As Anthony Joshua and Charles Martin prepare for their clash on Saturday night, we have a whole bunch of information for you here, including a collection of pre-fight quotes, photos from their media workout, a Joshua vs. Martin tale of the tape, and then an even larger tale of the tape and infographic on the bout and the fighters.
Fight Week Quotes, Q&A Interviews
Anthony Joshua
Many thanks for you guys taking the time to join the call. Eddie mentioned some great figures and great achievements that we have accomplished from the time I turned professional, and also the fact that the excitement of the heavyweight division is back and itās an honor to be involved in it, especially here in the UK. And sometimes in heavyweight boxing the UKās been overlooked, but I think right now people are looking at us and starting to respect the division a lot more. Moving forward with the fight against Charles Martin, as you said, itās a 96 percent –or 94 percent knockout ratio between us both, but the end of the game for both of us is, obviously, hit without getting hit, but someone will go and someone though has to be removed, and Iām very confident on Saturday night that wonāt be me. And I think the rewards of that becoming IBF Heavyweight Champion of the World. And why Iām so content is that God willing I win this championship, I then want to go on to unify the division. So, thatās why I keep my head in the game and stay focused and just look at it as another task on my checklist.
Question
It seems that this is coming a little bit quicker than maybe you or Eddie or anybody on your team anticipated, the opportunity to fight Martin. Can you address how soon this has come in your career compared to when maybe you thought it would arrive, the opportunity to fight for one of these titles?
Anthony Joshua
Yeah, I think we were looking at 12 monthsā time. And at the same time it is about my development, because youāre only as good as your last fight. So, when the opportunity came, what I was doing, I was looking at various opponents, the majority of them American opponents as well, who are some in the top 10 and some who (fought) at a world level or contending at world level. And theyāre very tough opponents as well, but moving forward April 9, I wanted to get a good contender and to show that my progression from the Dillian Whyte fight. I fought a fight that I didnāt need to, but I still swam the waters, and I came out on top. So, I wanted to show I could go in with, you know, good contenders and defeat them with ease. And when Charles Martin came around, as I said, and Iāll say it again, I took away the fact that heās IBF Heavyweight Champion of the World. And when I look at Charles Martin as an individual itās not that I see weaknesses, but I feel that Iām the better man, and they always say the better man will win on the night, and I feel confident of winning, and I feel the fact that the IBF Championship comes with it gives it that much more kudos and why there is a lot more attention around it. But, Iāll leave the attention and, you know, all the hype and the building of the fight thatās down to Eddie, the team, but when I look at the fight itself itās no problem. Iāll take this fight with both hands, and thatās how I kind of managed to secure my confidence moving forward with this heavyweight championship fight.
Question
Anthony, when you look at the landscape, the British boxing scene is thriving. Youāll have a heavyweight title if you win. Tyson Fury, no disrespect, is clearly the recognized champion in the weight class with two titles and the victory against Klitschko. And thereās other, big names in the heavyweight division that fight out of the UK. Would it be good for you to match up with some of these other guys over there, Fury and Haye in particular?
Anthony Joshua
It has to happen. It is a big deal, because I look at it like when you go back in history, Foreman fought Ali. Ali fought Frazier. Then you have Tyson fighting Holyfield. Holyfield and Lewis. And then, youāve just got the UK heavyweight: so Haye, Price, Fury, myself. Every division has to mix it up. So, if moving forward I get the victory, it just adds a bit of fuel to that fire, and these fights are going to happen sooner than later. So, I canāt shy away from it. Iāve got to prepare myself. And how I look at Charles Martin is I train for Charles Martin, but Iāve got to train for 10 fights ahead of Charles Martin because itās only going to get tougher, and thatās why I have to have the confidence. My mind says, āI can beat Charles Martin because I want to go to that level above as well.ā
Question
Eddie, could you address that?
Eddie Hearn
Anthony Joshua against David Haye is probably the bigger of the two fights, but Joshua against Tyson Fury and a unification fight between two Brits, I mean, you know, itās (huge).
Question
A fight between British boxers for the heavyweight championship has never happened, right?
