Perkin Warbeck wrote: ↑20 Dec 2023, 15:46 Day of Reckoning - Running Order:
1) Frank Sanchez vs. Junior Fa
2) Filip Hrgovic vs. Mark De Mori
3) Jai Opetaia vs. Ellis Zorro
4) Arslanbek Makhmudov vs. Agit Kabayel
5) Dmitry Bivol vs. Lyndon Arthur
6) Daniel Dubois vs. Jarrell Miller
7) Deontay Wilder vs. Joseph Parker
8) Anthony Joshua vs. Otto Wallin
Here are the latest betting odds:
Anthony Joshua 4:1 Otto Wallin (heavyweight)
Deontay Wilder 7:1 Joseph Parker (heavyweight)
Daniel Dubois 3:1 Jarrell Miller (heavyweight)
Dmitry Bivol 20:1 Lyndon Arthur (light heavyweight)
Jai Opetaia 25:1 Ellis Zorro (cruiserweight)
Arslanbek Makhmudov 10:1 Agit Kabayel (heavyweight)
Frank Sanchez 20:1 Junior Fa (heavyweight)
Filip Hrgovic 50:1 Mark De Mori (heavyweight)
It's difficult to argue with those odds, although I still expect Parker v Wilder to be a close one.
Joseph Parker is not the kind of fighter you can expect to go and knock out in a couple of rounds.
Deontay Wilder is also no stranger to getting buzzed early and is not known for his boxing skills.
7:1 seems harsh.
Mark De Mori is up against the 2nd best technician of the show and so Hrgovic must be the safest bet of the night.
Lyndon Arthur is up again one of boxing's very best technicians in Bivol, but he won't care about any of that. I'm guessing he'll make it messy and rough for as long as he can still stand up.
I'm not sure how the unbeaten Kabayel (23-0) feels about being 10-1 against the unbeaten Makhmudov (19-0).
Once again, we should give Joshua full credit for putting his rep on the line again. No current HW, not until Usyk (hopefully) meets Fury, has anything like his resume.
The tricky southpaw Otto Wallin almost derailed Fury a few years back and naturally enough none of the other big boys seemed to be too keen to face him since. His recent win against Gassiev was also asurprise, so AJ knows this is serious.
On the other hand, every Anthony Joshua fight is serious, and has been serious for years and years.
Let's not forget that Wallin, like most of the underdogs here, knows full well that this is the greatest chance of his life.
Even better, the venue (Boulevard Hall in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia) will be about as a level playing field as you can ever expect in boxing.
Asist of the boxers interviewed have said, we boxing fans should all be a little grateful to the man whose ambitions made all of this possible.
Turki bin Abdel Muhsin Al-Alshaikh is the kind of sports minister that we could all do with.