Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
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gregregegg
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Paul putting a weight limit in is smart, but surely he could of got it down to 240lb at least… just makes AJs last few days a bit odd and a slight weight cut for somone that’s never done it will be a bit disruptive. Also I guess could effect his chin a tiny bit increasing Paul’s chance from 1/200 to 1/100…
If your AJ what do you do? Do you try carry it at all? Or just walk out there and ice him in 30 seconds.
I personally think you open with a full strength strait right hoping to knock him out first shot in 5 seconds…..
If your AJ what do you do? Do you try carry it at all? Or just walk out there and ice him in 30 seconds.
I personally think you open with a full strength strait right hoping to knock him out first shot in 5 seconds…..
Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Ice him. The longer it goes on, the longer the weight cut comes into play. Think it's silly for Joshua to even agree to it with a weight cut, he doesn't need to.gregregegg wrote: ↑17 Nov 2025, 15:59 Paul putting a weight limit in is smart, but surely he could of got it down to 240lb at least… just makes AJs last few days a bit odd and a slight weight cut for somone that’s never done it will be a bit disruptive. Also I guess could effect his chin a tiny bit increasing Paul’s chance from 1/200 to 1/100…
If your AJ what do you do? Do you try carry it at all? Or just walk out there and ice him in 30 seconds.
I personally think you open with a full strength strait right hoping to knock him out first shot in 5 seconds…..
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Sendo Takeshi
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Stop using logic, mike.
I'm intrigued by this fight and wanna know how it goes.
Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
I don't think the 245 pound limit will even be particularly difficult for Joshua to be honest. He weighs in at 252 on average anyway so we're only talking about 7 pounds here.
You could skip a few meals and make that happen.
You could skip a few meals and make that happen.
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gregregegg
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Yea I think it’s just a slight distraction. I’m actualy surprised Paul couldn’t negotiate that to 235 or somthing… still would be a doable cut and wild far less than even the ledger… but I guess I don’t know what AJ weighs right now.
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Sendo Takeshi
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
So many mentally challanged people on social media who actually think Netflix is fixing the outcome.
The idea Netflix would risk fixing a real fight is beyond ridiculous. The legal, financial, and reputational fallout would be insane.
But some people can't think that far ahead.
The idea Netflix would risk fixing a real fight is beyond ridiculous. The legal, financial, and reputational fallout would be insane.
But some people can't think that far ahead.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Okolie has offered to spar with Jake Paul
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Thomastearns
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
As much as 99% of boxing fans would like to see Jake Paul ritually executed for his blasphemous transgressions against our noble art of boxing, and much as we'd be happy to pay for the privilege to witness it, this will be a carefully scripted offering.
Even Netflix aren't so desperate for ratings that they are prepared to broadcast a live snuff movie.
There's nowhere on Earth, not even Saudi, that a genuine fight between Anthony Joshua and Jake Paul could be sanctioned.
Okay, okay...maybe North Korea would if Kim was feeling desperately bored.
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golden_labrador
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
some hugging tips
Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
I would honestly be quite surprised if this actually happens. I suspect Jake Paul will fake an injury or something to get out of it.Thomastearns wrote: ↑18 Nov 2025, 16:59Controversial wrote: ↑17 Nov 2025, 13:15Everything goes out the window when there's big money to be made
As much as 99% of boxing fans would like to see Jake Paul ritually executed for his blasphemous transgressions against our noble art of boxing, and much as we'd be happy to pay for the privilege to witness it, this will be a carefully scripted offering.
Even Netflix aren't so desperate for ratings that they are prepared to broadcast a live snuff movie.
There's nowhere on Earth, not even Saudi, that a genuine fight between Anthony Joshua and Jake Paul could be sanctioned.
Okay, okay...maybe North Korea would if Kim was feeling desperately bored.
Maybe not though. If the event winds up happening I'll watch for sure because one way or the other it'll be the last time anyone cares about a Jake Paul fight. If its a fix, it ruins him. If he gets KO'd...well people finally got what they wanted and there's no need to see it twice.