Eddie Hearn
No, no, no, no it hasnāt. And, you know, it might never happen again. So, absolutely huge. As Anthony said, 100 percent of our eyes are on Saturday night, but at the same time we know the rewards, and the rewards come through a huge fight. And Tyson Fury is a character that would take the Anthony Joshua fight at the drop of hat, and we feel exactly the same way.
Question
How nervous are you, Eddie, about Saturday given that you brought up Anthony from day one in the pros? And I know this is a little sooner than you expected. You know, the fighter will do his job. But is it difficult for you to sit there with the nerves watching whatās unfolding in the ring?
Eddie Hearn
Yeah, Iām nervous, but Iām so excited. I mean, this is what boxing is — this is what the sport is all about. You know, weāre rolling the dice, and weāre doing it quicker than many would do it, but weāre doing it because Anthony Joshua makes the ultimate call. The team — he will get his opinions from myself and the training team, who all feel he can beat Charles Martin, but the man who has the ultimate say is Anthony Joshua, and, luckily, heās a very bright individual who believes he can beat Charles Martin. It doesnāt matter if itās Saturday night or 12 monthsā time, when you get the opportunity to fight for the World Heavyweight title in your backyard, you have to take it and especially when youāre a favorite going into the fight. I mean, the odds are ludicrous. You know, this is a close fight. This is a close fight where anything can happen, but we believe Anthony Joshua is a special talent. Itās certainly quicker than we expected, but look at the rainbow at the end. Anthony Joshua becomes the Heavyweight Champion of the World, in my opinion, becomes the biggest star in world boxing, and you will see when it happens. You might say, āWell, thatās a bit of an exaggeration.ā Trust me, itās not. This boy has got it all. But, we know how dangerous the fight is. We know how dangerous heavyweight boxing is. And the beauty of it is that these guys are fearless. Theyāve not been around long enough to know about defeats, etc. You know, Charles Martinās never been hit on the chin. Anthony Joshua has. And the Dillian Whyte fight will end up being a blessing for Anthony Joshua. So youāve got two 6-foot-5 guys, one big, awkward southpaw with a huge backhand. Another guy with the fastest hands Iāve seen in the heavyweight division for a long time and a total disregard for whatās coming back at him. Actually so much so, Iāve never seen a man unload in front of another man like this since Mike Tyson. But, we got to be smart because this time thereās going to be something coming back.
Question
For Stephen Espinoza: From a coaching programmerās perspective, how exciting is it that you have a heavyweight division as vibrant as it is right now? How refreshing is it to be able to say to them, āWell, hey, we have a division that is exciting; we have these fights now.ā
Stephen Espinoza
Itās really the icing on the cake, so to speak, of the current boxing market. There certainly is a certain mystique about the heavyweight division, particularly for the casual fan. No matter what is going on in any of the other divisions, heavyweight boxing holds just a special attraction. Thereās a magnetism and excitement about the division and itās been a relatively dormant division for much of the last decade. I donāt mean that in a derogatory way. Itās just we have one dominant champion or a set of brothers as dominant champions and each fight was really a foregone conclusion. What weāve seen in the last eight months is essentially an entire reinvigoration and renewal of the heavyweight division. And to see young guys, like Anthony Joshua, a newcomer on the scene who has made the kind of splash and has the kind of promise that Anthony has is something that really if the division wasnāt already rejuvenated, it certainly would have taken notice of him. But, you throw Anthony in there and some other good, young heavyweight prospects such as Joseph Parker and others, thereās a lot of excitement from the up and coming ranks all the way through the contenders and champions. Itās really an exciting time, not just for that division but for many others that are being remade in sort of a new generation of talent.
Question
Do you see the winner of this fight as being a guy that can perhaps help carry the flag for the network?
Stephen Espinoza
Weād love that to be the case. You know, as Eddie mentioned, he and I have been talking about Anthony for several fights now, and weāre thrilled that we were able to get a deal done and host this TV dĆ©but. And weād like to be his TV home for the remainder of his career, and thatās for two reasons, one because heās obviously a very skilled and entertaining fighter, but, two, there is a wealth of good fights that can be made. Thatās really the recipe for a TV programmers dream and not just to have charismatic skilled fighters, but actually have a wealth of opponents. There are a number of them, here in the U.S., starting with Deontay Wilder or other UK fighters – Tyson or David Haye, as well as internationally. Thereās really fertile ground in the heavyweight division right now.
