Rags-to-riches Ngannou targets Joshua heavyweight shock
7th March 2024
The main event is expected to begin at approximately 2am on Saturday.
- Ngannou has crammed a lot into his 37 years.
- The child of a single mother, he had to walk six miles to school and from the age of 10 he shovelled sand from open quarries, his meagre income helping to buy food and books.
- He crossed the unforgiving Sahara, travelled through Nigeria, Niger and Algeria, Morocco before crossing over to Spain where he was promptly jailed for two months for making an illegal crossing.
Francis Ngannou once toiled in a sand mine, scavenged for
food to avoid starvation and slept rough in a car park, so facing former
two-time world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua on Friday is just another
stop on his epic rags-to-riches journey.
"I've had a lot of experience in life," the
softly-spoken Cameroon-born fighter says with characteristic understatement. "I've
built my fighting spirit as high as anyone else."
Ngannou has crammed a lot into his 37 years.
The child of a single mother, he had to walk six miles to
school and from the age of 10 he shovelled sand from open quarries, his meagre
income helping to buy food and books.
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"It was work meant for adults, but we didn't have any
options," said Ngannou of his back-breaking labours which paid less then
$2 a day.
"Sometimes I didn't have a pen or a notebook. Sometimes
no shoes, my uniform was torn. I looked crappy. I didn't like my life, I felt
like I missed my childhood."
In 2012, at the age of 26 and fired by dreams of becoming a
professional boxer, Ngannou, now boasting a towering physique carved from his
brutal work in the sand pits, made a break for Europe and a better life.
Crammed with others into the back of a pick-up truck, he
crossed the unforgiving Sahara, travelled through Nigeria, Niger and Algeria
before reaching Morocco.
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Then, after half a dozen failed attempts, he finally made it
over the Mediterranean to Spain where he was promptly jailed for two months for
making an illegal crossing.
Completing a trip of around 5,000km, he took a train to
Paris, lived in a car park before local boxing coach Didier Carmont found him a
place to live and a gym in which to train.
Despite an early fascination with Mike Tyson, Ngannou
graduated towards Mixed Martial Arts and in 2021 became the UFC world
heavyweight champion.
Many scoffed when he opted to make his boxing debut against
world champion Tyson Fury in the so-called "Battle of the Baddest" in
October last year.
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The doubters were silenced, however, when Ngannou sent Fury to the canvas in the third round before losing only on a controversial split decision.
His reputation and bank balance soared. He was paid $10
million for his night's work, a windfall which has helped the once shoeless
Cameroonian purchase a luxurious home in Las Vegas.
On Friday, he will return to Riyadh to face 34-year-old
Joshua whose career could be fatally holed if he loses.
"Of course I can knock Joshua out," said Ngannou.
"I believe if I land on anyone, I will knock them out. The question is how
to land? That's the hardest thing."
Joshua, a former unified WBO, WBA and IBF heavyweight
champion, comes into Friday's 10-round fight on the back of three successive
wins.
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Before that, however, he lost back-to-back fights with
Oleksandr Usyk who will fight Fury for the undisputed heavyweight title in
Saudi in May.
"This Friday it's going to go down, so I can't wait for
the opportunity to show my skills and combat this person who thinks he can
knock me out," Joshua said of Ngannou.
"I believe I can knock him out. Definitely. I would
love to knock him out and make a statement."
"He has to be ready for the shots which are coming his way because I'm a man who will be standing in front of him, bringing him a lot of hell.
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