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gregregegg
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Top sparring will be tricky. Even in 20oz gloves you gotta be carfull not to spark out a 100 million dollar fight…
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Frank--Warren says Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul fight has 'car crash written all over it'
Promoter Frank--Warren believes Anthony Joshua's fight against Jake Paul has "car crash written all over it."
It was announced on Monday that the former two-time unified heavyweight champion Joshua (28-4, 25 KOs) will face Paul (12-1, 7 KOs) in a professional bout on Dec. 19 in Miami, Florida.
The fight was rumoured earlier this year before Paul agreed to fight lightweight champion Gervonta Davis, until the fight fell through earlier this month. Paul notoriously had Joshua on his fight wish list and has now landed the bout.
Joshua will now step in but Warren, who promotes fellow British heavyweight Tyson Fury, has no doubts how it will unfold.
"It's a big, big moment for him [Paul]. He's a massive underdog, everyone will think it's going to be rubber-stamped. It's got car crash written all over it," Warren told ESPN.
"People will watch it. It's a big fight, a fight that will have big viewing figures.
"He's [Joshua] taking the money and it's a safe option. I'd much rather he be in there fighting Moses [Itauma]."
Despite fighting Paul in the controversial bout, it's hoped Joshua will still fight Fury in a much anticipated showdown next year.
Joshua's promoter Eddie Hearn said last week they will work towards the fight with Turki Alalshikh, the chairman of Saudi Arabia's General Entertainment Authority, set to attempt to broker a deal between the two.
Alalshikh said Joshua will fight in February before targeting Fury in 2026.
Hearn has gone on record to say that their side deal was almost done, but Warren said Fury will have the final say.
"Tyson will make his decision what he wants to do," Warren said.
"All it's about with Tyson is does he want to do it and how much [money]?
"There's talks going on. The one to take it is Tyson if he wants to do it or not. If the offer is the right offer, he'll do it."
Promoter Frank--Warren believes Anthony Joshua's fight against Jake Paul has "car crash written all over it."
It was announced on Monday that the former two-time unified heavyweight champion Joshua (28-4, 25 KOs) will face Paul (12-1, 7 KOs) in a professional bout on Dec. 19 in Miami, Florida.
The fight was rumoured earlier this year before Paul agreed to fight lightweight champion Gervonta Davis, until the fight fell through earlier this month. Paul notoriously had Joshua on his fight wish list and has now landed the bout.
Joshua will now step in but Warren, who promotes fellow British heavyweight Tyson Fury, has no doubts how it will unfold.
"It's a big, big moment for him [Paul]. He's a massive underdog, everyone will think it's going to be rubber-stamped. It's got car crash written all over it," Warren told ESPN.
"People will watch it. It's a big fight, a fight that will have big viewing figures.
"He's [Joshua] taking the money and it's a safe option. I'd much rather he be in there fighting Moses [Itauma]."
Despite fighting Paul in the controversial bout, it's hoped Joshua will still fight Fury in a much anticipated showdown next year.
Joshua's promoter Eddie Hearn said last week they will work towards the fight with Turki Alalshikh, the chairman of Saudi Arabia's General Entertainment Authority, set to attempt to broker a deal between the two.
Alalshikh said Joshua will fight in February before targeting Fury in 2026.
Hearn has gone on record to say that their side deal was almost done, but Warren said Fury will have the final say.
"Tyson will make his decision what he wants to do," Warren said.
"All it's about with Tyson is does he want to do it and how much [money]?
"There's talks going on. The one to take it is Tyson if he wants to do it or not. If the offer is the right offer, he'll do it."
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Joshua given offer he simply couldn't refuse - Bunce
Boxing expert Steve Bunce says Anthony Joshua was given an "offer he simply couldn't refuse" to fight Jake Paul.
Britain's Joshua, the former two-time unified heavyweight champion, will take on YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul at Kaseya Center in Miami on 19 December.
The fight will consist of eight three-minute rounds and both fighters will wear regulation 10-ounce gloves.
Joshua, 36, weighed more than 250lbs during his previous three fights but must come in at under 245lbs for the bout.
