Deontay Wilder’s lethargic win shows Anthony Joshua has nothing to fear

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  • yoz
    Yoz
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    #1

    Deontay Wilder’s lethargic win shows Anthony Joshua has nothing to fear

    There is much media agonising about who should be the next man to stand in front of Anthony Joshua on his road to world heavyweight title glory. Here is a foolproof solution: track Deontay Wilder's opponents, starting with his latest patsy, the underwhelming Eric "The Drummer Boy" Molina, then go looking for the former champion Bermane Stiverne, the only opponent to take Wilder the distance. He won***8217;t be hard to find.

    If Joshua's ultimate goal is a fight with Wilder (presuming Wilder hangs on to his WBC title against the mandatory challenger, Alexander Povetkin), there is no more convincing path than to out-perform the champion against his old opponents. They would be glad of the payday. Stiverne would be a genuine challenge. Molina ***8230; er, less so. If Joshua could not knock out Molina inside a round there would need to be a steward***8217;s inquiry.

    Wilder laboured for nine rounds in front of his Alabama fans on Saturday night before getting rid of the game 33-year-old Texan with no chin. Even this far away watching on television, he looked lethargic and strangely reluctant to finish the job, and the American with the power and reputation of a budding heavyweight ogre needs his trainer Mark Breland to remind him of his strengths ***8211; which are fairly obvious.

    It was a poor performance but resulted nevertheless in the delivery of a 33rd stoppage win in 34 fights. Wilder, who had to drive only 60 miles from Tuscaloosa to get to the fight, put poor Molina down four times ***8211; with mainly glancing blows and shoves ***8211; yet was wobbled momentarily in the third round and nonplussed every time he was put on the back foot, by feints or crude charging from his desperate opponent, whose limp left lead was no more than a range-finder for the occasional haymaker off either wing.

    Molina was probably the worst challenger for a world heavyweight title since, well, Audley Harrison was blown away in a round by Wilder two Aprils ago. At least Harrison had some pedigree. What he had very little of that night was ambition.

    For Molina, the reverse was true but, with the best will in the world (and everyone says what a good guy the full-time special needs teacher is), he should not have been allowed anywhere near a world title fight. He had his first pro fight eight years ago, and was knocked out that night in a round by another debutant, Ashanti ***8220;The Boss***8221; Jordan, who retired two years later with a modest cv.

    Molina did, however, get out of the first round against Wilder (where his two previous defeats were visited on him ***8211; the other being at the hands of Chris Arreola ***8211; another opponent for Joshua to chase), and went on to thrash and charge at the champion for another quarter of an hour or so, intermittently retreating into a default position of rolled-up, rubber-ball defence on the ropes, where he suffered for his reticence.

    Wilder could have and should have had the challenger flat on his back inside three minutes. Joshua almost certainly would have done so. As would David Price and most other respectable young heavyweights.

    If Wilder fights like that against Wladimir Klitschko (who owns the other three versions of the title), he will be a former champion in one painful evening. He is clueless when not allowed to press the fight, although he is without doubt a lethal punch-thrower and impressively athletic for a 6ft 7in boxer who came late to the sport.

    Still, on this evidence, Wilder is not the heavyweight saviour the Americans have been waiting for. He will excite audiences against lesser opposition and he might even surprise everyone and knock out Klitschko, if he can land one of his bombs. But, even against such mediocre opposition as Molina, he looked more concerned about walking on to a big counter than doing his job.

    When it is boiled down, that is what he is: a knockout artist. And any ambitious heavyweight with skills and daring will fancy his chances against him. Joshua could beat Wilder right now. And again on Tuesday.
    Kevin Mitchell's Guardian Boxing Blog


    Thoughts?

    There is a mistake in the article - I think the author meant to refer to David Haye's HW defence against Audley Harrison. Wilder fought Harrison, sure, but he was not a belt holder at the time.
    Last edited by yoz; 06-15-2015, 10:08 AM.
  • gamefrk
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    #2
    Anthony Joshua shouldn't fear Wilder because they wont be fighting each other in a long long time. Joshua is just coming up, he has 13 fights only for gods sake. Joshua has never even been in a 12 round fight AFAIK.

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    • BWC
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      #3
      Originally posted by gamefrk
      Anthony Joshua shouldn't fear Wilder because they wont be fighting each other in a long long time. Joshua is just coming up, he has 13 fights only for gods sake. Joshua has never even been in a 12 round fight AFAIK.
      Man the Brits are really getting their panties in a bunch over this kid. Let the kid fight someone in the top 50 first..

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      • gamefrk
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        #4
        Originally posted by BWC
        Man the Brits are really getting their panties in a bunch over this kid. Let the kid fight someone in the top 50 first..
        Exactly, he's a solid Olympian but he's a novice at the pro ranks. He turned pro 1.5 years back & has a long way to go.

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        • The Hammer
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          #5
          tweet from Klitschko's trainer on Saturday evening:

          Johnathon Banks @Johnathon_Banks Jun 13
          @SHOsports As I watch this fight I see Klitschko has nothing to worry about

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          • yoz
            Yoz
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            #6
            Originally posted by gamefrk
            Exactly, he's a solid Olympian but he's a novice at the pro ranks. He turned pro 1.5 years back & has a long way to go.
            Joshua (13-0, 13KOs) fought Jason Gavern in his 11th pro fight.

            Wilder (34-0, 33KOs) fought Jason Gavern in his 32nd pro fight.


            I agree, though. Joshua has a way to go. I'm not sold on him yet - Parker looks like the more fluid prospect.

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            • yoz
              Yoz
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              #7
              Originally posted by Freedom.
              tweet from Klitschko's trainer on Saturday evening:

              Johnathon Banks @Johnathon_Banks Jun 13
              @SHOsports As I watch this fight I see Klitschko has nothing to worry about


              It's a shame. Unless Wilder goes for broke, and lobbies for a Wlad fight, the two won't meet in a unification bout - Povetkin is going to grab the WBC strap.

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              • AgainstTheRopes
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                #8
                Wilder will knock Joshua SPARK OUT as the Brits say

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