Fight Name: | Rage on the Red Sea |
Fight Date: | 20 August 2022 |
Location: | King Abdullah Sports City, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia |
Titles: | WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO, and vacant The Ring heavyweight titles |
Fighter1: | Oleksandr Usyk |
Nickname1: | "The Cat" |
Hometown1: | Simferopol, Crimea, Ukraine |
Record1: | 19–0 (13 KO) |
Height1: | 6 ft 3 in |
Weight1: | 221+1/2 lb |
Style1: | Southpaw |
Recognition1: | WBA (Super), IBF, WBO and IBO Heavyweight Champion The Ring No. 2 ranked pound-for-pound fighter The Ring/TBRB No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight 2-division world champion |
Fighter2: | Anthony Joshua |
Nickname2: | "AJ" |
Hometown2: | Watford, Hertfordshire, England |
Record2: | 24–2 (22 KO) |
Height2: | 6 ft 6 in |
Weight2: | 244+1/2 lb |
Style2: | Orthodox |
Recognition2: | IBF No. 3 Ranked Heavyweight WBA/WBO No. 4 Ranked Heavyweight The Ring/TBRB No. 2 Ranked Heavyweight Former two-time heavyweight champion |
Result: | Usyk wins via 12–round split decision (113–115, 115–113, 116–112) |
Oleksandr Usyk vs Anthony Joshua II, billed as Rage on the Red Sea, was a heavyweight professional boxing match between WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, and IBO heavyweight champion, Oleksandr Usyk, and former heavyweight champion, Anthony Joshua. The bout took place on 20 August 2022 at King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.[1] Usyk won the 12-round bout by split decision, with scores of 116–112 and 115–113 in his favour, and 115–113 in favour of Joshua.[2] Joshua was outboxed over the twelve-round distance as he suffered the second defeat of his professional career, losing via unanimous decision with judges' scorecards of 117–112, 116–112 and 115–113 all in Usyk's favour. The result meant that Usyk became only the second boxer ever, after Evander Holyfield, to win unified world titles in both the cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions.[4]
Four days after the fight, on 29 September, it was announced by Usyk's promoter Alexander Krassyuk that a one-sided rematch clause which had been specified in the fight contract had "already been activated in principle, from the side of Joshua." Krassyuk noted that Usyk relished the prospect of squaring off against Joshua twice: "So I remember when we discussed with Oleksandr the issue of rematch, he was delighted and said 'Wow, cool, I will beat Anthony [<nowiki/>[[sic]]] twice.'" Regarding the venue of the rematch, Usyk made it known that he hoped it would take place in his native country of Ukraine, saying, "I would love to have the rematch at Olimpiyskiy Stadium in Kyiv." However, Joshua's promoter, Eddie Hearn, stated that Ukraine was a "very unlikely" venue, as he wanted to maximise income: "I think it will be international or the UK, I would think it would be in the UK."[5]
With the Russian invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, a potential Usyk–Joshua rematch was thrown into doubt. In the days following the start of the invasion, Usyk posted on his social media channels to confirm that he had returned to Ukraine, and to plead with Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop the invasion, with one video captioned "No War".[6] On 2 March, Usyk confirmed in a video interview with American news network CNN that he had taken up arms and joined a territorial defence battalion in Ukraine. Regarding his professional boxing career, Usyk said, "I really don't know when I'm going to be stepping back in the ring. My country and my honour are more important to me than a championship belt."[7] In late March, it was reported that Usyk would be leaving Ukraine to begin preparations for the rematch with Joshua.[8] [9] Usyk revealed his decision to leave his homeland and refocus his efforts on boxing was supported by Mayor of Kyiv and former heavyweight champion Vitali Klitschko, as well as his younger brother Wladimir Klitschko, also a former heavyweight champion who had been defeated by Anthony Joshua in 2017.[10]
On 19 June 2022, it was officially announced that Usyk would be facing Joshua in a rematch in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on 20 August. The country put up a purse of roughly $77 million for the fighters to split through its sovereign wealth fund, Public Investment Fund.[11] The fight would mark the first defence of Usyk's world heavyweight titles, while it would be Joshua's twelfth consecutive world heavyweight title fight as he attempted to become a three-time world heavyweight champion.[12] Following Tyson Fury's decision to vacate The Ring magazine heavyweight title on 13 August, it was announced that the now-vacant title would also be on the line, in addition to Usyk's world titles.[13]
Despite Joshua's improved performance compared to his first loss to Usyk,[14] [15] the latter successfully defended his belts.