Bunce said that the fight is "ridiculous" and 28-year-old American Paul is nothing more than a "novice", but added he can understand the financial appeal for Joshua who is reportedly, external set to earn £36.9m ($50m).
"Last November Jake Paul fought Mike Tyson and nearly broke the world," Bunce told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"They had something ridiculous like 300 million people watching on different channels and were paid something along those lines in dollars as well.
"And that's the reason this fight is happening, let's get it right. AJ has been made an offer he simply couldn't refuse and he's accepted.
"I would not deny a single man or woman that boxes professionally a pound note, penny, a cent, a dime, the money for any fight.
"If AJ is being paid as handsomely as we're told, bear in mind he does a lot of work for the community with his foundation, if it spreads the love around and absolutely loads up his pockets, I've no problem with it."
Bunce said Joshua is "still in talks" over fighting fellow Briton Tyson Fury and the Paul bout will be "one of the final paydays" for the 2012 Olympic champion despite an obvious mismatch.
"AJ will be at least six inches taller and he will be perhaps four stone heavier. He's an Olympic champion remember - we overlook that fact," Bunce said.
"Jake Paul is a terrific novice. He's a great novice in a weight division below - cruiserweight - and that's what he is: a novice. But he's a novice who conjures up these ridiculous fights."
Nakisa Bidarian, co-founder of Most Valuable Promotions and Paul's manager, said he had no concerns about the fight on safety grounds.
"I don't think it's reckless in any way shape or form," he told BBC Sport.
"Jake's in a much better position than a lot of fights which happen in boxing on a regular basis. I think he has a great shot.
"AJ is big, strong, but slower. He's more vulnerable to Jake's movement. In my mind this is more sanctionable than many fights in the sport of boxing."
However, former British middleweight Nick Blackwell - who had to retire from boxing after he sustained a brain injury against Chris Eubank Jr in 2016 - said he does not agree with the fight going ahead as he feels it is "so dangerous".
He told BBC Newsbeat he does not "want anyone to go through what I've been through" and thinks Joshua will be "able to do what he wants".
Despite his personal objection, he understands the global appeal the fight will have.
"He's going to earn a lot of money out of it and everyone's going to want to watch it," he added.
"It's entertainment for everyone, a massive stage for them both, but I don't agree with it and the whole boxing world won't agree with it."
Will it tarnish Joshua's reputation?
Bunce acknowledged there is a recent history of fights of this nature and cited UFC champion Francis Ngannou's bouts against Tyson Fury and Joshua as an example.
Fury claimed a controversial victory by split decision in October 2023 before Joshua cruised to a second-round knockout win over Ngannou in March 2024.
"Tyson Fury travelled out to Saudi Arabia and picked up an absolute fortune for fighting Ngannou, who was 6ft 7in and 20 stone," Bunce said.
"Ngannou was 'untouchable' and 'unbreakable'. He pushed Fury and dropped him and people screamed blue murder saying it was a disgrace that Fury had damaged our sport.
"What happened, beautifully, a few months later was AJ got in with him [Ngannou], looked him up down, walked out then promptly knocked 10 bells out of him and sparked him out unconscious in the second round."
Bunce said there is a big difference between Joshua fighting someone of Ngannou's physical stature compared to Paul, though.
He added: "It's even more alarming for Jake Paul in the sense that Ngannou is five inches taller than Paul and five and a half stone heavier as well as having, quote unquote, 'the greatest chin in all fighting sports'.
"He managed to get himself sparked out in the second round so lord only knows what will happen to Jake Paul once the first bell sounds. Don't try to say you won't be watching, though - of course you will!"
However, Paul's promoter Bidarian insisted the bout will be a "career-defining moment" for both fighters and Joshua has the chance to become a "legend" to many in the "boxing community who hate Jake Paul".
He said: "For Jake Paul it's a chance to show how far he has come. For Anthony Joshua it's a chance to end the Jake Paul train, but also a lot of risk for him if he doesn't show the way he should, the way people expect him to.
"I commend him for not getting caught up in that noise of 'oh you shouldn't even be in there with Jake Paul'.
Does it feel like a dignified end to Joshua's career?
