What next for Joshua after humbling Dubois defeat?
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Two-time world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua is at a crossroads after his humbling defeat at the hands of fellow Briton Daniel Dubois at Wembley on Saturday.
The 34-year-old was demolished in a powerful display by a man seven years his junior.
It was a fourth career defeat for Joshua following losses to Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and 2022, and underdog Andy Ruiz Jr in 2019.
So with a long-awaited domestic blockbuster against Tyson Fury looking further away than ever, what happens now for one of Britainâs greatest ever heavyweight fighters?
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Bullied, outboxed and outthought â where did it go wrong?
Joshua arrived at Wembley after four consecutive victories, including an impressive knockout win over Francis Ngannou in March.
But he was dominated by IBF heavyweight champion Dubois, who has lost two of his 24 fights.
After being knocked down in the first round, Joshua hit the canvas several times more, including twice in the third, before the fight ended in the fifth.
âHe wasnât just knocked out â he was outboxed, outthought and outfought and, ultimately, bullied by the stronger, younger, fitter guy,â said former world champion Barry Jones on the 5 Live Boxing podcast.
âHe didnât recover from the first knockdown. He did well to get up but he was on borrowed time.â
Jones, a former featherweight, said no-one would be âshockedâ Dubois won but the bout was a âdemolition jobâ.
âJoshua looked so tentative,â he added. âHe made novice mistakes.â
Joshua told the podcast it was a âbad night at the officeâ.
âIt just wasnât my night,â he said. âI wasnât setting shots up. In a shootout like that you have to be sniper-esque. But when youâve been hit a few times youâre in survival mode.â
Former world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis said: âOne guy showed up, one guy didnât. Disappointed.â
âHe should walk awayâ â what next for Joshua?
In the immediate aftermath of the fight, Joshua said he wanted to continue in boxing.
Describing himself as a âwarriorâ, he added: âIf people want to see me fight, I will fight.â
Joshua won gold at the 2012 Olympics in his home city of London, and claimed his first world title eight years ago.
Saturdayâs fight was his 32nd as a professional â and afterwards hinted he had a rematch clause.
Fury, watching ringside, joked to a television camera that Joshuaâs defeat had cost him ÂŁ150m â the sort of fee he could have expected if the two were to fight.
In the meantime, Fury must focus on his rematch with Usyk in Saudi Arabia in December.
Joshua has also been linked with a bout against former world champion Deontay Wilder â but the 38-year-old Americanâs past two fights were defeats against Joseph Parker and Zhilei Zhang. Wilderâs trainer Malik Scott was at Wembley on Saturday night.
While the Briton ponders his options, Jones is clear on what he believes his next step should be.
Asked if Joshua should âwalk awayâ, the Welshman said: âI think he should. Heâs a credit to the sport and has reinvented sport in Britain in many ways. He made stadium fights seem the norm.
âHeâs got all that money, heâs still got his health, and heâll be a celebrity until the day he dies if thatâs what he wants.â
Joshuaâs long-time promoter Eddie Hearn said: âWeâve been here before, but the defeat by Ruiz was far more brutal.
âHeâs OK. Heâs gutted and kind of kicking himself about the mistakes he made. A lot of people around him are saying: âIt couldnât have gone any worse and he still could have won.â
âOf course heâs in the closing chapters of his career, thereâs no doubt about that, and if you start getting knocked out like that you certainly have to look at things.
âWe all know weâve seen the best AJ over the last year so itâs difficult to say that just because he got chinned by Dubois, thatâs it.â
âPhenomenal legacyâ â where does the defeat leave his reputation?
Joshua became the poster boy of British boxing after winning Olympic gold.
But despite a glittering career and unforgettable wins including his 11th-round knockout of Wladimir Klitschko in front of 90,000 fans at Wembley in April 2017, his reputation has been tarnished by subsequent defeats.
âHe is not the greatest heavyweight of all time and was never going to be because he didnât have the opposition around him to warrant that, but heâs been a good heavyweight,â Jones added. âHis legacy in the UK is phenomenal. For a while, he was the standout heavyweight in the division â but not for a long while.
âThe thing with boxers is â all the money is great but itâs your identity. What do you do if youâre not a boxer anymore?â
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