

We did this poll in the March Mania fantasy tournament back in the early days of COVID 392491430943 years or nine months ago, AJ got a shock win there because the internet rules and there was some obvious ballot stuffing. And it’s not like Joshua is quite so one-dimensional as Deontay Wilder, either. It is heavyweight, and one fight can just end it more than in any other division in the sport. He’s a tall, heavy man who moves far more fluidly than Joshua, who looks like the better athlete, but is comparatively a bit stiff, which goes for basically all heavyweights against Fury. Is Fury too long, tall, crafty, skilled, and smart? Would AJ be able to get there and use his power to pull what would surely be an upset on the sports books? I hate to reduce it to that, and maybe you see something I don’t, but I have a hard time seeing Joshua, who is a good straight-up boxer, out-boxing a guy like Fury, who is a real odd duck of a fighter, with a skill set combined with size that I don’t know that we’ve ever seen before. I think both fighters genuinely want to do it, and I think the three promoters (Hearn for Joshua, Arum and Frank Warren for Fury) will almost shockingly easily put it together, because it’s really not that hard to get done when there’s (1) big money and (2) fully willing combatants.īut forget “when” for a moment and let’s just focus on the matchup.
Joshua vs fury full#
Now, listen, I honestly do think - here’s some rare full optimism - that Fury-Joshua will get done pretty easily whenever the time is right. Waiting for the COVID pandemic to more fully pass might be the play logistically. Even if Joshua didn’t have the mandatory due, everyone is going to want the ability to pack a stadium, whether it’s Wembley or a temporary construction in Saudi Arabia or Dubai or somewhere. The smart money is still on Joshua fighting WBO mandatory Oleksandr Usyk in the spring, Fury fighting someone around the same time, and maybe Fury-Joshua for all the marbles in late 2021. AJ and Eddie Hearn are talking about it, Fury is talking about it, Bob Arum is talking about it, the fans want it.īut as unfortunately laid out already, it’s not likely to be next. It’s all the talk after Joshua’s win Saturday over Kubrat Pulev. It’s been time.Īnyway, this week’s question deals with another thing that probably isn’t going to happen next, the much-desired undisputed heavyweight title fight between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua. And while I personally am ready to put more of the blame on the fighters themselves instead of just promoters and whatnot, no matter how you look at the situation, it’s time. It’s what they should be doing, political explanations and all other BS aside.

I think that indicates not just how close a call it is, but also a sincere frustration from boxing fans. 36 percent of you chose Spence, the WBC and IBF titlist who has probably scored the better wins at 147, however you slice it.īut this is what’s most interesting to me: 25 percent say to just call it even until they actually get in the ring and fight each other. 1 at 147 pounds now that we’ve seen Errol Spence Jr and Terence Crawford fight again.ģ9 percent of you went with “Bud” Crawford, the WBO titleholder who has also won belts at 135 and 140, and is considered by some to be the No. Last week’s Big Question covered a hypothetical matchup, sorta, as we asked who you have ranked No.