At 36 - and with his powers seemingly on the wane - Joshua's decision to fight Paul is a far from ideal way to see out the twilight of his career, according to Bunce.
"If I put my purist hat on, the hat of the man who has been covering schoolboy boxing, covered AJ at a mere 18 years of age, and been to every level of boxing, of course it's not dignified," he said.
"Would I have liked to see him with Fury five years ago? Of course I would have. But it didn't happen then and even that fight is going to be late."
Bidarian has predicted the Paul bout will be the "biggest combat sports event of 2025" and dubbed it the "biggest fight" of Joshua's career.
He said: "From a reach and viewership perspective, it's absolutely the biggest fight.
"Just like the biggest fight of Mike Tyson's career was against Jake Paul. The most people watched Mike Tyson in a fight in his whole career was against Jake Paul."
Bunce joked that at least Joshua's fight with Paul still retains at least a semblance of credibility given boxers have plumbed to even further depths at times.
"It could be worse. A great man called Chuck Wepner fought a bear. The fight was so good with the bear they had a rematch!" he added.
"When the bear came in for the second fight Chuck Wepner told me: 'I looked over to the bear and he had done his homework, and nullified my jab!'
"You cannot invent this sport sometimes."
Boxing expert Steve Bunce says Anthony Joshua was given an "offer he simply couldn't refuse" to fight Jake Paul.
Britain's Joshua, the former two-time unified heavyweight champion, will take on YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul at Kaseya Center in Miami on 19 December.
The fight will consist of eight three-minute rounds and both fighters will wear regulation 10-ounce gloves.
Joshua, 36, weighed more than 250lbs during his previous three fights but must come in at under 245lbs for the bout.
Bunce said that the fight is "ridiculous" and 28-year-old American Paul is nothing more than a "novice", but added he can understand the financial appeal for Joshua who is reportedly, external set to earn £36.9m ($50m).
"Last November Jake Paul fought Mike Tyson and nearly broke the world," Bunce told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"They had something ridiculous like 300 million people watching on different channels and were paid something along those lines in dollars as well.
"And that's the reason this fight is happening, let's get it right. AJ has been made an offer he simply couldn't refuse and he's accepted.
"I would not deny a single man or woman that boxes professionally a pound note, penny, a cent, a dime, the money for any fight.
"If AJ is being paid as handsomely as we're told, bear in mind he does a lot of work for the community with his foundation, if it spreads the love around and absolutely loads up his pockets, I've no problem with it."
Bunce said Joshua is "still in talks" over fighting fellow Briton Tyson Fury and the Paul bout will be "one of the final paydays" for the 2012 Olympic champion despite an obvious mismatch.
"AJ will be at least six inches taller and he will be perhaps four stone heavier. He's an Olympic champion remember - we overlook that fact," Bunce said.
"Jake Paul is a terrific novice. He's a great novice in a weight division below - cruiserweight - and that's what he is: a novice. But he's a novice who conjures up these ridiculous fights."
Nakisa Bidarian, co-founder of Most Valuable Promotions and Paul's manager, said he had no concerns about the fight on safety grounds.
"I don't think it's reckless in any way shape or form," he told BBC Sport.
"Jake's in a much better position than a lot of fights which happen in boxing on a regular basis. I think he has a great shot.
"AJ is big, strong, but slower. He's more vulnerable to Jake's movement. In my mind this is more sanctionable than many fights in the sport of boxing."
However, former British middleweight Nick Blackwell - who had to retire from boxing after he sustained a brain injury against Chris Eubank Jr in 2016 - said he does not agree with the fight going ahead as he feels it is "so dangerous".
He told BBC Newsbeat he does not "want anyone to go through what I've been through" and thinks Joshua will be "able to do what he wants".
Despite his personal objection, he understands the global appeal the fight will have.
"He's going to earn a lot of money out of it and everyone's going to want to watch it," he added.
"It's entertainment for everyone, a massive stage for them both, but I don't agree with it and the whole boxing world won't agree with it."
Will it tarnish Joshua's reputation?