Question
Anthony, leading up to this fight, one line you keep using is that everything about your career is about development. You said that kind of in reference to your development in the ring but also personal development as a human being. What do you expect to learn in this fight with Charles Martin both about yourself and as a fighter?
Anthony Joshua
Well, as about myself, dealing with pressures, right? Itās just how to deal with fighting for the Heavyweight Championship of the World. Thatās a pressure in life that you could put on any-thing and thereās a certain amount of respect that youāll get. So, thereās pressures of life that Iām going to deal with outside of the ring. And regarding the fight, Iām looking towards the fight, in my last 10, 12 weeks in training, itās been a great camp. Weāve been sparring like 13 rounds, 14 rounds. Itās been — that mental toughness, you know, day after day. Pushing myself has been great. And then moving into the fight is when Iāve been a watching a lot of champions and some of the champions. One thing Iāve learned from them is just composure. Thatās what Iām going to take into this fight. So, not only experience and then how to deal with things, but thatās outside of the ring. But, when I am in the ring and just deal with what Iāve got to face within the ring and just stay composed, I should show people that basically anythingās possible. You know, they can say what they want, but Iām an underdog. Iām a challenger that can come in and annihilate a champion. Kind of like when Tyson fought Douglas. Just donāt give Charles Martin a chance and just outclass him, and thatās what I want to show and display on Saturday to be honest with you.
Question
Anthony, can you talk about the fact that youāre coming in–even though you got knockouts in all of your fights, you only have, I believe, a total of 32 pro rounds, and youāre fighting for world titles. Can you talk about the experience factor in this fight and how you want to overcome it? Obviously, everybody knows your Olympic and amateur record, but tell us about the experience factor as a pro fighting for a title this soon?
Anthony Joshua
I think that when the red carpetās been laid out for you, you can only walk down it with the amount of experience that I have. I havenāt got, you know, as you said, like 200 rounds under my belt and 50 fights. Iām just the man I am. And with the cards Iāve got, Iām going to make the most of it. And thatās how I have to attack this fight. It would have been great to have 50 fights and x amount of rounds, but I feel great with having 32 rounds and 15 fights as well. So, thatās why I think itās all a mindset. Itās how one person looks at it and how another does. And Iām confident that my rounds wonāt–there wonāt be another 12 rounds added onto this fight. Itās still going to stay in limited numbers, and thatās not being cocky. Itās just more of a confidence thing. Itās that the way we train in the gym, you know — and they say the fightās a long time before the fight. And the way we train the gym thatās why Iām so confident moving forward, because Iām hungry. Iām determined. And I just want to go in there and just put on a great show. And I know theyāll crumble. I just know Iām confident in making people crumble after a few rounds.
Question
Youāve fought a number of experienced fighters before. Do you consider Charles Martin to be your toughest opponent as a pro?
Anthony Joshua
No, I donāt. Not really, no. No, not yet. Not yet. Heās not my toughest opponent yet. But, then it might be a different story come April 9. Right now looking at Charles, heās a very (good) counter puncher. Heās laid back. He doesnāt work the full round. So, it should be a nice controlled fight. So, I donāt think itāll be like the Dillian Whyte fight. That was a tough fight. We work. Weāre both hungry. The guy was very strong to the head. That was a tough fight for sure. So, I donāt think Charles will impose those kind of threats that Dillian did.
Question
Do you want to make a prediction for the fight?
Anthony Joshua
Let me think. Six rounds, maybe six rounds.
Question
You and Eddie have both referenced the fight against Dillian Whyte. And the second round, what you think youāve learned from that and how it can help you?
Anthony Joshua
I was thinking that he threw a haymaker of a left hook, and it kind of — it just dazzles you a little bit. And then, you just basically hold yourself together, and it just shows composure. Stay, as I said, composed, man. Just stay composed. And thatās what Iām saying over the time when Iāve been watching many fighters. It happens. Itās boxing. It does happen, but itās how you deal with it, which is important. And I always say that it happened to me in round two. It happened to Dillian in round seven. One dealt with it better than the other, and I came out victorious. And thatās just how I dealt with it really.
