Sluggish Andy Ruiz gives Anthony Joshua a free pass to redemption


A focused and disciplined back-foot performance from the 30-year-old Briton wrested back his world heavyweight titles by unanimous points decision over a woefully out-of-shape Andy Ruiz Jr.
An unprecedented event had taken one last bizarre twist when a large proportion of the country’s 59mm annual rainfall dumped itself on the partially covered arena in the hours and minutes leading up to its headline contest.
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Hide AdBut in the end it was the fight itself that proved a wash-out as Joshua picked and prodded his way to a victory which appeared secure long before the three judges handed down their 118-110 (twice), 119-109 landslide verdicts.
“Maybe I could have done more but simplicity is genius,” said Joshua, who picked up a British record purse in excess of £60 million for a win which places him back at the top of the heavyweight table. “I took it back to the old school, seventies style, and outclassed the current champion.
“There was a time when I looked into Andy’s eyes and wanted to put my fist through his head. But then I thought, this is boxing, it’s not wrestling. I had to box to my plan.”
Hopes of a repeat of the five-knockdown classic in which Ruiz prevailed in their first fight in June was stirred by a lively start which saw both men bloodied around their respective left eyes by the end of round two. But it soon became clear that Ruiz’s one-stone weight gain was hampering his chances to get inside Joshua’s jab as the challenger broadly stuck to the script.
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Hide AdDespite some worrying moments when Ruiz almost succeeded in luring him into his kind of close-up contest – notably when he barged in behind a right hand at the end of the eighth – Joshua was for the most part given a free pass to redemption. Suspicions had been raised that Ruiz had taken the ‘Buster’ Douglas route to his title reign when he weighed in on Friday more than a stone heavier than for their first meeting, and the heaviest ever for a title fight outside the seven-foot Russian Nikolai Valuev.
And the Mexican-American was brutally honest during his post-fight media duties, in which he conceded apparently without a hint of irony: “There’s just a lot of things that were going on my plate.”
Ruiz added: “I should have trained harder. Maybe if I hadn’t put on all this weight I would have been faster.”
Ruiz’s calls for a third meeting are likely to be rejected as Joshua moves up to clean up one of two outstanding mandatory defences against Oleksandr Usyk or Kubrat Pulev.