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Tyson Fury marked his return to the heavyweight mix with a composed points win over Arslanbek Makhmudov at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, before immediately turning ringside to call out long-time rival Anthony Joshua.

The 37-year-old Briton – out of his latest retirement after 15 months – was far from Fury in full flow, but had enough ring IQ and technical control to outbox Makhmudov across 12 largely one-sided rounds.

Fury had to be watchful at times as Makhmudov did land occasional overhand rights, but the Russian was largely one-dimensional as Fury took a wide decision with scorecards of 120-108, 120-108 and 119-109.

But before the scores were even read out, Fury invited Joshua into the ring, but his rival refused.

“I challenge you, Anthony Joshua, to fight me next. Do you accept?” Fury said after more attempts to get Joshua into the ring failed.

Joshua, who appeared to film much of Saturday’s fight on his phone at ringside, initially seemed reluctant to engage, before replying: “I punched you up when we were kids and I’ll punch you up again.

“You aren’t going to tell me what to do, I’ve been chasing you for 10 years.

“I’m the boss, you work for me. I’m the landlord. You work for me.”

Fury responded: “You [Anthony Joshua] are next. You are getting knocked out. Believe it.”

A bout that should have happened in both men’s primes, it now lingers as boxing’s great what-if – but it appears it may finally be made a reality.

In his first fight since successive defeats to unified champion Oleksandr Usyk in 2024, Fury moves to 35 wins, two losses and one draw.

For Makhmudov, 36, it was a third defeat in 24 fights.Anthony Joshua

Fury and Joshua – both two-time world champions – have carried British boxing on the global stage for more than a decade, yet despite years of negotiations and false starts, the fight has never materialised.

Now, though, this feels like their most significant breakthrough yet.

“I have been at this table with him many times. In my heart, I’d fight Fury tomorrow, especially after watching that. There is not a problem fighting him,” Joshua told Netflix.

“I am not here to get clout. I am here to fight. The contract will be sent over, we will go through the nitty gritty, and you will probably see us in the ring next, more than likely.”

Joshua, 36, beat YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in December, before suffering a tragic car crash in Nigeria later in the month which claimed the lives of his two friends.

“I was in a serious incident maybe four months ago,” he added. “I need to really check out what is going on with my return to the ring.

“But I’m here, keeping my eye on the game. I am not ducking anyone, there are just things in my life I need to tend to.”

Most fans argue the moment has passed. Both fighters are now in their late thirties and no longer at their physical peak, but the commercial pull remains enormous.

For all the focus on Joshua, Usyk still looms in the background as a potential sporting detour for Fury, although there is limited appetite for a third fight after Usyk’s dominance across their first two meetings.

Another route could lead Fury towards the winner of the 9 May clash between WBO world champion Fabio Wardley and Daniel Dubois.

For now, though, Fury has done what he needed. He returned and he won comfortably.

And if the showdown with Joshua truly is next, British boxing may finally get the fight it has spent a generation waiting for.

Former world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua has made his first public appearance since he survived a car crash in Nigeria that killed his close friends Sina Ghami and Latif Ayodele.

Joshua had kept a low profile since the accident on December 29, but he was seen at London’s 02 Arena on Saturday watching a Derek Chisora bout.

The British fighter was ringside as Chisora made the 50th and final fight of his career against Deontay Wilder.

Boxing promoter Eddie Hearn has said Joshua needs time to heal before considering stepping back into the ring himself.

Dressed in a white tracksuit, Joshua emerged with Hearn from a black people carrier as he walked into the arena past a number of camera crews.Anthony Joshua

There was no friendly welcome from his old rival Wilder, who was repeatedly linked with a world title bout with Joshua during the peak of their powers.

The American went straight past Joshua without any acknowledgement in a tight corridor inside the arena.

Joshua last fought before Christmas when he faced YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in Miami, but speculation continues over a potential bout with British rival Tyson Fury.

During a ringside interview with DAZN, Joshua said: “It’s amazing to be here. Boxing, especially British boxing, is booming.