Chris DeBlasio
Before we move on to Prince Charles Martin, a few words from Stephen Espinoza. Stephen?
Stephen Espinoza
Thanks, Chris. We were fortunate enough to host Charles Martin when he won the title a few short months ago. I know Charles and his team were disappointed, not withstanding the win, because they didnāt get a chance to show what Charles Martin is all about. Iāve seen him in the gym. I know him as a fighter. I know his team. Heās an exciting fighter, an aggressive all-action fighter. And Iām sure that he is intent on showing what he didnāt get the opportunity to show the first time out. So, without further ado, Chris, Iāll turn it over to you to introduce the IBF Heavyweight Champion Charles Martin.
Chris DeBlasio
So, Leon Margules, Warriors Boxing, youāre taking the champion over to the UK for a monster fight. A couple of words on the event.
Leon Margules
Well, first of all, I want to thank Stephen Espinoza and SHOWTIME. Chris, thank you very much. I want to thank Eddie Hearn and Anthony Joshua for accepting to agree to challenge us for our title over here. Weāre very excited about this opportunity. We believe Charles is the real deal. We believe Charles may be more than Anthony Joshua bargained for. A special thanks to Mike Borao, Charlesā manager, whoās had Charles since the amateurs and who brought him up through the ranks of professional ranks, believes in him and believes he can fight the best, and be the best. So, if it wasnāt for Mike, Charles and him they wanted to seek out the best and most exciting fight and Anthony Joshuaās the guy. Thatās why the fight was made. So, Iād like to thank them. And Iād like to let the champion talk to you. So, ladies and gentlemen, the IBF Heavyweight Champion of the World with the record of 23-and-0, the undefeated Prince Charles Martin.
Chris DeBlasio
Hello, Charles. How you doing? A couple of words about your journey to the UK and the impending title defense, please.
Charles Martin
My stay in the UK so far has been very good. You know, the people are very nice to me. And weāre just finishing up with the workouts and just staying sharp now, winding down, getting stronger again. And basically weāre ready to (go).
Question
Charles, when the fight came up between yourself and Anthony, what was it that made you decide to immediately, well, throw caution to the wind and go to his hometown and fight the guy that many people think is the next superstar in the heavyweight division?
Charles Martin
Yeah, because just for that reason that everybody thinks that heās a superstar, and, you know, I know that heās great. I know that heās not ready. You know, Iām going to get him right now while heās great. You know what I mean?
Question
Do you feel like when fans look at this fight theyāre seeing two heavyweights that both have outstanding potential or both, good physical specimens that can punch and that have good personalities, all that, but nobody really knows that much yet about how good you or Joshua could be and maybe that this is the fight that you can begin to prove that to people?
Charles Martin
Yeah, thatās pretty good to say, but like I said, Iāve got more fights than him. So, this far in the amateurs and the pros I got more fights than him. So, I just overall got more experience and thatās what Iām basing this off of. It donāt matter about who you got in the ring with as a professional and fought because, you know, the experience and getting comfortable is what itās all about, you know, and I donāt feel that heās comfortable enough in the ring and especially not with me being in there. When I get in there and start doing the things that I do in there, you know, heās gone. Itās going to be a different story. Itās going to be a whole different look.
Question
He says heās going to knock you out inside six rounds. Your response?
Charles Martin
Heās not ready. Heās not ready, man. Heās not ready. He going to get tired like he always does. Like he normally gets tired thinking heās going to go five rounds. Heās going to get tired, and thatās when Iām going to jump on (him), period.
Question
So, youāre predicting youāll knock him out?
Charles Martin
Yeah, I know Iām going to knock him out.
Question
Did you watched any tapes of Anthonyās fights, or any of the other fights that heās had recently, to give you the opinion that you think that heās green and he gets tired?
Charles Martin
Yeah, he just — he did get tired. In the Dillian Whyte fight he got real tired and he doesnāt have any footwork. He canāt box. You know, he canāt move. The only thing heās relying on is his power, and I got more tools than that. Iām more than just a powerful puncher. You know, I can do it all. So, thatās what Iām taking into the fight. I got more in my arsenal. If he thinks heās going to be able to land hard punches on me and stuff like that, heās got another thing coming. Iām very elusive. So, weāll see when itās time to take care of business.
