.”

Turki Alalshikh is open to financially backing an Anthony Joshua-Tyson Fury fight even if Fury loses twice to Oleksandr Usyk.

The chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, which has fully funded many of the biggest fights in boxing over the past few months, won’t abandon bouts he believes boxing fans will still want to see even if fighters lose. Alalshikh still sees a way to put together a Joshua-Deontay Wilder fight, which would’ve finally taken place March 8 at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh had Joseph Parker not upset Wilder by unanimous decision in their 12-rounder December 23 at Kingdom Arena.

The 42-year-old Alalshikh will take the same approach to Fury-Joshua if Usyk defeats Fury in their heavyweight title unification fight February 17 at Kingdom Arena. England’s Fury (34-0-1, 24 KOs) and Ukraine’s Usyk (21-0, 14 KOs) have reportedly agreed to a two-fight deal, thus the loser could exercise his right to an immediate rematch later this year.

Unless Fury-Usyk results in a draw or no-contest, the winner would become the sport’s first fully unified heavyweight champion of the four-belt era. If Fury wins, he would need to beat Usyk twice before securing a long-discussed, highly anticipated showdown with Joshua (27-3, 24 KOs), who will need to defeat Francis Ngannou (0-1) on March 8 to maintain his place in the Fury fight or even a third fight versus Usyk.

If Cameroon’s Ngannou upsets England’s Joshua, who has opened as a 6-1 favorite to beat the former UFC heavyweight champ, and Fury defeats Usyk, a Fury-Ngannou rematch obviously would become the once-unforeseen fight to make for the IBF, IBO, WBA, WBC and WBO titles. Ngannou stunningly pushed Fury in his professional boxing debut, during which he floored Fury with a left hook late in the third round, yet lost a 10-round split decision October 28 at Kingdom Arena.

Tyson Fury could be made to 'look a fool' by Oleksandr Usyk if he doesn't  make important change

Alalshikh offered his perspective on those potential heavyweight fights during a wide-ranging interview with DAZN’s Ade Oladipo, which was posted to the streaming service’s website and social media platforms Wednesday.

“We want to see Fury-Usyk and the result, and the rematch between Fury [and] Usyk,” Alalshikh said. “And after that, we want to see Tyson Fury against Ngannou, or the people want to see it. And we want to see, if Fury [wins], we want to see him against Joshua if Joshua [wins]. If Usyk [wins], maybe we have [a] chance to have the third fight. And even if Usyk [wins], the people still want to see Tyson against Joshua. This is what we want to deliver to the market. And we close a lot of things about this.”

With strong support from Saudi Arabia’s King Salman and its crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, Alalshikh aggressively has gone about offering the type of purses required to make fights like Fury-Usyk, Fury-Ngannou, Joshua-Ngannou, Joshua-Otto Wallin, Parker-Wilder and Parker (34-3, 23 KOs) against WBO interim champ Zhilei Zhang (26-1-1, 21 KOs), the co-feature of the March 8 pay-per-view event that’ll be headlined by Joshua and Ngannou.

Boxing notes: Tyson Fury cashing in with Francis Ngannou fight - Sports  Illustrated

“We are coming with new strategy,” Alalshikh said, “and new idea and new vision … to do and deliver to the market the best [fights], with good price, and make the [fights] that people want to see. We don’t want to waste time. Tyson Fury is 35 now, around 35. Joshua is around 33, I think. Usyk [is] around 36, Wilder 38, 37. Artur [Beterbiev] now 39, next week. Why we are losing time?

“The people need to see Joshua-Fury, Fury-Joshua, need to see Joshua-Wilder. And I hope Wilder [comes] back. You know, and there is rumor, and you know it, the fight was between Joshua and Wilder [for March 8]. But you see the result and the body condition of Wilder now. It would not be reasonable to have the fight now. We want him to come back. And I see Parker, what he’s doing, amazing show, and he’s one of the best boxer [who has come back] now, this year.”

Francis Ngannou’s coach teases Mike Tyson collaboration for Anthony Joshua fight after boxing legend played key role in Tyson Fury camp

Ngannou shocked the world when he dropped WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury and almost caused a monumental upset at the ‘Battle of the Baddest’ last October.

Iron Mike' Tyson to be in Ngannou's corner for Fury fight - Vanguard News

Ahead of the bout, Mike Tyson joined the MMA fighter’s camp and ultimately helped the Cameroonian KO artist push Fury to a controversial split decision.

Dewey Cooper, who combines his job as Ngannou’s striking coach with running Team Combat League, has now explained how the boxing legend came to join their camp and highlighted the main benefit of having him in the gym.