A long-awaited showdown between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua remains one of boxing’s most talked-about matchups, yet the two heavyweights have still not met in the ring.

Years of negotiations, delays, and shifting plans have stalled the bout. Now, fresh comments from promoter Kalle Sauerland have brought renewed attention to the potential clash.

Speaking in a recent interview, Sauerland suggested the fight could finally take place later this year, although no official confirmation has been issued by either camp. The situation remains fluid, with fans still awaiting definitive details.

In an interview with iFL TV, Sauerland pointed to reports that the fight could be staged in Dublin around September or October.

“You also look at other fights coming up. Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are expected to fight later this year, possibly in Dublin around September or October,” he said.

Tyson Fury & Anthony Joshua

Itauma Targets Joshua After Statement Win

Rising heavyweight Moses Itauma has also entered the conversation following an impressive stoppage victory over Jermaine Franklin.

Itauma became the first fighter to stop Franklin, securing a fifth-round knockout at Manchester’s Co-op Live arena. The performance has strengthened his case for a high-profile bout.

When asked about a potential clash with Joshua, Itauma was direct:

“If that’s a fight to make, that’s a fight to make.”

Now 14-0 with 12 knockouts, Itauma is on track to potentially become the youngest British heavyweight champion in history.

Joshua’s Return Timeline Unclear

Joshua’s 2026 has been affected by personal tragedy following a fatal car crash earlier this year that claimed the lives of close friends. The incident delayed his return to training camp.

Promoter Eddie Hearn is now targeting a return for the 36-year-old between July and August.

What Comes Next?

Despite years of failed negotiations, a Fury vs Joshua showdown remains the ultimate goal for boxing fans.

Fury is currently scheduled to face Arslanbek Makhmudov on April 11, while Joshua is still searching for his next opponent.

Promoter Frank Warren has praised Itauma as the best heavyweight he has worked with, but is also considering a direct path to a world title fight against Oleksandr Usyk later this year.

For now, the boxing world continues to wait for confirmation of whether Fury and Joshua will finally share the ring.

Deontay Wilder had a clear message for Anthony Joshua following his win against Derek Chisora.

Wilder proved some of his doubters wrong as he was able to claim bragging rights against fellow veteran Chisora with a split decision victory at The O2 Arena in London.

It was a scrappy affair between the two men, with Wilder earning two knockdowns across the course of the 12 rounds, as the judges scored the bout 115-111, 115-113 and 112-115 to secure the narrow victory for the American.

Speculation has now begun over who ‘The Bronze Bomber’ may look to target next, with a clash against unified world heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk or WBO titleholder Fabio Wardley seen as two potential options.

It seems as if Wilder may have another target in mind though, after he crossed paths with long-term rival Joshua as he left the ring on Saturday.

‘The Bronze Bomber’ made his intentions known, as in a video captured by Boxing King Media he called Joshua out with a three word message.

“Let’s do it.”

The aftermath was then captured by DAZN, as Wilder revealed what he thought about the coming together with Joshua.

“He’s scared as f**k. Let’s do it.”

Wilder and Joshua were linked to a showdown for a number of years when they were each reigning world heavyweight champions, but for one reason or another, it was never able to come to fruition.

While both men may now be past their best, it would still be a big fight for the division, but for now it seems that Joshua’s focus is on landing a battle against countryman Tyson Fury, who himself knows what it is like to share the ring with Wilder after their epic trilogy.

Surging British prospect-come-contender Moses Itauma is good enough to take Anthony Joshua down if they fought next.

That’s according to Hall-of-Fame fighter, Carl Froch, who picked AJ out of all “of the heavyweight ex-champs” that would provide Itauma with the best possible opponent “to look good against,” when speaking to NewBettingSites.uk.

A 21-year-old southpaw, Itauma is already considered one of his region’s most exciting talents, with 14 wins posted to date, 12 knockouts, and no losses. The 6-foot-5 star, in his last five bouts, is 5-0 (5 KOs) despite leveling up in opposition by fighting Mariusz Wach, Dillian Whyte, and Jermaine Franklin Jr — beating all in spectacular fashion

Joshua, meanwhile, remains an ambassadorial figure albeit a declining talent at the world level, having peaked around 2017-2018 when he he toppled Wladimir Klitschko, Carlos Takam, Joseph Parker, and Alexander Povetkin in succesion.

