World Heavyweight Champ Joshua Wary Of Ruiz Threat In Debut US Bout
31st May 2019
The Londoner hopes Saturday's bout in New York will edge him closer to an eventual superfight against either WBC champion Deontay Wilder or fellow Briton Tyson Fury

- Anthony Joshua insists he is not underestimating Mexican opponent Andy Ruiz as he prepares to defend his unified world heavyweight crown on US soil for the first time at Madison Square Garden on Saturday
- British star Joshua is an overwhelming favorite to extend his unbeaten record against Ruiz, a late replacement for Jarrell Miller, who withdrew from the bout after failing three drug tests in April
- Bookmakers are offering odds of 1/20 for Joshua to make Ruiz the 23rd victim of a professional career which has seen him accumulate the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO heavyweight belts since his gold medal at the 2012 Olympics
NEW YORK, United States- Anthony Joshua insists he is not underestimating Mexican opponent Andy
Ruiz as he prepares to defend his unified world heavyweight crown on US soil
for the first time at Madison Square Garden on Saturday.
British star Joshua
is an overwhelming favorite to extend his unbeaten record against Ruiz, a late
replacement for Jarrell Miller, who withdrew from the bout after failing three
drug tests in April.
Bookmakers are
offering odds of 1/20 for Joshua to make Ruiz the 23rd victim of a professional
career which has seen him accumulate the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO heavyweight
belts since his gold medal at the 2012 Olympics.
But Joshua insists
he is paying no attention to the bookmakers as he prepares for a fight that he
describes as an upset waiting to happen.
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"This is a
banana skin fight for me in every aspect," Joshua said Thursday.
"I've got to take Andy deadly seriously, I don't overlook him at all.
"I've got to
respect him and his whole team. And I really respect the fact that he put his
name on the dotted line to take this challenge.
"No matter what
the odds or the bookmakers are saying, Andy's going to come in here and give me
a real good fight and cause problems. It's down to me to outsmart and outmuscle
him."
Joshua, who has
delivered 21 knockouts in his 22 victories, will, however, be determined to
deliver an explosive performance as he aims to build a broader following in the
United States on his American debut.
The Londoner hopes
Saturday's bout in New York will edge him closer to an eventual superfight
against either WBC champion Deontay Wilder or fellow Briton Tyson Fury.
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Fight fans have been
left frustrated by the failure of any of the world's three top heavyweights --
Joshua, Wilder and Fury -- to make a bout in the wake of Wilder and Fury's
spectacular draw in Los Angeles last December which reignited interest in
boxing's prestige division.
The prospect of a
swift unification bout between Joshua and Wilder receded further on Wednesday,
when WBC champion Wilder said he had agreed a rematch with Cuba's Luis Ortiz
later this year.
That deal makes it
unlikely that Joshua will face Wilder in a ring anytime before 2020, although
the Briton on Thursday said he had not given up hope that the fight could still
happen this year.
- 'Don't rob the fans' -
"I don't need
to be negative towards Deontay Wilder. Good luck to him, it's his career, he
knows what he's doing," Joshua said.
"But I'm a fan
of the sport. Let's not rob the fans of a good fight. I'm a fan and I feel like
I'm robbing my fans of a good fight.
"If he wants to
come and see us, he's more than welcome. Hopefully he'll come to his senses
before a date and a venue is announced for Ortiz.
"But if it's
not Wilder, I'll have to go somewhere else. What can I do?"
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Ruiz, whose lone
loss in his 33 fights came in a majority decision loss against New Zealand's
Joseph Parker in 2016, is adamant that he has the guile to pull off an ambush
on Saturday.
"I've been
waiting for this opportunity all my life," Ruiz said. "I've been
training so hard. I think it came at the perfect time. I'm ready to be the
first Mexican heavyweight champion of the world.
"I don't have
nothing bad to say about Anthony Joshua, he's a champion, I respect him. But
inside the ring there's going to be no respect. No fans, no friends. It's going
to be a helluva fight."