Skip to main content
Boxing News
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Schedule
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Fight Schedule
  • Current Champions

Follow us

  • YouTube YouTube
  • Instagram Instagram
  • Twitter / X Twitter
  • Facebook Facebook

© 2013—2025 Boxing News

Magazine

Anthony Joshua: ‘When Wladimir Klitschko gets beat, it could be the end of him’

Anthony Joshua tells Klitschko to 'stand up to the power' when they clash at Wembley Stadium

George Gigney

26th April, 2017

Anthony Joshua: ‘When Wladimir Klitschko gets beat, it could be the end of him’
Esther Lin/Showtime

ANTHONY JOSHUA believes defeat for Wladimir Klitschko in their colossal heavyweight unification fight at Wembley Stadium this Saturday could bring an end to the Ukrainian’s Hall of Fame career.

Having lost his heavyweight throne to Tyson Fury in 2015, Klitschko – at age 41 – is looking to join exalted company and become a three-time world heavyweight champion when he fights Joshua for the IBF and WBA titles.

Though he understands the magnitude of the event, which will see 90,000 pack out the national stadium, Joshua does not see the fight as be-all and end-all for his own career.

“Is it a defining fight for myself? I wouldn’t say so because it’s not the end of my career,” he said.

“With what Klitschko’s done, it’s a very defining fight for him. When he gets beat, that could be the end of him, that’s why it’s so defining. What represents him doesn’t represent me, this is just part of my journey.

“I’m very comfortable with it. It’s the first time one of my opponents has brought their fans with them, where a lot of people know who he is, what he’s achieved.”

The pair met at the final press conference earlier today, exchanging pleasantries and fist-bumps before they duke it out on a show that will be broadcast in over 150 countries worldwide.

Klitschko, filling the role of challenger (and underdog) for the first time in over a decade, insisted he is the better technician of the two, though paid respect to Joshua’s concussive power.

The unbeaten Londoner – like Klitschko, an Olympic champion – refuted his adversary’s claim and sent out a warning.

“If I couldn’t box, I wouldn’t be here. I may not be the best but what I do good, I do brilliant,” he said.

“That’s got me here. The little things I do got me here and if he claims to be the better boxer then so be it, so when I start punching you in your jaw, you better stand up to the power.

“I think he’ll start fast because he won’t be able to keep up the pace. Father time is a genetics thing, it’s something no one can deny, it’s a part of life. I don’t think he’d be able to cope in my training camp, the amount of work we put in.

“Hard work has to become smart work as you get older and I think he’s at that stage where he has to work smart. I more hard work than smart work and that’s why I don’t mind going in to fight Wladimir because I know that if it gets tough, I will slug it out.”

More stories

Evander Holyfield

Evander Holyfield names the greatest heavyweight in boxing history: “It’s not Muhammad Ali”

7 Nov, 2025
Evander Holyfield and Riddick Bowe

Evander Holyfield vs Riddick Bowe: ranking each fight from the epic heavyweight trilogy

6 Nov, 2025
Terence Crawford and David Benavidez

David Benavidez says ‘without doubt’ there is still one fighter better than Terence Crawford

6 Nov, 2025
Roy Jones Jr

Roy Jones Jr says one fighter is clearly the greatest of all time: “I know it’s him”

6 Nov, 2025
Boxing News

Since 1909

Editorial

  • News
  • Live Coverage
  • BN Investigates
  • Opinion
  • Features

Boxing

  • Upcoming Fight Schedule
  • Current Boxing Champions

Company

  • About Boxing News
  • Contact us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy

Follow us

  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • X
  • Facebook
  • Google News
Copyright 2013—2025 Boxing News