Anthony Joshua beats Andy Ruiz Jr to reclaim heavyweight world titles (2024)

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By Luke Reddy

BBC Sport in Riyadh

Anthony Joshua became a two-time world heavyweight champion with a unanimous points victory over Andy Ruiz Jr in a tense rematch in Saudi Arabia.

Six months on from the night Ruiz stunned boxing, Joshua risked seeing his career left in tatters with a second defeat, but served up 36 minutes of movement and well-timed punching to take the IBF, WBA and WBO titles back to Britain.

After cutting his Mexican rival inside the first round he never looked back and picked out smart jabs and right hands throughout before being serenaded with chants of "AJ, AJ, AJ" by 14,000 or so fans in the Diriyah Arena.

Ruiz never looked close to landing a knockdown and when scores of 118-110 118-110 and 119-109 were read out, Joshua jumped up and down in the ring in celebration, just as the man who had wrecked his US debut did in June.

Joshua gets it right all night

Joshua, 30, now joins a small cluster of men including Muhammad Ali, Lennox Lewis, Evander Holyfield, Mike Tyson and Floyd Patterson to have reclaimed the world heavyweight title.

Patterson fell to the canvas seven times in one round as he lost his belts to Ingemar Johansson in 1959 but regained them in a rematch. The question in Saudi Arabia was whether Joshua could show the same mental fortitude after being knocked down four times by Ruiz in June. His answer was emphatic.

A downpour in a country that barely sees rain stopped moments before Joshua strode to the ring, prompting him to carefully dry his feet on the canvas.

From that moment on, his feet moved with grace. Seconds before the off, Ruiz was told "let's go Andy" by his corner but he was rarely allowed to get close to his rival and inflict the damage he did in the first fight.

Ruiz, the bookmakers' underdog again, was cut above his left eye in the first. He landed two jabs of his own in the second but took a left hook as Joshua moved with the lightness of a man at his lowest weight in five years.

He was burning energy but was slick and showed variety in working head and body in the third. A crowd unfamiliar with the sweet science at such close quarters offered audible applause and cheers as the smart work landed.

There was always tension given the speed with which Ruiz's gold gloves can move, and in the eighth he served up a first scare. As the pair tangled, Ruiz made things ugly and winged in a hook. The crowd stamped their feet while Ruiz's fighting compatriot Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez stood and screamed ringside.

The ninth felt key, Joshua needed to establish distance again. He landed a solid uppercut but saw Ruiz fire back wildly instantly. Again, the incredible durability of the champion and the constant threat he carried was evident.

Deep in the 12th, Ruiz beat his chest as if to dare Joshua close. After a night of lateral movement and poise, it was never going to happen. Joshua glared out at the crowd as the bell sounded. It was a look of a defiance. It was the look of a man who had proved his point.

Image source, Reuters

Brave Ruiz pays for distraction

Some seeing Ruiz's showing here will ask what was wrong with Joshua in their first meeting - the Mexican was never able to rediscover the heights he hit in New York.

His weight gain of 15lb was the same as James 'Buster' Douglas piled on after stunning Mike Tyson in 1990. Douglas lost easily to Holyfield months later and as the scorecards widened on Saturday and Ruiz ate shots, it looked as if his new status and its attached distractions might have taken a similar toll.

Hauling 20st 3lb around a ring is no easy feat. Only Nikolai Valuev - who was 7ft tall - has weighed more and held a world title. And as Saudi royalty watched on at ringside, Ruiz was consistently unpicked and outmanoeuvred.

He will at least leave with a career-high pay day in excess of £10m. He can live the rest of his life as a former world champion who stunned boxing. But if he shoots for titles again, he will simply need to be better.

Joshua's clinical response to adversity

Joshua had said defeat would have been "catastrophic" for a career that promised so much, delivered plenty and then, from nowhere, was shaken to its core.

Some close to him had expressed how nervous they were all week. The fact his entire team stayed with him in the ring for over 30 minutes after his win pointed to their relief.

He has promised to fully explain what happened on that June night but it is to his credit that he pushed for a new approach to his training, made adjustments and lived out the lessons he gleaned from his lowest point in the paid ranks.

To use a boxing term, he 'boxed the ears off' a man who had prompted him to ask so many questions of himself.

The talk of facing Deontay Wilder or Tyson Fury - temporarily derailed by Ruiz in June - will resume. Another rematch, though neither party is obligated this time, also has legs.

Joshua has earned such options after such a clinical response to adversity.

Boxing history will never forget what Ruiz did to him. Joshua can at least draw some comfort in putting things right.

What they said - 'When was the last time we had a role model like this?'

Promoter Eddie Hearn: "Madison Square Garden was a humiliation, he went down four times - people wrote him off, said he had no heart, he quit. He went back, brushed himself down and went back to work to prove you all wrong. It was an absolute masterclass, a shutout, a way of boxing people didn't believe he could do.

"He taught himself to box like that - the discipline was incredible. All the things no-one thought he possessed. That's because he's getting better. What heavyweight has a resume like him? Give him respect; he has changed the face of boxing. A great individual with a big heart.

"I have represented Anthony since he turned pro. He is a very close friend of mine. The strength he has shown is unbelievable. When was the last time we had a role model like this? We should be so proud. An absolute role model for our country."

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Joshua's trainer Robert McCracken: "I think he was where I wanted him to be for this fight. He has listened in camp, worked really hard, and I thought he boxed very well against a dangerous fighter.

