The cry for a heavyweight champion is so loud that it often drowns out the need for common sense and rationality.
Nine years ago, I was in the Scholars Lounge in Rome. It was not a place of learning, but one of the city’s numerous ‘Irish’ bars. I was on my way back from the International Journalism Festival in Perugia and had stopped for two nights in the Immortal City.
It was the weekend that Anthony Joshua challenged ‘Prince’ Charles Martin for the IBF heavyweight title. Joshua, 15-0 (15), was coming into the ring after beating Dillian Whyte, his somewhat rival, in seven rounds. Martin, 23-0-1 (21), was defending his title for the first time, having beaten Vyacheslav Glazkov for it two-and-a-half months earlier.
There was a young couple sat on the same table with me. We were not together as a group, but we were all interested in watching the fight.
“What do you think of Martin?” asked the man.
“Not much.”
“So Joshua wins?”
I shrugged. “I guess. But the problem is who he fights afterwards. Fifteen fights, knocking out all those guys to get here – what happens when he starts having mandatories against those who can really fight back?”
Joshua stopped Martin in two rounds that night. He defended against Dominic Breazeale and Eric Molina in subsequent bouts, then stopped Wladimir Klitschko in eleven.
But it was after that the sheen began to come off. The underrated Carlos Takam pushed Joshua hard, who would go onto look less than inspired in subsequent bouts against Joseph Parker and Alexander Povetkin. Then Andy Ruiz knocked him out in seven.
Even though Joshua would win the rematch, he looked almost hesitant. A win over Kubrat Pulev inspired few. Then there were the losses to Oleksandr Usyk and Daniel Dubois. Even with the run of victories of lesser opponents, it seems that Joshua either left something behind in the ring along the way or it was never developed in the first place.
I lean towards the latter, and that is why I have been thinking that thought a lot this week, because we are running up to Saturday when the undefeated Moses Itauma, 12-0 (10), is set to meet Dillian Whyte, 31-3 (21), in a twelve-round bout in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. It is a fight that either moves Itauma into true contention – where is already being lined up in some quarters to be the next, and final, dance partner of Oleksandr Usyk – or relegates him back down a few levels.
And yet I feel that this fight may be coming too soon for Itauma. He has only fought twelve times in the professional ranks. Ten of his victories have come by stoppage, with only two of his wins going past the second round.
A twelve-fight professional record is still the record of an amateur learning the ropes of the trade. When Anthony Joshua was 12-0, his next opponent was Kevin Johnson. At that time, Johnson was on the long downslope of his career, having slipped into the role of gatekeeper.
Other heavyweight champions, in their thirteenth fights, fought opponents of a similar level. For Lennox Lewis, it was Mike Acey, 11-4-1. For Mike Tyson, it was Conroy Nelson, 15-7-2. For Wladimir Klitschko, it was Marcos Gonzalez, 18-11-1. Brother Vitali fought Anthony Willis, 16-6, in his thirteenth pro fight. Tyson Fury went in against Zack Page, 21-32-2, at the same point.
I doubt Whyte is at the stage of his career that those fighters were at. He may have last had a significant fight in 2022 (against Fury), but he has stopped three men in the years since – all of whom would be better learning fights for Itauma, still a relative novice.
The other fighter I have been thinking of this weekend has been David Price, who was 15-0 (13) when he went out to face Tony Thompson, 36-3 (24), in Liverpool. Thompson stopped him in two and, five months later, repeated the same trick in five. At the time of their first bout, Thompson was only one fight away from challenging Wladimir Klitschko for the world heavyweight title.
Again, Price had been rushed into it. And he paid the price with two losses and a career that was derailed to finish at 25-7 (20).
I thought then that Price had been set to fight Tony Thompson too soon. Such was the hubris of those around him that they made that fight. And that same hubris led them immediately to the rematch.
I fear that same hubris is being played out again.
Senior writer/editor Pete Carvill is the author of Death of a Boxer (a Daily Mail and Irish Times ‘Sports Book of the Year’) and A Duel of Bulls: Hemingway and Welles in Love and War. He is also a frequent blow-by-blow commentator on DAZN for boxing from Germany.
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