Bunce acknowledged there is a recent history of fights of this nature and cited UFC champion Francis Ngannou's bouts against Tyson Fury and Joshua as an example.
Fury claimed a controversial victory by split decision in October 2023 before Joshua cruised to a second-round knockout win over Ngannou in March 2024.
"Tyson Fury travelled out to Saudi Arabia and picked up an absolute fortune for fighting Ngannou, who was 6ft 7in and 20 stone," Bunce said.
"Ngannou was 'untouchable' and 'unbreakable'. He pushed Fury and dropped him and people screamed blue murder saying it was a disgrace that Fury had damaged our sport.
"What happened, beautifully, a few months later was AJ got in with him [Ngannou], looked him up down, walked out then promptly knocked 10 bells out of him and sparked him out unconscious in the second round."
Bunce said there is a big difference between Joshua fighting someone of Ngannou's physical stature compared to Paul, though.
He added: "It's even more alarming for Jake Paul in the sense that Ngannou is five inches taller than Paul and five and a half stone heavier as well as having, quote unquote, 'the greatest chin in all fighting sports'.
"He managed to get himself sparked out in the second round so lord only knows what will happen to Jake Paul once the first bell sounds. Don't try to say you won't be watching, though - of course you will!"
However, Paul's promoter Bidarian insisted the bout will be a "career-defining moment" for both fighters and Joshua has the chance to become a "legend" to many in the "boxing community who hate Jake Paul".
He said: "For Jake Paul it's a chance to show how far he has come. For Anthony Joshua it's a chance to end the Jake Paul train, but also a lot of risk for him if he doesn't show the way he should, the way people expect him to.
"I commend him for not getting caught up in that noise of 'oh you shouldn't even be in there with Jake Paul'.
Does it feel like a dignified end to Joshua's career?
At 36 - and with his powers seemingly on the wane - Joshua's decision to fight Paul is a far from ideal way to see out the twilight of his career, according to Bunce.
"If I put my purist hat on, the hat of the man who has been covering schoolboy boxing, covered AJ at a mere 18 years of age, and been to every level of boxing, of course it's not dignified," he said.
"Would I have liked to see him with Fury five years ago? Of course I would have. But it didn't happen then and even that fight is going to be late."
Bidarian has predicted the Paul bout will be the "biggest combat sports event of 2025" and dubbed it the "biggest fight" of Joshua's career.
He said: "From a reach and viewership perspective, it's absolutely the biggest fight.
"Just like the biggest fight of Mike Tyson's career was against Jake Paul. The most people watched Mike Tyson in a fight in his whole career was against Jake Paul."
Bunce joked that at least Joshua's fight with Paul still retains at least a semblance of credibility given boxers have plumbed to even further depths at times.
"It could be worse. A great man called Chuck Wepner fought a bear. The fight was so good with the bear they had a rematch!" he added.
"When the bear came in for the second fight Chuck Wepner told me: 'I looked over to the bear and he had done his homework, and nullified my jab!'
"You cannot invent this sport sometimes."
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Tommy Fury Reveals Why He Rejected $15m Offer To Fight Jake Paul
Tommy Fury will not be fighting Jake Paul despite the pair often going back and forth about a rematch.
These two first fought back in 2023 when Fury had had just eight fights. It was a relatively close contest, with Fury being put down in the final round but eventually taking a split decision points win on the cards.
Since then, he has had surgery to correct a hand injury and has fought just twice more, beating KSI in 2023, then Kenan Hanjalic back in May.
Paul, meanwhile, has pushed on and become one of the most talked about stars in boxing. He has now had 13 contests with just that one loss and some big wins against big names that have elevated his profile,
Most famously, he beat an almost 60-year-old Mike Tyson last November and has also bested Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, Nate Diaz, Tyron Woodley and Mike Perry, and is next out against Anthony Joshua on December 19 after Fury was reportedly offered the fight but refused.
Reacting on X, Fury explained his decision not to take the rematch despite the lure of a huge purse.
