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On August 3 at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, Terence Crawford makes his long-awaited return to the ring when he aims to become a four-weight world champion against WBA super-welterweight title holder Israil Madrimov.

Crawford (40-0-0 31 KO) will compete at 154lbs for the first time in the headline bout of a stacked card on Riyadh Season’s international debut. His return in California will be his first fight since last July when he dominated Errol Spence Jr to become the undisputed welterweight champion. It made Crawford the first male two-weight undisputed champion having previously achieved the feat at super-lightweight.

Naoya Inoue (bantamweight and super-bantamweight) and Oleksandr Usyk (cruiserweight and heavyweight) have since emulated Crawford, but ‘Bud’ will hope to strike out on his own and become a three-weight undisputed champion.

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The first step on that journey is Madrimov (10-0-1 7 KO). A victory will not only earn Crawford the Uzbek’s WBA title but also the WBO interim belt, setting up the American for a shot at WBO world champion Sebastian Fundora, who also holds the WBC strap.

It means that, potentially, within two fights Crawford could be the unified super-welterweight champion, with only the IBF title, currently held by Bakhram Murtazaliev, out of his possession.

Given Crawford’s status as arguably the best pound-for-pound boxer on the planet and the history that awaits him should he carve through the 154lbs division, it’s no surprise much of the attention ahead of August 3 is focused on the Nebraskan.

However, Madrimov is not a fighter to be taken lightly, and while Bud is the strong favorite to win (bookmakers have priced him at around 1/7 for victory), the unbeaten Uzbek will not want to give up his title in his first defense.

So, with the odds stacked against him and facing perhaps the finest fighter of his generation, what can Madrimov do to emerge victorious and shock the world?

It’s no secret that Crawford has not fought as much as he would’ve liked in recent years, and several failed negotiations over the past 12 months mean it will be more than one year since his last bout against Spence.

Going back to December 2019 and his bout against Egidijus Kavaliauskas, Crawford has averaged one fight per year for the past five years: Kell Brook (November 2020), Shawn Porter (November 2021), David Avanesyan (December 2022), and Spence (July 2023).

So far, that lack of activity has had minimal effect on Crawford, who secured stoppage wins over all these opponents, but could there come a time when ring rust might set in? As he approaches his 37th birthday in September and with a step up to his heaviest weight yet, it might prove to be a factor against Madrimov.

The Uzbek has hardly been particularly active himself, with four fights dating back to December 2021, but at least his most recent outing was in March when he produced the best performance of his career so far to stop Magomed Kurbanov and become a world champion.

Madrimov will hope his better sharpness and greater experience at 154 can give him a couple of advantages against a superior opponent in Crawford.

Crawford might be the most complete fighter on the planet. Speed, power, movement, intelligence, with long arms that give him range – the American has it all, plus no one can control a fight better than Bud. There have been 40 opponents who have all tried and failed to find a solution.

Such is Crawford’s brilliance, he’s often allowed to fight on his own terms and at his own tempo, placing his opponents in survival mode and unable to execute their game plans.

To avoid a similar fate, Madrimov will need to rely on his own strengths, of which there are plenty. The Uzbek is a powerful and accurate puncher who has a solid defense – thanks to his stellar amateur background – and like Crawford, has excellent footwork.

At 29 years old, he also has youth on his side, while he is full of self-belief and is genuinely convinced that he will be the man to inflict a first career defeat on Crawford.

“Experience-wise, yes, I have ten professional fights, but it’s a high quality. All ten were WBA fights. All ten were twelve-rounders against stiff opposition. I have more than 200 international amateur fights. So overall, over 300 amateur fights. I have experience fighting everyone around the world,” Madrimov said.

“The ring will show everything. On August 3, you will see everything. We have some things we’ve been watching. We’re not going to talk about it right now. With a lot of fighters, they’re losing before they even step in the ring [with Crawford]. They’re already kind of on the downside [of their careers]. With me, I’m mentally strong.”

Make no mistake, Madrimov will be a massive underdog when he climbs through the ropes to face Crawford on August 3, but as the saying goes, every boxer has a puncher’s chance.

For that to generally apply, though, a boxer needs to possess the necessary power to administer that one, fight-changing punch – and Madrimov certainly has that.

