Where it all went wrong for Anthony Joshua

Daniel Dubois punches Anthony Joshua during the first round of their fight at Wembley
Dubois caught Joshua with an overhand right in the first round - Mark Robinson

Clearly Anthony Joshua’s ability to shift tickets and pay-per-view purchases is undimmed. A full house at Wembley is more than most fighters could ever dream of, even with Liam Gallagher as your support act.

Joshua’s continuing viability as a top-level heavyweight is rather more open to question after a comprehensive defeat in five rounds to Daniel Dubois. Here is how it all went wrong for Joshua in London in the IBF heavyweight title fight:

Knockdown 1, round one

Easy to play Captain Hindsight with the result already known, but perhaps Joshua’s decision to arrive late at Wembley and warm up away from the stadium betrayed a certain complacency. It was an odd start to the fight, where you would expect some caution. Joshua left himself open with a wider stance than necessary and towards the end of the first round was floored by a huge overhand right which caught him flash on the chin. Joshua was up well before the count but in truth he never really recovered.

Anthony Joshua after he was knocked down by Daniel Dubois in the first round
Joshua on the canvas at the end of the first round - PA/Bradley Collyer

Knockdown 2, round three

A visibly shaky Joshua hangs on throughout round two but is down once more in the following round, again towards its conclusion so is saved by the bell again.

This time his legs gave way after a couple of jabs, a shot to the body then a left hook from Dubois. Joshua leans then sits on the ropes to steady himself but is paying the price for a curious defensive strategy, keeping his gloves noticeably low.

Anthony Joshua is knocked down in round three by Daniel Dubois
Joshua was knocked down again in round three - Getty Images/Richard Pelham

Knockdown 3, round four

It briefly looks as if the fight has been waved off by referee Marcus McDonnell but he is in fact ruling what looked another knockdown as a Joshua slip.

Anthony Joshua gets knocked down by Daniel Dubois in the IBF World Heavy weight bout at Wembley Stadium
Joshua is down again - PA/Bradley Collyer

No doubting that the Olympic champion’s legs have gone though, this time he hits the canvas after stumbling without a huge amount of new provocation. The damage has already been done.

Anthony Joshua on the canvas against Daniel Dubois
Joshua simply never recovered from those early knockdowns - Getty Images/Richard Pelham

Unearned showboating

Some unusual body language crept in as the fight progressed, Joshua appeared to invite Dubois to take a seat at the end of the fourth round and stuck his tongue out at his opponent.

Perhaps a desperate attempt to win the psychological battle at least, because the fight was clearly getting away from him after the opening minutes. There were reportedly words exchanged with someone in the crowd at one point too, which does not suggest the sort of laser focus required for a challenge of this magnitude.

Knockdown 4, round five

Some sense that an improbable comeback might be on the cards, with Joshua still wobbling but landing a decent shot at the end of the fourth round. Then an even more promising flurry during the fifth, culminating in a powerful uppercut, but this would be his undoing. Attempting to capitalise on a seeming momentum shift, Joshua leans forwards then is caught unexpectedly by a jab which floors him.

Daniel Dubois knocks out Anthony Joshua in the IBF World Heavy weight bout at Wembley Stadium, London. Picture date: Saturday September 21, 2024
Down goes Joshua - PA/Bradley Collyer

This time he cannot get up. After the fight his manager Eddie Hearn salutes Joshua’s spirit but concedes he got greedy at this critical moment.

Anthony Joshua is counted out by referee Marcus McDonnell during the IBF World Heavyweight Title fight between Daniel Dubois and Anthony Joshua, on the Riyadh Season - Wembley Edition card at Wembley Stadium on September 21, 2024 in London, England
Joshua did not make it beyond round five - Getty Images/Richard Pelham

Post fight

Anthony Joshua (R) and Daniel Dubois speak after their IBF World Heavyweight Title fight, in which Dubois won by knock out, as part of the Riyadh Season - Wembley Edition card at Wembley Stadium on September 21, 2024 in London, England
Dubois retained his IBF heavyweight title - Getty Images/Mark Robinson

After the regrettable loss of temper following his rematch defeat to Oleksandr Usyk, Joshua perhaps wisely stays diplomatic after the fight.

“It is what it is,” he concludes, unhelpfully, and does not seem overly concerned about the emphatic nature of his defeat. Hearn says he is certain he will invoke a rematch with Dubois but he is more bullish than the majority of pundits and fans after another chastening night for Joshua.

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