Question
Do you think because of the way the fight with Glazkov ended that youāre not getting the credit that you think you deserve coming into this fight?
Charles Martin
No, not at all. You know, it is what it is. Iām the World Champion. So, you know, Iām getting respect. You know, I get credit and respect. You know, so, Iām just over here fighting him on his territory, you know, and the UK fans thatās their guy. So, I mean, of course, theyāre going to be rooting for him.
Question
How do you think the crowd might affect the fight with the officials and the fact that heāll be the fan favorite and the local hero? Do you think thatāll have any effect on the way the fight goes on?
Charles Martin
No, because I donāt plan on taking it to the judgesā hands. My judge is my left and my right.
Question
You could probably have fought anybody after winning the title. What prompted you or what was behind the decision to go to England to defend your title? Not a lot of champions in any division will do that on their first offense. What was behind your reasoning?
Charles Martin
Because probably theyāre scared. I aināt scared, man. Iām here for a reason. Iām here for a reason. And, you know, over here heās a superstar, man. You know what Iām saying? And we want to take on all these big names. He was the biggest name that we could see this far, you know, besides Tyson Fury. Tyson Fury was already in with Klitschko, and Deontay Wilder was (busy). You know what Iām saying? All the other big names were taken. You know, Iām saying at the time he was the only one that was open, available. So, we figure why not do that? We want to make a name and make a mark on the sport. You know what I mean? Thatās what I want to do. You know, I want people to know that heās down for whatever, whenever, however. If I got to come all the way over here to do it, Iām down for whatever. Iām down for whatever, man.
Question
A lot of people are asking, you know, why did you choose Anthony Joshua? You know, why are you picking this site? Were there other names offered to you, and did you kind of specifically point out and tell your people, āHey, I want to go and fight Anthony Joshua.ā
Charles Martin
Yeah, you know, (there was a) small name like Chris Arreola. I donāt want to fight Chris Arreola. Why would I fight Chris Arreola? I can beat Chris Arreola. I know thatās just an easy fighter to beat. You know what I mean? I want somebody, I want the superstars. I want these guys. You know, Iām going to take his space. You know what I mean? Take everything that he thought he was (getting) and itās going to come this way. I know exactly what Iām doing with this.
Question
Could you tell us some of the things that youāve added to your camp for this fight?
Charles Martin
Oh, youād have to take that up with my condition coach. Man, you know, heās got it down to a science. He went to school for it. He knows what heās doing. And I just feel overall stronger, you know, faster, stronger, more balanced, core strength. You know, Iām just a different person than I was. So, Iām happy that, you know, the stars were in line once again. You know, the chemistry was right from the start. We hit it off. And he just pushed me to different levels.
Question
Joshua was quite critical of your style of boxing. He said youāre a counter puncher who doesnāt work the full round. Your reaction?
Charles Martin
Yeah, see, thatās all heās seeing is that Iām a counter puncher, but Iām a lot more than just a counter puncher. So, Iām going to let him keep thinking that thatās all thatās to my game. So, thatās fine by me. Keep on thinking that Iām just a counter puncher, if you want to.
Question
If victorious, do you ultimately want to unify the division?
Charles Martin
Yeah, absolutely. Thatās what our ultimate goal is, to unify. To get all the belts thatās the ultimate goal.
Question
When Joshua was on the call, he was asked if he thought you would be his toughest opponent. He said, āNo,ā and that he would finish you inside of six rounds. How do you respond to that?
Charles Martin
Thatās fine by me. Words are words. You know, theyāre nothing more than what they are. Heās saying that I aināt his toughest opponent, fine. Iām going to — Iām not even going to say nothing about it. Thatās cool, but I like that. I like that, you know? Be confident. Be very confident in what you do.
Question
Whatās your prediction for this fight, Charles?
Charles Martin
Oh, I donāt have any prediction. Man, Iām not the one to predict. Iām a realist. You know, you come out talking that crap, it donāt mean nothing, you know? Predictions, Iām not a prophet. You know what I mean? Iām going to go in there and see whatās in front of me, and who knows how it goes down. You know, if I see (an opportunity), then Iām going to take the initiative. You know, hey, Iām just a technician in there, man. Thatās all I can say, Iām a technician, a lot of tools.