Even with a fighter as skillful and imposing as Crawford, a clean shot to the temple or ripping punch to the liver has the potential to send him to the canvas. It’s not happened yet – Bud has famously never gone down – but at 154 against arguably the biggest puncher he’s faced, there remains an outside possibility that one clean shot could change the outcome of the bout.

“Madrimov is the best 154-pounder in the world, I really believe that,” Madrimov’s promoter Eddie Hearn said. “Terence came straight out the gate and he wanted all the champions. His Excellency (Turki Alalshikh) reached out to me. We made the fight, the main event on a huge card but as I said to him, ‘Every fighter gets old, every fighter steps [up] one weight class too many’.”

Tyson Fury is not one to shy away from a challenge.

‘The Gypsy King’ has fought some of the greatest fighters of his generation such as long-reigning heavyweight king Wladimir Klitschko and undisputed champion Oleksandr Usyk.

He also famously shared a brutal trilogy with one of the most destructive punchers in the history of the sport in Deontay Wilder.

READ: Oleksandr Usyk would demand special rule in order to fight Jake Paul

But there is one boxer he admits he will never face – his long-time training partner and close friend Joseph Parker.

I don't want to get beat up' - Tyson Fury reveals the one heavyweight  contender he will never fight | talkSPORT

Asked last year if he would ever entertain a fight with Parker, Fury, who was the WBC heavyweight champion at the time, replied: “Definitely not.

“No. I’d rather give him the belt than fight him for it.

“We’re too close for that fight and there’s plenty of heavyweights out there.

“He doesn’t need to fight me, I don’t want to get beat up, sorry!”

Fury may be forced to make the tough decision if he defeats Usyk when they rematch for the WBA ‘super’, WBO and WBC titles on December 21.

Parker picked up the WBO ‘interim’ title by beating Zhilei Zhang in his last outing in March and would be next in line in the sanctioning body rotation system to face the winner.

The expectation is that whoever emerges victorious from Daniel Dubois and Anthony Joshua’s all-British showdown for the IBF strap on September 21 will be next in line for a shot at Usyk or Fury.

However, the WBO could throw a spanner in the works by mandating Parker to box the unified heavyweight champion.

Of course, a step-aside fee can be agreed to allow the original plan to go ahead and Parker would likely take this to avoid causing his close friend a headache should he end up in possession of three of the four major sanctioning body belts at the back end of the year.

Although Parker’s stance on fighting Fury is slightly different.

“If it ever came down to it and Tyson was No. 1 and I was No. 2, and there was no one else to fight, and it could help me and my family and secure us for the rest of our lives, I think Tyson and I could do something together,” he said earlier this year.

“But I have the utmost respect for the guy and what he has done for my career, and if it wasn’t for him I wouldn’t be where I am today.

“But if it has to come down to it I think we can put everything aside and do it before we sit down after the fight and say, ‘Hey man, you caught me with that good shot,’ and that sort of thing if you know what I mean.”

Usyk defeated Tyson Fury in May to become the undisputed heavyweight world champion and will rematch the Brit in December

Oleksandr Usyk would be open to fighting Jake Paul in MMA – if the boxing world champion puts one hand behind his back.

Usyk dethroned Tyson Fury to become the undisputed heavyweight world champion in Saudi Arabia in May. He and Fury will return to the desert in December for their contracted rematch, but Usyk could then return to cruiserweight where he also reigned as the undisputed king.

Oleksandr Usyk's brutal message to Jake Paul ahead of Mike Tyson fight |  Boxing | Sport | Express.co.uk

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That would put him in the same division as YouTube star Jake Paul who has established himself as a professional boxer and takes on former UFC star Mike Perry next weekend. But while a fight with Paul would be a complete mismatch, Usyk’s coach Sergey Lapin joked his man would give Paul a chance by putting himself at a disadvantage.

“Usyk is running out of challenges at heavyweight,” Lapin told Betway. “He accepted the challenge at heavyweight and became the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world, a lot of work went into this achievement. After the rematch we will see who will remain in the heavyweight division, but Usyk has now passed this level, everyone who stood in Usyk’s way has been overcome. We are now set for a rematch with Fury, after that we will know who will be next.

“He’s proven he’s the best of this generation and, once he’s retired Tyson Fury, he will consider his options. Maybe that’s dropping down in weight again, or maybe there’s a wildcard option on the table for him; be it in the boxing ring, the MMA cage or even Conor McGregor’s Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship.

