Tag: Anthony Joshua

  • Nigerian boarding house beating helped me- Anthony Joshua

    Nigerian boarding house beating helped me- Anthony Joshua

     

     

     

    Beating students in boarding school could be dubbed  bullying, but Nigerian born British boxer, Anthony Joshua  has identified the positive side of such experience, revealing that his experience in Nigerian boarding school made him stronger.

    Joshua will be Britain’s highest-profile fighter when he faces Wladimir Klitschko at Wembley next month, but he was very nearly lost to a boarding school in Nigeria.

    The IBF heavyweight champion, whose full name is Anthony Oluwafemi Olaseni Joshua, joined his Nigerian mother Yeta

    in the African nation for six months at the age of 11 and attended a school he expected to remain in.

    After a period that he believes taught him discipline, Joshua and his family returned to the UK, and he resumed the path that led to him being discovered as a promising amateur fighter who has since been groomed for exceptional success.

    Victory against Klitschko on April 29 would also earn Joshua the WBA title, and ensure that he surpasses David Haye’s record of being world heavyweight champion for three fights.

    The controversial and outspoken Tyson Fury’s struggle with depression meant he vacated his titles without making a single defence, while many refused to overlook the fact the London-born former world heavyweight champion Lennox

    Lewis represented Canada when he won Olympic gold.

    Against that backdrop, if he is not already, Joshua is on course to become Britain’s most popular heavyweight since the long-retired Frank Bruno. It could, however, have very easily been different had he remained elsewhere.

    ‘I thought I was going there (Nigeria) on holiday,’ said the 27-year-old who also has an Irish-Nigerian father, Robert.

    ‘I wasn’t prepared for it. It was a boarding school as well.

    ‘At the time you think ‘Why?’, but as you get older you think it was good that you experienced it. It was good for me.

    ‘I think my mum was trying to do some business there; maybe she had it in her mind. You don’t just randomly decide to move there. She might have been thinking about it, but didn’t inform us because we were kids. We stayed out there, not long, only six months.

    ‘It was a change and I thought I was going to go for the full course: 5.30am in the morning, up fetch your water, put like an iron in your water to warm it up. Your clothes had to be washed and ironed.

    ‘We got beaten. That’s my culture: beating. The government raises your kids now; parents aren’t allowed to raise their kids, because there is so much control about what you do or what you say. In the (Nigerian) culture it’s family, outside support; everyone has a role in raising the kids.’

    Joshua, who last visited Nigeria – where he still has family in Lagos – 13 years ago, is expected to fight the 41

    -year-old Klitschko in front of 90,000 fans at Wembley, the biggest boxing crowd in the UK since the Second World War.

    ‘I thought I was in heaven (when I returned to England),’ said Joshua, who continues to be linked with having a future fight in his mother’s homeland.

    ‘(But) when you are in sport you become a representation of people. I’ve got it (an outline of Nigeria) tattooed on my arm, so people can relate to me.

  • Anthony Joshua:My God will not put me in a position I cannot handle

    Anthony Joshua:My God will not put me in a position I cannot handle

    Battles Klitschko April 16

    Anthony Joshua is optimistic. The heavy weight titan is ready to fight Waldimir Klitschko in April 16. The Nigerian lad is not leaving any stone upturned as he said at a press conference where he met Klitschko face to face.
    “I am here for a reason . I believe God will not put me in a position I cannot handle. I will still be victorious,” Joshua boasted.
    Meanwhile, Joshua and Klitschko will fight for three belts in April at Wembley in London .A total of 90,000 spectators are expected to be in attendance for the title fight.The Ukrainian surrendered his
    world title on that occasion, though attempts at a re-match proved fruitless after several
    cancellations from the Fury camp. Klitschko has since stated his the upcoming bout with Joshua
    will be his ‘signature fight,’ and officially confirmed the clash would take place in the
    immediate aftermath of Joshua’s recent victory over Eric Molina.

  • Joshua retains title, to fight Klitschko in April

    Joshua retains title, to fight Klitschko in April

    Nigerian-born boxer Anthony Oluwafemi Joshua has retained the IBF World heavyweight title in emphatic style after knocking out American Eric Molina in the third round of their fight at the Manchester Arena and will face Wladimir Klitschko on 29 April at Wembley Stadium.

    The mega fight for the vacant WBA Super World heavyweight and IBF World heavyweight titles was announced when promoter Eddie Hearn told the 21000 fans that gathered to watch the fight.

    “I would like now to bring Wladimir Klitschko to the ring, and I am officially announcing the fight against Anthony Joshua at Wembley Stadium on 29 April.”

    Klitschko, who is 40 and his boxing record stands at 64 wins and 4 losses then asked the screaming fans if they wanted to see two Olympic champions in the ring before eyeballing the much younger Joshua who at 27 holds a 18 win, all knock out record. The response he got was a resounding yes.

    Klitschko won the Super-Heavyweight gold medal the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta while Joshua won the same event at the London games for Great Britain in 2012.