AP

New champ Usyk heads for simple life, Joshua eyes rematch

Sep 25, 2021, 3:07 PM | Updated: Sep 26, 2021, 3:12 am

Oleksandr Usyk of Ukraine smiles during a press conference after winning the WBA (Super), WBO and I...

Oleksandr Usyk of Ukraine smiles during a press conference after winning the WBA (Super), WBO and IBF boxing title bout against Anthony Joshua of Britain at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London Saturday Sept. 25, 2021. (Nick Potts/PA via AP)

(Nick Potts/PA via AP)

LONDON (AP) — Anthony Joshua was walking back to his dressing room, dazed, bedraggled — he could barely see out of his right eye — with sympathetic shouts coming from the crowd of 66,000 who’d just seen British boxing’s national treasure lose his world heavyweight titles again.

Joshua was trying hard not to feel sorry for himself. In fact, he was already plotting how he could defeat Oleksandr Usyk in a rematch.

“When I was walking back through the tunnel, I just said to myself, ‘I’m ready to get back to the gym, I’m ready to just put that work in,'” Joshua said. “Most people after they’ve finished a fight, it’s like, ‘Yeah, let me go out and have a bit of fun.’ But my mindset is a bit different.”

So, after shaking hands with Usyk and video-calling the new champ’s kids back in Ukraine, Joshua got his team to put on a tape of the fight and watched it with two people close to him — Tony Bellew and Derek Chisora — who have also lost to Usyk over the past three years.

“This isn’t just one fight and then I’m done,” Joshua said. “I’ve got an opportunity to go back to the drawing board.”

The video will have been a tough watch. Befuddled by fighting a southpaw for only the second time, Joshua was given a lesson in movement and punching speed by an undefeated 34-year-old opponent who demolished allcomers in the cruiserweight division and — after just three fights at heavyweight — already owns three of the four major belts in boxing’s blue riband category.

To Joshua’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, Usyk is the second best pound-for-pound fighter in boxing.

“Anthony could have swerved that fight easy. Maybe we should have,” Hearn said. “But that’s not really what he’s about.

“You’ve got people who will take easy options and you’ve got people who will choose to fight everybody. And the latter is AJ.”

So, Joshua will “100%, 110%” trigger the rematch clause that was part of the deal.

Hearn said it will take place in February or March, hopefully in Britain and almost certainly not in Kiev – the preferred location for Usyk despite his fearsome reputation as a road fighter.

Joshua’s coach, Rob McCracken, think he knows how his man can close the gap on Usyk and avoid getting in the kind of situation that saw him hanging on the ropes by the end of Saturday’s fight, on the end of a pummeling in his own back yard. He surely would have gone down had the final bell not sounded.

“You’ve got to apply pressure behind your jab and your right hand, keep him off-balance and put your shots together when you get there,” McCracken said.

Easier said than done.

Usyk will start as favorite in the rematch — Hearn said that, and Joshua didn’t disagree — and is blessed with such talent and pedigree that he’ll be confident of outboxing his fellow Olympic gold medalist from 2012 once again.

It was some performance, in only his third heavyweight fight, in such a fevered atmosphere and against a two-time world champion. By the end, he was bullying the younger Joshua — a man with a distinct advantage in height, weight and reach – and won comprehensively on all three of the judges’ scorecards.

“It is the biggest fight in my career but it wasn’t the hardest one. That is ahead of us,” Usyk said.

Before that — and Joshua now has the benefit of a fight against the slippery and sharp Usyk in the memory bank — Usyk wants to go home and “live” a simple life for a while.

“I want to take my kids to school, I want to plant trees, I want to water apple trees, I want to see my wife more often,” he said.

He’ll return home to a hero’s reception – Usyk is already a big deal in Ukraine – and put the WBA, WBO and IBF heavyweight titles alongside his heavyweight gold medal from the 2012 Olympics, the piece of hardware he still treasures more than any other.

And Joshua? The popular Londoner just went through his most chastening experience in the ring, outclassed rather than surprised like he was in the stunning loss to Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2019.

For that reason, the recovery process will be different and he’ll have to reassess his approach. That might also mean looking at his ring walk.

Whereas Usyk was all business on his way to the middle, Joshua might have been too relaxed, high-fiving fans and even cutting away to hug an old face from his boyhood boxing club.

It’s all part of the Joshua Show – he continues to sell out big venues, the latest being Tottenham Hotspur Stadium — but that has been blown off course, along with the all-English narrative of a fight with WBC champion Tyson Fury to be undisputed champion.

It’s not over, though. Joshua is only 31 and is too good — and lucrative — a fighter for Hearn to give up on.

“Maybe AJ gave (Usyk) too much respect, particularly in the early part of the fight,” Hearn said.

“I don’t know if he (Usyk) can be much better. I hope he can’t … I think he boxed the perfect fight. Can he do it again? Maybe he can raise his game, but maybe he can’t box to that level again. AJ will, I promise you, be much, much better than that in the rematch.”

___

More AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/apf-sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

___

Steve Douglas is at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

AP

Associated Press

Ex-Packer Guion gets 1 year for domestic violence assault

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Former Green Bay Packers defensive tackle Letroy Guion was sentenced to one year in jail after pleading no contest in a domestic violence assault at his home last fall. Brown County Circuit Court Judge Thomas Walsh also ordered Guion on Tuesday to serve three years’ probation and complete a domestic […]

1 year ago

Joe Jarzynka...

Associated Press

Durant eager for Suns debut vs. Hornets after knee injury

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Kevin Durant has been through quite a bit during his 15-year NBA career — but joining a new team midway through the season is a new one for the 13-time All-Star. The 34-year-old Durant doesn’t seem all that worried. Durant makes his highly anticipated Phoenix Suns debut on Wednesday night against […]

1 year ago

FILE - Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores stands on the sideline during the second half of an N...

Associated Press

Judge: NFL coach can press discrimination claims in court

NEW YORK (AP) — NFL Coach Brian Flores can pursue some of his discrimination claims against the league and its teams in court rather than through arbitration, a judge ruled Wednesday. The written decision by Judge Valerie Caproni in Manhattan was issued months after lawyers for the league tried to get the lawsuit moved to […]

1 year ago

Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Alex Stalock cools off in the first period during an NHL hockey game ...

Associated Press

Kane trade reinforces hard reality of Blackhawks rebuild

CHICAGO (AP) — After days of speculation, the harsh reality of the Chicago Blackhawks’ situation was reinforced by one move in a flurry of transactions ahead of the NHL trade deadline. Showtime is over, at least in Chicago, and a seemingly bright future is, well, way off in the distance. The reverberations of Chicago’s decision […]

1 year ago

FILE -  Yves Jean-Bart, president of the Haitian Football Federation, wearing a protective face mas...

Associated Press

Disgraced ex-Haitian soccer president announces he’s back

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Haiti’s former soccer federation president whose lifetime ban from sport over sexual abuse allegations was overturned last month announced Wednesday that he is reclaiming his position. Yves Jean-Bart’s defiant announcement could lead to a standoff with FIFA, which already has appointed an emergency management committee to lead the Haitian Football Association […]

1 year ago

FILE - Green Bay Packers' Aaron Rodgers walks off the field after an NFL football game against the ...

Associated Press

Rodgers says decision on future will come ‘soon enough’

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Aaron Rodgers says he will make a decision on his future “soon enough” as the four-time MVP quarterback ponders whether to play next season and if his future remains with the Green Bay Packers. Rodgers, 39, discussed his future while speaking on an episode of the “Aubrey Marcus Podcast” that […]

1 year ago

New champ Usyk heads for simple life, Joshua eyes rematch