According to New York Times statistics, Joshua landed 37 body punches compared to 15 in their first fight.[11] Overall, however, Usyk outperformed Joshua, landing 170 of 712 punches, compared with 124 of 492 for Joshua.[11] Usyk also established new records for punches landed by an Anthony Joshua opponent (170) and most punches landed on Joshua in a single round (39 punches in the 10th round).[16]
The split decision was controversial and surprised the majority of viewers, who had expected a unanimous verdict for Usyk.[17] The Ring magazine called Glenn Feldman's scorecard "horrible".[15] Among those criticizing his judging were promoter Lou DiBella and boxing trainer Teddy Atlas.[18]
The fight was well received. The Ring called it "excellent",[15] The Sporting News called it "thrilling",[19] Sky Sports called it "spectacular".[20]
Immediately after the fight, Joshua threw the title belts out of the ring and started to walk out of the arena, but came back and once in control of the microphone gave an emotional speech, talking about his life, fighting, Ukraine, and praising Usyk. After Joshua was done, Usyk said he wanted to fight Tyson Fury or, otherwise, he might not box again.[15] [21] He also dedicated his win to his country "Ukraine, Armed Forces of Ukraine" and everyone who was defending his country.[22] [11]
In the post-fight press conference, Joshua broke down in tears.[21] [23]
In early September 2022, details of the potential undisputed title fight with Fury started to surface. Usyk stated that Fury was not retired and was interested in the match.[20] Fury's co-promoter, Bob Arum, stated that December 17, 2022, was discussed as the potential date of the fight. However, Usyk countered that the fight was unlikely to be held in 2022 due to his "old traumas which have resurfaced".[24] [25]
Weight Class | vs | Method | Round | Time | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heavyweight | Oleksandr Usyk (c) | def | Anthony Joshua | SD | 12/12 | |||
Heavyweight | Filip Hrgović | def | Zhang Zhilei | UD | 12/12 | |||
Light-heavyweight | Callum Smith | def | Mathieu Bauderlique | TKO | 4/12 | |||
Cruiserweight | Badou Jack | def | Richard Rivera | SD | 10/10 | |||
Heavyweight | Andrew Tabiti | def | James Wilson | 5/8 | ||||
Super-bantamweight | Ramla Ali | def | Crystal Garcia Nova | TKO | 1/8 | |||
Light-heavyweight | Daniel Lapin | def | Jozef Jurko | UD | 8/8 | |||
Super-middleweight | Benjamin Whittaker | def | Petar Nosić | 6/6 | ||||
Lightweight | Bader Samreen | def | Fuad Tarverdi | TKO | 4 (4) | 1:16 | ||
Light-welterweight | Ziyad Almaayouf | def | Jose Alatorre | 1 (4) | 2:55 | |||
Welterweight | Traycho Georgiev | def | Money Kicks | 4/4 |
Country | Broadcaster | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Free-to-air | Cable/Pay TV | Stream | PPV | |
Ukraine | Suspilne 2+2[26] | YouTube [27] | ||
United Kingdom | Sky Sports Boxing YouTube (undercard) | Sky Sports Action Sky Sports Arena (undercard) | Sky Sports Box Office [28] | |
Worldwide | DAZN |
On 25 September 2021 at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, England, Anthony Joshua first faced Oleksandr Usyk, his WBO mandatory challenger, in a defence of his unified world heavyweight titles. Despite entering the bout as the reigning champion and the pre-fight betting favourite,[2]