Agencies
Olympic champion Anthony Joshua defeated former kick-boxer Dillian Whyte to take the British heavyweight title on Saturday with a bruising seventh-round knockout and edge closer to a possible shot at the world crown.
The 26-year-old Englishman took his record to 15 knockouts from 15 fights since turning pro after winning 2012 Olympic gold in London.
Joshua’s latest win raises the prospect of a clash with WBO and WBA heavyweight champion Tyson Fury if his fellow British fighter beats Wladimir Klitschko in their world title rematch next summer.
“Yes I enjoyed it, more because it was about bragging rights,” said Joshua who had lost to Whyte in 2009 during their amateur careers.
“There had been a lot of talking, all the way back since 2009. We’d been patiently waiting for this moment and I enjoy being victorious and showing that talk is cheap, you have to back it up when you’re in the ring.
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“He was tough, there were times when I hurt him in the first round and he hurt me in the second. It was a matter of who had that little more grit, determination and skill.”
Saturday’s fight was the first time Joshua had been taken beyond three rounds in his professional career.
“I took myself past three rounds and felt that I carried the right engine through the fight,” he added.
“Even when I had been loading up and doing silly things, I still had enough power to knock him out in the seventh.”
Joshua, who also retained his Commonwealth crown, ended a bad-tempered clash after one minute and 27 seconds, initially staggering his bitter rival with a straight right before finishing him off with a ferocious right uppercut.
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