“Offering me the fight in America… a place you know I can’t get to right now. Convenient. Offer me the same $15M anywhere else in the world and I’ll be there in 8 weeks to shut you the f**k up and repeat what I did the first time. And ‘daddy’s little boy’? If anyone’s a son here it’s you… I gave you your first L. @jakepaul”
Tommy Fury will not be fighting Jake Paul despite the pair often going back and forth about a rematch.
These two first fought back in 2023 when Fury had had just eight fights. It was a relatively close contest, with Fury being put down in the final round but eventually taking a split decision points win on the cards.
Since then, he has had surgery to correct a hand injury and has fought just twice more, beating KSI in 2023, then Kenan Hanjalic back in May.
Paul, meanwhile, has pushed on and become one of the most talked about stars in boxing. He has now had 13 contests with just that one loss and some big wins against big names that have elevated his profile,
Most famously, he beat an almost 60-year-old Mike Tyson last November and has also bested Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, Nate Diaz, Tyron Woodley and Mike Perry, and is next out against Anthony Joshua on December 19 after Fury was reportedly offered the fight but refused.
Reacting on X, Fury explained his decision not to take the rematch despite the lure of a huge purse.
“Offering me the fight in America… a place you know I can’t get to right now. Convenient. Offer me the same $15M anywhere else in the world and I’ll be there in 8 weeks to shut you the f**k up and repeat what I did the first time. And ‘daddy’s little boy’? If anyone’s a son here it’s you… I gave you your first L. @jakepaul”
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Terence Crawford accepted Jake Paul fight offer but Anthony Joshua preferred for one key reason
Terence Crawford accepted Jake Paul's fight offer, but the YouTuber-turned-boxer was the one who decided to face Anthony Joshua.
Paul's fight with Gervonta Davis was cancelled, and the 'Problem Child' was forced to look for an alternative opponent to get back into the ring before the start of 2026.
A list of potential foes was put together, with some ambitious names considered including recently crowned undisputed 168lbs champion Terence Crawford.
Ultimately, Paul decided to look elsewhere and announced his stunning heavyweight clash with Joshua, which will take place in Miami on December 19.
When giving the inside scoop on how the fight materialised, Paul's business partner Nakisa Bidarian insisted Crawford did give his blessing for a showdown.
He told TMZ: "And there were probably 30 fighters who accepted to fight Jake.
"AJ being one of them, Crawford being another, and AJ is the one that we came to an agreement on. Yes, 100% [he wanted the fight]."
On choosing Joshua, Bidarian added that he believes the choice of a more sizeable opponent was preferred to give him an unlikely chance of victory.
"It's a dangerous fight for Jake, but it's a more winnable fight for Jake than Gervonta Davis.
"And I say that in terms of, yes, Tank is a much smaller man, but he's quick, he's fast, he's precise, he's super skilled, and he had knockout power.
"AJ is big, strong, and has knockout power, but he's definitely slower than Tank. He's definitely less skilled than Tank.
"And so it will give Jake, the boxer, who's been in the sport a lot less than Joshua, the opportunity to display a better skill set than he would have against Tank from my perspective."
Bidarian then suggested Oleksandr Usyk's relationship with Joshua helped smooth over negotiations.
He concluded: "Joshua was in camp with Usyk's coaches. So I don't know who's picking whose brain, but Usyk's definitely in the conversation here."
Terence Crawford accepted Jake Paul's fight offer, but the YouTuber-turned-boxer was the one who decided to face Anthony Joshua.
Paul's fight with Gervonta Davis was cancelled, and the 'Problem Child' was forced to look for an alternative opponent to get back into the ring before the start of 2026.
A list of potential foes was put together, with some ambitious names considered including recently crowned undisputed 168lbs champion Terence Crawford.
Ultimately, Paul decided to look elsewhere and announced his stunning heavyweight clash with Joshua, which will take place in Miami on December 19.
When giving the inside scoop on how the fight materialised, Paul's business partner Nakisa Bidarian insisted Crawford did give his blessing for a showdown.
He told TMZ: "And there were probably 30 fighters who accepted to fight Jake.
"AJ being one of them, Crawford being another, and AJ is the one that we came to an agreement on. Yes, 100% [he wanted the fight]."
