Anthony Joshua: Losing to ‘better man’ Oleksandr Usyk ‘mentally killed me’

Joshua lost his heavyweight titles to the undefeated Ukrainian in September

Alex Pattle
Combat Sports Correspondent
Thursday 06 January 2022 13:01 EST
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Anthony Joshua reflects on Oleksandr Usyk loss and previews rematch

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Anthony Joshua has opened up on the pain he felt after losing to Oleksandr Usyk last year, saying the defeat “mentally killed me”.

Usyk comfortably secured a unanimous-decision victory over Joshua in September, dethroning the WBO, WBA, IBF and IBO heavyweight champion in London.

Joshua has since triggered a rematch clause to face the undefeated Ukrainian again, likely in spring, and has spoken of his emotions from the fallout of his loss to Usyk.

“If I didn’t fight the best, I may not have lost,” Joshua told Sky Sports. “I know people have high expectations of me, and that’s why sometimes they’re shocked, and I have high expectations of myself as well.

“That’s why, when I lost the first time [to Andy Ruiz Jr in June 2019], I never made no excuses. But I have my reason, and I always felt like: ‘Cool, I took my loss, but I’ll get it back.’ I knew I’d get it back.

“So, I just brushed it off. But this one hurt, because I was 100 per cent – no problems, everything was cool, I went in there and I just lost to the better man that night.

“It hurt, but it gave me motivation to pull myself out of that position where mentally it killed me. I’ve fought my way back and I’ll redeem myself.”

Joshua’s stoppage defeat by Ruiz was the first of his professional career, and the Briton avenged it by outpointing the Mexican-American at the end of 2019 – regaining his titles in the process.

Joshua, 32, then knocked out Kubrat Pulev in late 2020, before taking on Usyk.

Southpaw Usyk outboxed Joshua with relative ease, and Joshua has admitted that a taunt from Tyson Fury contributed to “AJ”’s perhaps misguided tactics that night.

“I wanted to box with [Usyk] for 12 rounds, because there was always a stigma that I can’t box, [that] I’m a big, stiff bodybuilder,” Joshua said, referencing a jibe from his fellow British heavyweight.

“So I said: ‘Alright, cool, let me practise my boxing.’ I tried practising my boxing with Usyk.

“He won nine rounds, I won three. Next fight, I win four more rounds – I win.”

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