"Andy Ruiz is a real danger and he is very quick and heavy-handed. There were a couple times Josh went into mid-range and came unstuck but he settled back down in the corner and got back on it. His weight was great and his jab was tremendous."

BBC Radio 5 Live boxing pundit Steve Bunce: "AJ was absolutely clinical and he never wasted a shot. That was class and he stuck to his plan. Beautiful to watch.

"He got it right in spectacular fashion. He has been steely and nasty."

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Anthony Joshua beats Andy Ruiz Jr to reclaim heavyweight world titles (2024)

FAQs

Who did Andy Ruiz lose his belts to? ›

Ruiz shocked the world in 2019 when he stopped Anthony Joshua to become world champion, but he lost his belts in an immediate rematch six month later when he was outpointed by the Brit.

Who did Anthony Joshua lose his heavyweight title to? ›

Fight results

Oleksandr Usyk became only the third boxer in history – after Evander Holyfield and David Haye – to win world titles both at cruiserweight and heavyweight. At the same time, Anthony Joshua's defeat left the prospect of a highly anticipated undisputed unification bout with Tyson Fury in tatters.

Who did Anthony Joshua lose all his belts to? ›

Joshua, who held the WBA, WBO and IBF belts, lost them after losing twice to Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and 2022. After those defeats, he returned to the winning ways, defeating Jermaine Franklin Jr. and Robert Helenius, the latter by KO.

How much did Andy Ruiz get paid for the Joshua fight? ›

Ruiz was confirmed and announced to take place at Madison Square Garden in New York City exclusively live streamed on DAZN in the United States and PPV on Sky Sports Box Office in the United Kingdom. It was reported that Ruiz would earn around $7 million (£5.36 million) for the bout.

Is Andy Ruiz the heavyweight champion of the world? ›

He is a former unified world heavyweight champion, having held the World Boxing Association (WBA) (Super version), International Boxing Federation (IBF), and World Boxing Organization (WBO) titles in 2019. He also held the International Boxing Organization (IBO) title during that reign. Andy Ruiz Jr.

How did AJ lose to Ruiz? ›

The last time Anthony Joshua accepted a late-replacement opponent he became victim to one of boxing's biggest upsets ever, as Andy Ruiz Jr. shocked him toward a seventh-round TKO heard around the world.

Has Usyk ever lost? ›

As an amateur boxer, Usyk won heavyweight gold medals at the 2011 World Championships and 2012 Olympics while accumulating a record of 335 wins and 15 losses. He turned professional in 2013, winning his first world title in 2016.

How many heavyweight belts does Anthony Joshua have? ›

Anthony Joshua is the former two-time unified WBO, IBF, and WBA heavyweight champion. Joshua first held the titles from March 2018 to July 2019. He later reclaimed the three belts with a unanimous decision win over Andy Ruiz Jr. in December 2019.

Who has AJ lost too? ›

Joshua's professional record is 24-3, with 22 of his wins having come via KO/TKO. The Briton's three losses have come against Andy Ruiz Jr and Usyk.

Why did Joshua throw the belts out of the ring? ›

Anthony Joshua lost his temper after losing his rematch to Oleksandr Usyk and reacted angrily by throwing two belts and arguing with his team.

How rich is Anthony Joshua? ›

Joshua has unquestionably inflated his wealth in recent times with Forbes estimating his earnings at around $47million in 2020. However, based on the latest edition of the Sunday Times Rich List, Joshua's net worth now rests at £175m, an impressive sum no doubt, if a little far off his ultimate ambition.

Who is the richest boxer in the world? ›

Floyd Mayweather is the richest boxer in the world with a net worth of $400 million. The retired American boxing champion is the fifth highest-paid athlete ever. During the course of his 21-year career between 1996 and 2017, he won 15 major world championships from super featherweight to light middleweight.

How rich is Andy Ruiz Jr.? ›

net worth, salary and purse: Andy Ruiz Jr. is an American professional boxer who has a net worth of $10 million.

Who has Andy Ruiz lost to? ›

Matches
  • Win. Luis Ortiz "King Kong" R12. Sep 05, 2022. ...
  • Win. Chris Arreola "The Nightmare" Apr 30, 2021. PBC: Andy Ruiz vs Chris Arreola.
  • Loss. Anthony Joshua "AJ" Dec 07, 2019. Diriyah Arena, Diriyah.
  • Win. Anthony Joshua "AJ" Jun 01, 2019. Madison Square Garden, New York.
  • Loss. Joseph Parker "Lupesoliai La'auli" Dec 10, 2016.

Who has beaten Ruiz? ›

Joshua won the bout via unanimous decision. The bout between Ruiz and Joshua was refereed by Luis Pabon. Andy Ruiz Jr. Imperial, California, U.S.

What happened to Anthony Joshua before the Andy Ruiz fight? ›

Unified world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua said a health issue left him "tired" and "drained" in the build-up to his June defeat by Andy Ruiz Jr. Joshua, 30, reclaimed his world titles in Saudi Arabia on Saturday, dominating the Mexican over 12 rounds.

What belt did Anthony Joshua win? ›

Anthony Joshua is the former two-time unified WBO, IBF, and WBA heavyweight champion. Joshua first held the titles from March 2018 to July 2019.

How many pounds did Andy Ruiz lose? ›

What if I had won against Anthony Joshua being chubby and fat and almost 300 pounds? I would have been thinking 'Man, I can win all the other fights like this. ' Now I see things a lot clearer,” Ruiz said. Appeared in the April 28, 2021, print edition as 'The 'Fat' Boxer Who Lost 55 Pounds'.

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