“Mike used to come to my fights, so we’ve been friends for a long time,” Cooper told talkSPORT.com.

“Four years ago, Francis went on Mike Tyson’s podcast, and Francis was talking about fighting Tyson Fury and people like that way back then.

Mike Tyson to train with Francis Ngannou ahead of Tyson Fury boxing match -  MMA Fighting

“He made an agreement with Mike Tyson that if he did a boxing fight Mike would have to work his corner because Mike Tyson was so influential in Francis wanting to take this journey.

“Mike had to be a part of it. He trained Francis when he could. He had a very busy schedule. He and I are good friends, so whenever he came in, he took over. It’s Mike Tyson!

“I think the main factor he played, besides the great training and instructions, was the motivation of Francis. When Mike Tyson came to the gym, Francis lit up like a kid on Christmas morning about to open his gifts.”

Ngannou’s performance against Fury earned him another mega-fight against former two-time world champion Anthony Joshua, who he will face in Saudi Arabia on March 8.

Boxing: Mike Tyson on robbery claims in Tyson Fury vs Francis Ngannou: The  real champion of the night was Ngannou | Marca

Cooper expects Tyson to join their camp again and says he is happy to have ‘Iron Mike’ play as big a role as Ngannou wants him to over the next couple of months.

He added: “Whatever way Francis wants Mike Tyson to be involved he will be.

“I love Mike, we go back way before any of this Francis Ngannou–UFC stuff was happening anyway.

“So, I hope he will come through like he did last time and keep implementing his mentality and technique.

“I’m sure he will, but either way, [Ngannou] is going to be prepared and ready to go against Anthony Joshua.”

Best laid plans often go to waste in boxing but when Ben Davison took over the reigns of Anthony Joshua’s training team, he probably assumed he would spend the first part of 2024 preparing the two-time unified heavyweight champion for a shootout with Deontay Wilder.

When Joseph Parker outboxed a disappointing Wilder in December, Joshua’s team quickly pivoted to a fight with Francis Ngannou on March 8th. The opponent may have changed but after guiding Joshua to an impressive fifth round stoppage of Otto Wallin last time out, Davison isn’t taking the fight with the mixed martial artist any less seriously .

Ngannou, of course, came close to scoring one of the biggest shocks of all time last October when he dropped WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury in the third round and pushed him to the wire before losing a split decision.

Many have assumed that as well as Ngannou did in his professional boxing debut, he was helped by Fury wildly underestimating him. Davison doesn’t subscribe to that school of thought.

“I know Tyson, obviously. I’ve worked with him,” Davison said at the Joshua-Ngannou launch press conference this week. “He’s a very professional athlete. He takes his job very seriously. He would have prepared properly for Ngannou. Now, mentally sometimes it’s hard to put yourself in that position where you fully have respect for the opponent. Even though you’re trying to do all the right things, sometimes that’s not there. Only he can answer those questions, but Ngannou shocked all of us and I think he’s a very credible opponent.”

The relationship between a fighter and their trainer is the most important in boxing. There are times when trainers have to ask their fighters to do unnatural things in the ring and when they get off their stool and head back into battle, the boxer needs to do so with total belief that the man on the other side of the ropes has given them the right instructions. For Davison, that bond is the most important thing to have emerged from the relatively short amount of time he and Joshua have spent working together.

“I can’t speak for him but my experience is [that he’s] extremely coachable,” he said. “I feel like trust got built to a certain point where I needed it to be just before the Otto Wallin fight. There was a few things before going into the fight where I was extremely confident that that trust was there. Now, each fight is different and you have to keep building on that but I think that the way we coach suits the type of character that he is.”

Davison and his assistant, Lee Wylie, are renowned for forensically breaking down fighters but when somebody of Joshua’s caliber walks through the gym door it is a case of simplifying matters and reminding them what they are good at. Joshua doesn’t need to be shown how to throw a jab or a right hand to the body but he can be shown when to throw them and told why he is doing so. Having spent a long time seemingly caught between styles and unsure of himself, Joshua looked confident and relaxed against Wallin.

“People were going, ‘Ben’s rejuvenated A.J.’ It’s a load of nonsense,” Davison said. “He’s an Olympic gold medalist. Those are the skills he’s always had. All that we’ve done is helped him to understand, ‘These are the tools you’ve got that we think will work for that job and these are the tools that you’ve got that we think will work for that job.’ That’s our job really.

“Lee Wylie says this about football. Pep Guardiola doesn’t tell Cristiano Ronaldo to kick the football a little bit more with this part of the foot. He teaches the team how to play in a system against another team and that’s what we do as coaches at this level.”