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Tank Davis’ Camp Accuses Lomachenko of Avoiding Unification Fight

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Image: Tank Davis' Camp Accuses Lomachenko of Avoiding Unification Fight

Gervonta “Tank” Davis’ coach, Kenny Ellis, took to social media to criticize Vasiliy Lomachenko for his lack of motivation to return to the ring for a unification fight with the Baltimore native.

Ellis snarled at Lomachenko, saying he should retire if he’s not motivated to fight Tank Davis (30-0, 28 KOs). Interestingly, Tank’s motivation to fight Lomachenko was nonexistent from 2018 to 2023; it’s only now that it’s suddenly surfaced.

“If Lomachenko can’t get motivated by being given a chance to become the ‘Face of Boxing,’ his team needs to hang his gloves where he can never reach them again. He’s done,” coach Kenny Ellis said on social media, responding to reports that Vasiliy Lomachenko has told his manager Egis Klimas that he’s not motivated to fight Gervonta ‘Tank’ Davis right now.

Loma’s manager, Egis Klimas, did not rule out a fight between Lomachenko and Tank, saying only that he did not want to fight until the end of the year, when the fight was scheduled anyway.

Yesterday Klimas told Steve Kim X“Loma is not in the mood [to fight Tank Davis] “right now. There’s no motivation right now.”

Some fans believe Tank Davis’ interest in the Lomachenko fight comes because he’s now 36 and showing signs of aging. In other words, Gervonta and his team, with their wolf instincts, have spotted a lame prey that he believes they can roll off the hills and hunt down.

Interestingly, Gervonta’s fans were quick to jump on Lomachenko, calling him a fight ducker, but they didn’t mention the years when Tank refused to fight him. It’s like they have amnesia about past events.

Fans forget about Tank’s Ducking

What Tank Davis did is a classic move in the sport. Avoid a unsafe fighter in his prime; wait until he’s aged, then push for the fight. That’s the way it is in the sport, and it’s pathetic.

Many fans have abandoned the sport and focused on watching MMA because at least in this sport the most essential fights happen when they are supposed to, not for years until one of the fighters starts showing signs of finishing.

It’s clear what Tank Davis and his team did to Lomachenko. Now, given their advantage, they bark that he won’t take Tank effortless.

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    July 20, 2024 at 11:39 pm

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Boxing

Daniel Dubois Debunks the Not-So-Humble Anthony Joshua ‘Myth’

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Anthony Joshua knocked out by Daniel Dubois

Daniel Dubois literally crushed Anthony Joshua, knocking down the former world champion five times to earn a convincing victory.

Joshua never took part in the fight and lost in front of 96,000 spectators, while Dubois completely dominated the 2012 Olympic gold medalist.

Dubois punched Joshua in the jaw early on but the Watford man never recovered. Joshua showed he is far from his humble self as he struggled to cope with the ongoing defeat.

Tongues out, chest-thumping and laughing, the younger, better man completely put Joshua in his place. The victory proves Joshua was never the British “Muhammad Ali” as Eddie Hearn claimed.

Joshua vs. Dubois preliminary fight results:

Hamzah Sheraz defeated the much smaller and less advanced Tyler Denny in a brutal two-round fight.

Sheeraz was in full control of the situation and got the job done in second gear.

Joshua Buatsi He knocked down Willy Hutchinson twice in a decision that didn’t tell the whole story.

The two fought a fierce battle in which both were injured, and the fight undoubtedly deserves a rematch.

Despite the shooting, the result should not have been in doubt.

Yet somehow one of the judges awarded the win to Hutchinson 113-112, despite two rounds being 10-8 and a point deduction in Buatsi’s favour.

Buatsi correctly accepted the 117-108 and 115-110 verdicts along with the other judges, but only one of those scores was close to reality.

Hutchinson has proven he is world class and could fight for a second fight, which could be a good sign for O2.

Anthony Cacace defended his featherweight title against the ever-stubborn Josh Warrington.

In what was a congested fight for most, Cacace kept Warrington at bay and thwarted the Leeds man’s usual spoiling tactics.

After twelve rounds Cacace won on points 118-110 and twice 117-111.

In the second preliminary fight, Joshua vs. Dubois, in the super welterweight division Josh Kelly won a decision over eventual replacement Ishmael Davis. Kelly seemed to be on top for most of the fight, opening up a gap in the first few sessions.

However, the scores were much closer than expected, as Davis came out powerful in the final few rounds. One judge even scored it a 114-114 draw. The other two saw it for Kelly at 115-113 and 115-114.

Josh Padley surprised Wembley in the opening fight, knocking down and defeating Turki Alalshikh favourite Mark Chamberlain.

Padley, an electrician who took two months off to compete in the fight, used a smothering tactic to keep Chamberlain at bay. Slow in the fight, Padley knocked Chamberlain down before claiming a decision victory.

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Shock and awe as Daniel Dubois balmy on Anthony Joshua’s heels

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IBF heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois knocked down Anthony Joshua four times and crushed his fellow Londoner in five incredible rounds at Wembley Stadium.