Anthony Joshua

Of the four losses on Joshua’s resume, three have come in his last seven bouts, including a brutal defeat to Daniel Dubois in 2024 which he only rebounded from late, last year, with an eventual knockout of the internet sensation Jake Paul.

“Psychologically and mentally he is not there anymore,” Froch said of his former stablemate when he competed under the Matchroom banner. “He’s been banjoed a few times.”

He added: “I don’t think his heart’s in the fight game anymore. So, it’s a bad fight for AJ, yeah, and I think that Itauma probably beats him.”

Picking against Britain’s older guard is a bit of a theme for Froch, as he also regards the Arslanbek Makhmudov bout on April 11 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London as a possible banana skin for Tyson Fury.

“It’s a potential bad fight for Fury, if Fury’s not taking it seriously,” he told the same betting site. “But from what I’ve seen and heard of him, and he’s not in bad shape, he’s not gone massive, he’s not gone up to 25 stone.

“I think he wins,” said Froch, “I just hope he’s got the fitness and the engine to do the 12 rounds, because Makhmudov is quite fit and strong for 12 rounds.

“But he’s shown vulnerabilities around the body, and he’s not of that level. But we don’t know what we’re gonna get with Tyson Fury. I feel like anything can happen.”

Former super-middleweight champion Carl Froch has predicted how a showdown between rising star Moses Itauma and two-time world champion Tyson Fury would play out.

Itauma dispatched of Jermaine Franklin with relative ease on Saturday night, becoming the first man to knock the Michigan contender out, despite Franklin having previously fought the likes of Dillian Whyte and Anthony Joshua.

As a result, the Itauma hype train has shifted up a gear and is gathering momentum ahead of another appearance in July and a potential world title challenge before the end of the calendar.

Speaking to his YouTube channel about a possible clash between Itauma and Fury, Froch revealed that he would pick Itauma to defeat ‘The Gypsy King’ right now, irrespective of their difference in accomplishments and experience.

Fury fights Makhmudov next Saturday, as he returns to action after 16 months of inactivity, looking to prove that he is still Britain’s best heavyweight and that he is well capable of becoming a three-time world champion.

Gervonta Davis’ latest legal concern is going to bring him back into court.

Davis, 31, was accused by his ex-girlfriend of battery, false imprisonment and attempted kidnapping on Oct. 27, 2025, when he allegedly grabbed and dragged her out of a gentlemen’s club, where she worked as a dancer, and into the parking lot.

A Miami judge has now cleared the civil lawsuit to move forward in court, the Baltimore Sun reported on Wednesday.

Davis’ ex-girlfriend, revealed to be Courtney Rossel, is seeking $5 million in damages. Her legal team has since dropped the false imprisonment charges, per the Baltimore Sun.

Gervonta Davis
Davis was previously arrested for the incident by the Miami Gardens Police in January and was quickly released on bond. His official arrest concluded a two-week-long search that involved US Marshals after police reported him missing.

The judge’s decision came one day after Davis filed a countersuit, claiming the plaintiff initiated the argument that eventually turned physical. ‘Tank’ claims she attempted to extort him after filing the lawsuit and notes in his case that the whole ordeal cost him a lucrative fight with Jake Paul.

At the time of the lawsuit, Davis and Paul were scheduled to headline a massive Netflix fight card in November 2025. Neither fighter’s purse was released, but it was fully expected to be the biggest payday of Davis’ career, despite it trending toward being an exhibition.

The lawsuit convinced Most Valuable Promotions to remove Davis from the matchup, given its position as the most powerful women’s boxing promotion. He was quickly replaced by former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua, who handed Paul his first stoppage loss in the sixth round.

Gervonta "Tank" Davis during an April 20, 2023 press conference.
Judge makes Gervonta Davis ruling as incriminating footage is released

The ruling also came one day after Rossel’s legal team released the security footage that convinced investigators to obtain the initial arrest warrant. The incriminating evidence was released to the public by TMZ Sports.

