Fight Name: | Anthony Joshua vs. Daniel Dubois |
Fight Date: | 21 September 2024 |
Location: | Wembley Stadium, London, United Kingdom |
Titles: | IBF heavyweight title |
Fighter1: | Daniel Dubois |
Nickname1: | Dynamite |
Hometown1: | London, England |
Record1: | 21–2 (20 KO) |
Height1: | 6 ft 5 in |
Weight1: | 248.6 lb |
Style1: | Orthodox |
Recognition1: | IBF Heavyweight Champion TBRB No. 5 Ranked Heavyweight The Ring No. 6 Ranked Heavyweight |
Fighter2: | Anthony Joshua |
Nickname2: | AJ |
Hometown2: | Watford, England |
Record2: | 28–3 (25 KO) |
Height2: | 6 ft 6 in |
Weight2: | 252+1/2 lb |
Style2: | Orthodox |
Recognition2: | IBF/WBO No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight The Ring/TBRB No. 2 Ranked Heavyweight Former two-time unified heavyweight champion |
Result: | Dubois wins by knockout in round 5 |
Anthony Joshua vs. Daniel Dubois was a heavyweight professional boxing match contested between two-time former unified heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua and International Boxing Federation (IBF) heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois.[1] [2]
The bout took place on 21 September 2024 at Wembley Stadium in London, United Kingdom. Dubois defeated Joshua via knockout in the 5th round. [3] [4]
On 26 June 2024 Dubois was elevated to full IBF champion after Oleksandr Usyk vacated the belt.[5] It was announced that he would be making his first defence of the title against former two-time unified champion Anthony Joshua at Wembley Stadium in London on 21 September.
Dubois retained his title by defeating Joshua by KO in the fifth round after a dominant performance. The result was considered a major upset, as Dubois was the pre-betting underdog going into fight.[6] Dubois immediately started boxing aggressively, and knocked Joshua to the canvas at the end of the first round with a huge overhand right to Joshua's chin. Joshua was able to beat the count, but seemed to be on unsteady legs as the bell signalled the end of the first round. Momentum seemed to be in Dubois' favour, and he knocked Joshua down for the second time in round 3 with a left to the chin: Joshua's gloves had touched the canvas, but the referee allowed Dubois to continue unloading punches which eventually did trigger an official knockdown. The fourth round saw Joshua hit the canvas twice more, although one of those occasions was ruled a slip. In the fifth round, Joshua seemed to find a way back into the fight when he landed a right hand which seemed to force Dubois back into a corner. However, Dubois caught Joshua on the chin with a counter right hand as Joshua was attempting to land a right uppercut of his own, which sent Joshua sprawling to the canvas again, and this time unable to beat the count. The fight was called off after 59 seconds of the fifth round, with Dubois retaining his IBF heavyweight title via fifth round knockout.[7] [8] Over the five rounds, Dubois landed 79 of his 196 punches thrown with a connect rate of 40% and Joshua landed only 32 of his 117 punches thrown with a connect rate of 27%.[9]
The result was considered a major upset, as Dubois was the pre-betting underdog going into fight.[10] [11]
Weight Class | vs. | Method | Round | Time | Scorecards | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Main Card[12] | |||||||||
Heavyweight | Daniel Dubois (c) | def. | Anthony Joshua | KO | 5 (12) | 0:59 | |||
Middleweight | Hamzah Sheeraz | def. | Tyler Denny | 2 (12) | 2:05 | ||||
Light Heavyweight | Joshua Buatsi | def. | Willy Hutchinson | 12 (12) | (112–113, 117–108, 115–110) | ||||
Super Featherweight | Anthony Cacace | def. | Josh Warrington | UD | 12 (12) | (118–110, 117–111, 117–111) | |||
Light Middleweight | Josh Kelly | def. | Ishmael Davis | 12 (12) | (114–114, 115–113, 115–114) | ||||
Lightweight | Josh Padley | def. | Mark Chamberlain | 10 (10) | (95–93, 96–92, 96–92) |