“Can you imagine Usyk and Jon Jones fighting to prove they’re the baddest man on the planet? Or maybe it’s a third fight with Anthony Joshua in the MMA cage. Maybe it’s Jake Paul at cruiserweight, although Usyk would need to fight him with one hand behind his back though to make it fair.”

Paul will take on Perry after the bare-knuckle boxer in Florida after Mike Tyson was forced to pull out of their fight with an inflamed stomach ulcer. Paul’s widely-criticised and controversial fight with the heavyweight legend has been rescheduled for November 15.

Oleksandr Usyk savaged reigning IBF World Heavyweight Champion Daniel Dubois when comparing him to Anthony Joshua.

The 37-year-old made history in May after becoming the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era, following a monumental journey that saw him overcome five British fighters in six years. ‘

The Cat’ first secured the unified heavyweight title by defeating Joshua, making a mockery of claims that Usyk’s size would be detrimental to his success after moving up from cruiserweight. He then defended his titles against ‘AJ’ in a rematch, before winning a controversial bout against Dubois. Following a cagey opening to the fight, Dubois appeared to drop Usyk in the fifth round, but faced cries of a low blow coming from Ukrainian and his corner.

READ: “That Would Have Decapitated a Normal Man”: Eddie Hearn Sets the Record Straight on Anthony Joshua’s Chin

Siding with the Ukrainian, referee Luis Pabon ruled the body shot to be low and allowed Usyk time to recover. Had it been deemed to be a legal punch, it is highly unlikely that Usyk would have been able to recover sufficiently to beat the official’s count.

After being allowed to recover, Usyk then went on to ensure his retention of the WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweight belts via a ninth-round knockout. Complaints from Dubois’ promoter, Frank Warren, were not successful in securing a rematch and Usyk moved past the Londoner after the scare.

In his next fight, Usyk would battle past Tyson Fury to become the undisputed world heavyweight champion. However, just five weeks after that monumental victory, Usyk would be forced to vacate his IBF heavyweight title. Within hours, interim champion Dubois was upgraded to full IBF world champion – an ironic twist given his history with Usyk.

The 26-year-old will now face Joshua in his first title defence, with Wembley Stadium playing host to the clash on the 21st of September. In the build-up to that fight, an unflattering comparison that Usyk made between Dubois and Joshua during an interview with Boxing News has emerged. He was pretty brutal in his assessment.

“I treat Daniel Dubois with respect. I wish him good luck, and let him become the champion someday – that he trains well … There is no way to compare [Dubois and Joshua], because they are completely different fighters. Different skills; different styles. Totally different boxers. To be fair, I don’t think [Dubois can reach Joshua’s level]. I am sorry for saying this, but this is the truth and I’m telling it.”

Although Usyk has two wins over Joshua, both game via decision, whereas he was able to halt Dubois inside the scheduled distance. Whether or not the harsh words stemmed from his anger on the controversy with the match against Dubois, ‘Dynamite’ has certainly proved that he belongs at world level and an exciting bout looks to be in store when he clashes with Joshua in September.

“I heard he doesn’t have a chin,” the former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou said, ahead of his fight against the former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua.

Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on who you were rooting for, Ngannou didn’t have a chance to test his chin as he was knocked out cold in the second round of their crossover fight in Riyadh. But, over fourteen years of his professional career, AJ’s chin has been tested in crucial fights. Whether it was Andy Ruiz Jr., Wladimir Klitschko, or Oleksandr Usyk, all of them threw bombs at Joshua. Nonetheless, he was able to withstand the test and went the distance with almost all the fighters, barring one. So, does the perception that Joshua has a weak chin hold true?

The 34-year-old heavyweight boxer has the opportunity to become world champion again. After Usyk reluctantly relinquished his IBF belt due to his rematch with Tyson Fury, Joshua will go up against Daniel Dubois. The interim IBF champion was elevated to the status of world champion last month. It is going to be an all-British showdown on September 21, 2024, in Wembley Stadium. Before the clash, Joshua’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, sat down with Seconds Out to dismantle the perception that AJ has a weak chin.