The footage is another major obstacle for Davis’ case, as it shows him aggressively grabbing Rossel and forcing her out into the parking lot. While there is no audio and the boxer did not appear to strike his ex-girlfriend, the clips certainly appear to fall in line with the accusations.

Davis has not made any public comments beyond statements from his legal team since the footage was released. His case is expected to proceed in Miami-Dade court soon, with an official

The future of Gervonta Davis currently remains up in the air but that hasn’t stopped an undefeated fighter from calling him out.

It’s been over a year since ‘Tank’ was last in action, when he defended his WBA lightweight title in a controversial majority decision draw against Lamont Roach.

A fight between Floyd Schofield and Lucas Bahdi for the vacant WBA title was believed to be targeted for April, but Schofield recently claimed that the fight was cancelled, potentially paving the way for ‘Kid Austin’ to meet Davis instead.Gervonta Davis

Speaking in a social media clip, Schofield discussed the current situation, insisting he would be happy to face ‘Tank’ if it unfolds that way.

Schofield has an unbeaten record of 19-0 with 13 wins coming by way of knockout and has been touted for big things in the sport. He had notably been set to face Shakur Stevenson for the WBC lightweight title last year before withdrawing from the bout on fight week through illness.

Despite the callout from Schofield, Davis has been reported to be in advanced talks with Isaac Cruz for his next outing, in what would be a rematch of their battle from 2021.

Gervonta “Tank” Davis has gone on the offensive in the legal arena. The undefeated lightweight star filed a countersuit seeking more than $20 million in damages against Courtney Rossel, the ex-girlfriend who accused him of domestic violence at a Miami gentlemen’s club last October, according to an exclusive report from TMZ Sports published on March 30.

Davis (30-0-1, 28 KOs) denied nearly all allegations in the civil complaint, maintaining that he never struck or choked Rossel and did not falsely imprison her. In his answer to the lawsuit, Davis characterized the situation as a calculated shakedown, alleging that Rossel demanded $1.1 million to make the accusations disappear. He further claimed that Rossel was the initial aggressor and that she provoked the encounter as part of a scheme designed to extract money from him.

Perhaps most striking among the countersuit’s claims is Davis’ assertion that the two spent the night together at Rossel’s home after the alleged attack, and that Rossel told her employer she was fine following the incident.

The Financial Fallout: A Lost Megafight

The countersuit’s central argument centers on a legal theory of interference with business relationship. Davis contends that Rossel’s civil lawsuit, filed in late October 2025, directly caused the cancellation of what would have been the biggest payday of his career: a November exhibition bout against Jake Paul at Miami’s Kaseya Center, originally set to stream on Netflix.

Davis claims he stood to earn more than $20 million from the Paul fight, which was scrapped shortly after Rossel’s allegations became public. Paul quickly pivoted to a replacement bout against former two-time heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua on December 19 at the same venue. Joshua stopped Paul by sixth-round knockout in front of a sold-out crowd of 19,600, an event that ranked as the top program on Netflix in 45 countries, according to the streamer.

Both Joshua and Paul earned substantial paydays from the replacement bout, while Davis, sidelined by the legal fallout, received nothing.

The Accuser’s Response

Rossel’s legal team wasted no time. Her attorneys have already filed a motion to dismiss the counterclaim, arguing that Davis cannot sue her for reporting an alleged crime. The motion is a signal that this legal battle will be contested aggressively on both sides.

The dueling civil claims now run parallel to Davis’ ongoing criminal case in Florida. Davis was arrested on January 28 after a weeks-long search involving U.S. Marshals and a multi-county surveillance operation. He was released on $16,000 bond and ordered to stay away from both Rossel and the Miami Gardens establishment where the alleged incident took place.

