ANTHONY JOSHUA DEFLECTED concerns over sportswashing on Tuesday as he appeared in Saudi Arabia to promote his heavyweight boxing world title fight against Oleksandr Usyk of Ukraine.
The 20 August rematch was announced after the launch of the controversial, Saudi-funded LIV Golf, which has threatened the regular tours by luring top players with huge prize pots.
The fight and the golf are the latest in a series of Saudi events to be accused of sportswashing, or attempting to bolster the countryโs international reputation while detracting attention from its appalling human rights record and its role in the humanitarian disaster in Yemen.
But when asked about sportswashing at a fight launch event in Jeddah, Joshua laughed: โI donโt know what that is.
โIโm here to win the heavyweight championship of the world. I like Saudi. I think Saudiโs good. Iโm having a good time here. Iโm treated really well.
All that allegation stuff, for me, Iโm not caught up in any of that stuff. Iโm here to have a good time, mix with the local people, bring entertainment to Saudi.
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The Jeddah clash will be the second in Saudi Arabia for Joshua, 32, who avenged a shock loss to Andy Ruiz Jr in Riyadh in December 2019.
The Watford heavy is out for revenge once again after losing his WBA, IBF and WBO belts last September in London to Usyk, who has since been shaken by Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine.
Usyk, 35, returned home to fight for his country before being given a special exemption from military duty. But he dismissed any notion that the war had given him extra motivation.
โMy friends, people close to me, have died in the war. When so many people are suffering I donโt have any idea how it can influence anything positively,โ Usyk said.
โI was there for one month, I saw with my own eyes what happened there: rockets flying and fighter jets flying. Itโs horrible.โ
Joshua also paid tribute to Ukraine and said he had been in touch with Wladimir Klitschko, the former heavyweight whose brother and fellow boxer Vitali is now the mayor of Kyiv.
โBig up to Usyk, the Klitschko brothers, everyone in Ukraine. I know itโs been tough, but tough times donโt last,โ Joshua said.
โKeep your heads up, the worldโs watching. The worldโs in supportโฆ Anyone thatโs going through tough times, weโre always with them, so especially the Ukrainian people right now.โ
He added that he had no concerns about the receding chances of his long-touted all-British super-fight with the consensus world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury, who retired after his April victory over Dillian Whyte.
โIโll fight anyone, thatโs never been an issue. When the timeโs right, if he wants to fight weโre here for it, definitely,โ Joshua said of Fury.
โBut no, if he wants to fight Iโm here. Whenever heโs ready Iโll be available.โ
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'I don't know what that is' - Joshua ducks sportswashing questions in Saudi Arabia
ANTHONY JOSHUA DEFLECTED concerns over sportswashing on Tuesday as he appeared in Saudi Arabia to promote his heavyweight boxing world title fight against Oleksandr Usyk of Ukraine.
The 20 August rematch was announced after the launch of the controversial, Saudi-funded LIV Golf, which has threatened the regular tours by luring top players with huge prize pots.
The fight and the golf are the latest in a series of Saudi events to be accused of sportswashing, or attempting to bolster the countryโs international reputation while detracting attention from its appalling human rights record and its role in the humanitarian disaster in Yemen.
But when asked about sportswashing at a fight launch event in Jeddah, Joshua laughed: โI donโt know what that is.
โIโm here to win the heavyweight championship of the world. I like Saudi. I think Saudiโs good. Iโm having a good time here. Iโm treated really well.
The Jeddah clash will be the second in Saudi Arabia for Joshua, 32, who avenged a shock loss to Andy Ruiz Jr in Riyadh in December 2019.
The Watford heavy is out for revenge once again after losing his WBA, IBF and WBO belts last September in London to Usyk, who has since been shaken by Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine.
Usyk, 35, returned home to fight for his country before being given a special exemption from military duty. But he dismissed any notion that the war had given him extra motivation.
โMy friends, people close to me, have died in the war. When so many people are suffering I donโt have any idea how it can influence anything positively,โ Usyk said.
โI was there for one month, I saw with my own eyes what happened there: rockets flying and fighter jets flying. Itโs horrible.โ
Joshua also paid tribute to Ukraine and said he had been in touch with Wladimir Klitschko, the former heavyweight whose brother and fellow boxer Vitali is now the mayor of Kyiv.
โBig up to Usyk, the Klitschko brothers, everyone in Ukraine. I know itโs been tough, but tough times donโt last,โ Joshua said.
โKeep your heads up, the worldโs watching. The worldโs in supportโฆ Anyone thatโs going through tough times, weโre always with them, so especially the Ukrainian people right now.โ
He added that he had no concerns about the receding chances of his long-touted all-British super-fight with the consensus world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury, who retired after his April victory over Dillian Whyte.
โIโll fight anyone, thatโs never been an issue. When the timeโs right, if he wants to fight weโre here for it, definitely,โ Joshua said of Fury.
โBut no, if he wants to fight Iโm here. Whenever heโs ready Iโll be available.โ
โ ยฉ AFP 2022
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