On choosing Joshua, Bidarian added that he believes the choice of a more sizeable opponent was preferred to give him an unlikely chance of victory.
"It's a dangerous fight for Jake, but it's a more winnable fight for Jake than Gervonta Davis.
"And I say that in terms of, yes, Tank is a much smaller man, but he's quick, he's fast, he's precise, he's super skilled, and he had knockout power.
"AJ is big, strong, and has knockout power, but he's definitely slower than Tank. He's definitely less skilled than Tank.
"And so it will give Jake, the boxer, who's been in the sport a lot less than Joshua, the opportunity to display a better skill set than he would have against Tank from my perspective."
Bidarian then suggested Oleksandr Usyk's relationship with Joshua helped smooth over negotiations.
He concluded: "Joshua was in camp with Usyk's coaches. So I don't know who's picking whose brain, but Usyk's definitely in the conversation here."
Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
This is small boxer delusionRuthless-RKO wrote: ↑19 Nov 2025, 09:36 Terence Crawford accepted Jake Paul fight offer but Anthony Joshua preferred for one key reason
Terence Crawford accepted Jake Paul's fight offer, but the YouTuber-turned-boxer was the one who decided to face Anthony Joshua.
Paul's fight with Gervonta Davis was cancelled, and the 'Problem Child' was forced to look for an alternative opponent to get back into the ring before the start of 2026.
A list of potential foes was put together, with some ambitious names considered including recently crowned undisputed 168lbs champion Terence Crawford.
Ultimately, Paul decided to look elsewhere and announced his stunning heavyweight clash with Joshua, which will take place in Miami on December 19.
When giving the inside scoop on how the fight materialised, Paul's business partner Nakisa Bidarian insisted Crawford did give his blessing for a showdown.
He told TMZ: "And there were probably 30 fighters who accepted to fight Jake.
"AJ being one of them, Crawford being another, and AJ is the one that we came to an agreement on. Yes, 100% [he wanted the fight]."
On choosing Joshua, Bidarian added that he believes the choice of a more sizeable opponent was preferred to give him an unlikely chance of victory.
"It's a dangerous fight for Jake, but it's a more winnable fight for Jake than Gervonta Davis.
"And I say that in terms of, yes, Tank is a much smaller man, but he's quick, he's fast, he's precise, he's super skilled, and he had knockout power.
"AJ is big, strong, and has knockout power, but he's definitely slower than Tank. He's definitely less skilled than Tank.
"And so it will give Jake, the boxer, who's been in the sport a lot less than Joshua, the opportunity to display a better skill set than he would have against Tank from my perspective."
Bidarian then suggested Oleksandr Usyk's relationship with Joshua helped smooth over negotiations.
He concluded: "Joshua was in camp with Usyk's coaches. So I don't know who's picking whose brain, but Usyk's definitely in the conversation here."
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gregregegg
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Anyone heard any undercard rumours? You wanna have a couple really good 50-50s under it cause main event might be 20 seconds…
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
might be the same as we were gonna get for Paul-Tankgregregegg wrote: ↑20 Nov 2025, 03:30 Anyone heard any undercard rumours? You wanna have a couple really good 50-50s under it cause main event might be 20 seconds…
Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
I think it'd be wise to put some hot prospects or maybe even contenders on the undercard here just for the exposure it would give them.
Whatever people think of this event, whether you think it's a farce, you wanna see it, whatever...fact is. People are gonna watch it. Lots of people. So you if you have a guy that you think could be tomorrow's next big star in Boxing, this is the kinda show they should be on.
Whatever people think of this event, whether you think it's a farce, you wanna see it, whatever...fact is. People are gonna watch it. Lots of people. So you if you have a guy that you think could be tomorrow's next big star in Boxing, this is the kinda show they should be on.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Ruthless-RKO
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
Paul vs Joshua – Kickoff Press Conference
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Sendo Takeshi
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Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
DC keeping it real haha.
In hindsight, Paul vs Ngannou would've been a more interesting fight.
Re: Anthony Joshua vs. Jake Paul | NETFLIX - December 19, 2025
all 'fans' of this were probably tuning in to the golden joystick gaming awards as well