Criminal Charges Still Loom

While the false imprisonment charge was dropped on March 27 after prosecutors determined it was redundant, Davis still faces two criminal charges: felony attempted kidnapping and misdemeanor battery. The charges stem from an October 27, 2025 incident at Tootsies Cabaret in Miami Gardens, where Rossel, a dancer at the club, told police that Davis grabbed her by the hair and throat and attempted to force her out of the building. Police reviewed surveillance footage and determined that the evidence supported the issuance of an arrest warrant.

The criminal case exists separately from any civil claims. According to CBS Sports, Miami Gardens Police Executive Officer Emmanuel Jeanty stated during a January press conference that the investigation determined Davis used force in an attempt to remove the victim from the location against her will.

Davis also faces a separate warrant from Baltimore for allegedly violating probation tied to a 2020 hit-and-run that injured four people, including a pregnant woman. A Baltimore judge issued that warrant in early February.

A Pattern and a Career in Limbo

The current case is the latest in a lengthy history of legal entanglements for Davis. He was arrested in Broward County in 2022 on domestic violence charges, was accused of striking the mother of his children in July 2025, and was captured on video in 2020 appearing to grab an ex-girlfriend by the neck at a charity basketball game. Charges in the prior domestic violence cases were either dropped or dismissed when the alleged victims declined to cooperate with prosecutors.

The boxing consequences have been severe. The WBA reclassified Davis from active lightweight champion to “champion in recess” in January 2026, effectively stripping him of the title he had held since 2023. His inactivity in the ring now stretches past a year, with his last official bout being the majority decision draw against Lamont Roach on March 1, 2025 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

Reports surfaced earlier this month that Davis is in discussions for a summer rematch with Isaac Cruz at super lightweight on Prime Video pay-per-view, but whether a fighter facing a felony attempted kidnapping charge can realistically secure a commission license remains an open question.

For Davis, the countersuit represents an attempt to reframe the narrative around his legal troubles, casting himself as the victim of an extortion attempt rather than the aggressor. Whether a judge and, potentially, a jury see it that way will depend on evidence that has yet to be fully tested in open court. What is beyond dispute is that the fighter who once appeared destined to inherit Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s throne as boxing’s biggest attraction is now fighting battles that no amount of ring skill can resolve.

Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury’s all-time great trilogy took something from the British fighter, according to the American puncher’s former coach, Malik Scott, who talked to Action Network about his former pupil’s rivalry, and his return to the ring on Saturday, April 4 at the 02 Arena in London atop Misfits Pro card on DAZN.

Wilder and Fury fought thrice from 2018 to 2021, sharing a disputed split draw in Los Angeles, before Fury took control with wins in the sequel and trilogy bout, and edging him 5-3 in combined knockdowns across the fights, too.

Since the last of their fights, Wilder is 2 (2 KOs) against 2 defeats (1 KO). Fury, meanwhile, is 3-2 (2 KOs). Neither has really bounced back with aplomb.

For Scott, the Fury from the Wilder saga was the not the same Tyson as the one who stepped through the ropes ahead of, and during, his two losses to Oleksandr Usyk.

“The power actually feels scary, and it’s a serious thing,” said Scott. “Tyson Fury felt it the worst because he had to deal with it with 10-ounce gloves on, being hit by Wilder, getting knocked down, getting up with his equilibrium disturbed, and continuing to fight, and then getting knocked down again. And that happened to him, not in just one fight, but in two fights, repeatedly got knocked down by Wilder. And that’s not even counting the punches that landed that he didn’t go down from.Tyson Fury

“So he’s just not the same man, but I knew he wasn’t the same man when he gave Usyk two good fights. I knew he wasn’t the same man when he stopped Dillian Whyte.”

Wilder returns this weekend for his fight against Chisora riding the momentum of a win, having finished Tyrrell Anthony Herndon in the seventh round. Scott predicts another victory in England.

He continued: “If Deontay, who’s the hardest puncher in the history of the sport in my opinion, cracked Derek coming in, Derek goes to sleep.

“If Derek can stay in Deontay’s chest and attempt to drown him and take him into deep waters and drown him, if Deontay doesn’t knock him out, then it could be a long night for Deontay,” said Scott.

“I think Deontay Wilder wins by knockout early.”