Dubois was in control, but moments before the fight was stopped, Joshua cracked Dubois and hurt him with three powerful right hooks. Then, when Dubois threw two of his own in return, Joshua fell face down, his dreams of becoming a three-time heavyweight champion vanishing into the London air after 59 seconds of the fifth round.

“Aren’t you having fun?” shouted a delighted Dubois, who now has a record of 22-2 (20 KOs).

Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk had already been in the ring for months before their rematch in Saudi Arabia in December, and Dubois threw the rest of the heavyweights into the blender by catching Joshua off guard in such emphatic fashion.

Joshua (28-4, 25 KOs) showed heart, courage and determination, but refused to be deterred by the disastrous start.

In front of an electrifying crowd and tens of thousands of fans, Dubois – the titleholder – took on the unusual position of the challenger coming out first, similar to what happened earlier in the evening when Hamzah Sheeraz came out to stop Tyler Denny.

Dubois landed the first good right hook of the fight, supporting himself with a brutal, powerful jab from the outset.

Joshua landed an overhand right with a minute left in the session. Dubois looked out of the ring after receiving a crushing right hook and before Joshua connected with a powerful right hook that floored the former Olympic champion.

Joshua tried to stay serene, but Dubois surged forward, caught Joshua with a powerful right and began pummeling him with both hands.

Wembley fell into a stunned silence. Joshua looked heavy-legged and forced to hold on. Dubois snapped AJ’s head back with a punch, and Dubois, a man whose temperament had so often been questioned, looked uplifted, confident and in charge.

The key was the punch. Dubois was able to time Joshua and get a punch in when they both threw at the same time. Tardy in the second round, Dubois took a shot because he was a little overconfident, but Dubois came out of the blocks again in the third round.

Jab, double jab, Dubois landing long punches. And he landed a right hand, too. Joshua tried to get some life back into his legs. He looked for the right hook, the punch that almost landed Wladimir Klitschko on a similarly intoxicating night at Wembley in 2017.

That night Joshua was also transferred to the canvas, but this time the ending was completely different.

Tardy in the session, Dubois surged forward. He landed meaty punches, and Joshua began to fall apart. His trembling legs sent him staggering back toward the ropes, and Dubois pounced.

Joshua, back on the ropes, covered up, but Dubois kept going. Sensing his moment, he threw punches with both hands, and Joshua fell once more.

He touched the ground with his glove, which started the countdown, but referee Marcus McDonnell allowed the fight to continue and ordered his colleague to stop, and Dubois showed no mercy.

Joshua didn’t recover until the fourth round began. He was on the ground almost from Dubois’ first punches, and when Joshua slid to the mat, many thought the fight was over – but Joshua got back to his feet. There, he staggered through the fight, clinging to his chance to become a three-time heavyweight champion.

Joshua was very brave and courageous. He stubbornly accepted a nonchalant expression on his face, but he was in a terrible state, having huge shots. Somehow he survived this stormy fourth.

He lost in the first, second and fourth rounds.

“Fucking warrior spirit,” AJ’s trainer, Ben Davison, said between rounds.

“One hundred percent,” Joshua replied.

“Start mixing it up,” Davison urged.

Joshua looked relatively keen early in the fifth and landed a powerful right hook that wobbled Dubois. He landed a few more punches on Dubois, and as Joshua got greedy, Dubois crushed the charging Joshua with a devastating right hook, then finished him with another right—the kind of devastating finisher that will happily go down in the annals of time and highlight reels alongside the devastating punches landed by Jack Johnson, Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano, George Foreman, and Mike Tyson.

Joshua lunged forward, face first. Marcus McDonnell counted him out, and the crowd rose as one, shocked and horrified by the violence they were witnessing.

Unbelievable. This turned into a heavyweight shootout for the ages.

Dubois, 27, who has fought just 90 rounds in competition and lost to Joe Joyce and Usyk, shook up Anthony Joshua. He shook up the status quo of the division. And yes, he shook up the boxing world.

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Boxing

Anthony Joshua vs Daniel Dubois Live Score & Analysis

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Anthony Joshua returns to Wembley Stadium in London for the fourth time to face IBF heavyweight world champion Daniel Dubois on Saturday (DAZN PPV).

Joshua (28-3, 25 KOs) from Watford, England, is a two-time heavyweight champion. He won the IBF title in 2016 by defeating Charles Martin, became a three-belt unified champion by defeating Wladimir Klitschko in ESPN’s Fight of the Year in 2017, and in 2018 he took the WBO title from Joseph Parker.

Dubois (21-2, 20 KOs), from London, is a former IBF interim champion who was elevated to full champion after Oleksandr Usyk vacated the belt in June to allow for a rematch with Tyson Fury.

Also on the card, Joshua Buatsi will face Willy Hutchinson in a 12-round fight for the vacant WBO interim featherlight heavyweight title. Buatsi (18-0, 13 KOs), from Accra, Ghana, now based in London, has won 13 of his first 15 fights by knockout but has gone the distance in his last three, including a dominant performance against Dan Azeez in February.

Hutchinson (18-1, 13 KOs), from Carstairs, Scotland, was quickly rising through the ranks of the UK boxing world until March 2021, when he lost by fifth-round TKO to Lennox Clarke. Hutchinson recovered and won his next five fights.

Stay here for live scores and analysis from London.

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