Anthony Joshua Ready To Relinquish WBO Title For Bout Against Tyson Fury  next year, admits promoter Eddie Hearn | Sports247 Nigeria

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In the interview with Seconds Out, Eddie Hearn waxed lyrical on AJ’s ability to hold up against massive power punches from his opponents. “AJ has a really, really good chin. Watch the shots AJ took in the Wladimir Klitschko fight. The right hand that would’ve decapitated a normal man, AJ got up from.” 

AJ’s path to becoming the unified heavyweight champion of the world wasn’t easy. He had to face the legendary Ukrainian fighter, Wladimir Klitschko. The right cross from Klitschko gave Joshua problems throughout the fight. Then came one perfectly timed devastating swing from Klitschko in the sixth round, which knocked Joshua down on the canvas. However, the British heavyweight boxer was able to recover from that and went on to win the fight.

And, who can forget the Andy Ruiz Jr. fight? As Hearn rightly pointed out, “Even vs Andy Ruiz, he kept getting up.” 

n all-out close-quarter brawl with the undersized heavyweight Ruiz proved costly for the two-time former unified heavyweight champion as he was knocked down twice by a barrage of punches. Nonetheless, he was still able to survive four more rounds until Ruiz’s onslaught was too much for AJ to take and the referee had to step in and stop the fight.

Last but not least is Joshua’s fight against Uysk. As Hearn said, “Oleksandr Usyk hit him with the kitchen sink and he never had him out. Look what happened to Tyson Fury, never saw AJ like that in that fight. AJ’s got a great chin.” 

Although Usyk put in a boxing clinic against Anthony Joshua, the two-time undisputed champion never had him hurt. Joshua was able to withstand the power punches and was able to go the distance with the Ukranian in both fights. Safe to say, the 34-year-old British boxer has been hit with some good shots in his career, and he did fare quite well.

Anthony Joshua dominated Tyson Fury during their only sparring session. 

According to reports, they crossed paths in 2010. Fury was already professional, chasing his dream of becoming a world champion. Joshua was an amateur working his way up the ranks, catching the attention of boxing trainers galore. They had a sparring session during their time at the Finchley Boxing Club.

When they stepped into the ring, Fury was 11-0. He had just come off a win against John McDermott in their rematch for the English heavyweight title. Fury was keen to stay sharp in the gym and offered anyone who could knock him out in sparring a Rolex. Joshua stepped into the ring. Although he did not stop Fury, The Gypsy King admitted that Joshua dominated him during their three rounds.

Tyson Fury meets with Anthony Joshua and vows to 'smash' heavyweight rival  Oleksandr Usyk - Manchester Evening News

READ: How Anthony Joshua has become boxing’s bad boy ahead of Daniel Dubois bout

“I went down to Finchley Boxing Club and I sparred with the ABA champion, Anthony Joshua. He’s red hot, him, he’s very good. To be honest with you, I thought to myself, ‘I’m only going to take it easy as he’s an amateur and we probably won’t spar again if I go mad.’

“He’s rushed out at me, he threw a one-two and a left hook and I slipped. I thought, ‘He’s not that good, I’m going to take my time.’ Then bash, he gives me a big uppercut right on the point of the chin. If I’d have had a bit of a weak chin like David Price, I’d have been knocked out for a month,” Fury said

Now, there is a narrative in place for them to finally face each other. Fury suffered the first loss of his career, losing a split decision to Oleksandr Usyk. Fury was almost knocked out in round nine, only to be saved by a standing eight count by the referee. The defeat meant he missed out on becoming the Undisputed Heavyweight Champion.

Fury will rematch Usyk on December 21. But it will not be undisputed after Usyk vacated the IBF belt. Joshua will face Dubois for the IBF belt. Dubois was elevated as a full champion. If Fury and Joshua win their next fights, they could box each other for undisputed. They have already agreed to fight each other regardless of the results during a FaceTime call. Based on Fury’s prior comments, he will be in for a tough ride.

“He’s very, very good and he’s only young, 20, watch out for that name Anthony Joshua he is one prospect for the future. He came out at me for three rounds and he gave me a beating – I’m not going to deny it, he gave me hell for leather for three rounds.

“I thought ‘Oh my god, an amateur is killing me.’ Being a professional, and I’ve been an amateur myself and fought all over the world, I slowed him down a bit with a few good body shots. The kid’s only 20, and I’m a handful myself, so for him to put up a good performance like that against a top prospect in me, I think he’s one for the future,” Joshua added

 

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