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Anthony Joshua knocks out Francis Ngannou in second round – live

Anthony Joshua knocks out Francis Ngannou in second round  live
Round-by-round report: Anthony Joshua and Francis Ngannou meet in a 10-round non-title bout in Riyadh. Follow along with Bryan Armen Graham

“On the route to the championship, you should always stay focused,” Joshua says in his in-ring interview. “And this was me stepping aside from that mission. I thought it was something for the broadcasters and sponsors to kind of get behind. It’s just about entertainment. But when I saw the fight with him and Tyson Fury, I was like, ‘Damn, this guy can fight.’ So I said I need a piece of that, and as I said, he’s an inspiration. So we wanted to welcome him. We broke bread together and he’s a great champion and this doesn’t take away anything of his capabilities because in boxing it’s one or the other. He can come again.

“I told him he shouldn’t leave boxing. He can do well. remember, he’s two fights in and he’s fought the best. He can go a long way if he stays dedicated, but it’s up to him.”

The Compubox punch statistics lend numerical context to the carnage. Joshua landed 12 of 31 punches (29.3%), compared to eight of 42 for Ngannou (19.0%). Notably, Joshua landed five of nine power punches in all (55.6%). He scored knockdowns on three of those, the last of them a knockout.

Compubox punch statistics from Joshua v NgannouView image in fullscreen

The fight continues on even terms for two minute until Ngannou goes down with about a minute left in the round, a heavy straight right-left hook combination. And this time the Cameroonian looks in serious trouble. Ngannou somehow makes it to his feet, but Joshua wastes no time: the Briton surges into the pocket and drops him with a heat-seeking overhand right that leaves Ngannous out cold on the canvas. The referee Richard Gonzales immediately waves it off and it’s over! Anthony Joshua has defeated Francis Ngannou with a savage knockout.

Francis Ngannou is knocked down for the third time as referee Ricky Gonzalez stops the fight in the second round.View image in fullscreen

Joshua darts in with a jab to the body. Ngannou looking more comfortable than he did in the early stages against Fury. Joshua lands another nice left jab. Joshua blocks a Ngannou right hook upstairs with his glove. Ngannou switches from orthodox to southpaw with about a minute left in the round. What confidence! And just like that, Joshua detonates a massive right hand on Ngannou’s chin and Ngannou is down in a heap! And Ngannou is hurt! He beats the count at nine and there’s about 40 seconds till the bell. Will he make it? And he does! What a first round!

Guardian’s unofficial score: Joshua 8-10 Ngannou (Joshua 8-10 Ngannou)

The fighters have been announced. The final instructions have been given. The seconds are out. We’ll pick it up with round-by-round coverage from here.

It’s 3.19am in Riyadh and the fighters are making their entrances. First it’s Ngannou, who looks all business as he makes the long walk at a methodical pace to God’s Plan by Drake. Now it’s Joshua’s turn. The former two-time unified heavyweight champion strolls down a bridge flanked by pyrotechnics and takes a direct route to the ring as Skepta’s I Spy blasts at ear-splitting volumes. All in all an understated ringwalk by AJ standards. Both fighters are inside the ropes and Michael Buffer has taken the microphone to go through the introductions.

Anthony Joshua makes his ringwalk.View image in fullscreen

Parker has eked out the result despite getting knocked down in the third and eighth rounds. One ringside judge scored it a 113-113 draw while the other two had it 114-112 and 115-111 for the New Zealand puncher. Parker is now the WBO interim heavyweight champion.

Joseph Parker celebrates victory with his coaching team whilst holding a Samoan flag.View image in fullscreen

Zhang has dropped Parker for a second time, this time in the eighth round with a chopping lead right hook. Parker had really turned things around since the first knockdown in the third, taking advantage of a suddenly passive opponent who’d seemed content to hunt of the knockout. But almost out of nowhere, Zhang sends his foe to the canvas with another innocent-looking blow.

Joseph Parker is knocked down by Zhilei Zhang (not pictured) during their heavyweight fight.View image in fullscreen

The final undercard bout has come alive as Zhang drops Parker in the third round. It was a gorgeous straight left that probably didn’t travel farther than a foot. Parker makes it to the bell but blood is pouring from his nose, adding a sense of urgency into what had been unfolding as a cagey, technical encounter. Advantage to Big Bang Zhang.

Joseph Parker makes it to his feet after getting knocked down by Zhilei Zhang,View image in fullscreen

A special cameo at ringside. A certain Portuguese football manager has taken his seat for tonight’s fights.

Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the Saudi general authority for entertainment speaks with José Mourinho during Friday’s fights in Riyadh.View image in fullscreen

Rey Vargas has just retained the WBC’s version of the featherweight title after a controversial split draw with Liverpool’s Nick Ball, the undefeated prospect who roared back from a quiet start to score a pair of knockdowns in the later rounds.

One judge scored it 114-112 for Vargas, another 116-110 for Ball while the third had it 113-113. The announcement is met by a chorus of boos from the Kingdom Arena crowd that only rises in volume when Vargas is interviewed in the ring during the aftermath.

Next up: a delicious heavyweight scrap between WBO interim champion Zhilei Zhang and Joseph Parker, who held the WBO’s primary belt from 2016 through 2018. The main event between Joshua and Ngannou will follow.

Nick Ball knocks down Rey Vargas during their featherweight title fight.View image in fullscreen

Hello and welcome to Riyadh’s Kingdom Arena for tonight’s crossover match between Anthony Joshua and Francis Ngannou. It’s been billed as the Knockout Chaos: a scheduled 10-round bout under boxing rules between the former two-time unified heavyweight champion amnd a former UFC champion with exactly one professional boxing match under his belt.

Joshua (27-3, 24 KO), at 34 years old, has won three straight bouts after back-to-back defeats ot Oleksandr Usyk and is still angling for another run at a heavyweight belt. But the 2012 Olympic gold medalist has put those plans on hold for a highly lucrative date with the 37-year-old Ngannou, who defied all expectations five months ago with a disputed split-decision loss to lineal heavyweight champion Tyson Fury, scoring the only knockdown of the evening along the way. Fury may have won the fight, but Ngannou clearly won the event.

That automatically makes Ngannou (0-1, 0 KO) an awfully intriguing proposition entering tonight’s sophomore outing. But was Ngannou really that good against Fury, or was Fury that poor in overlooking the Cameroonian neophyte? We’ll have answers soon enough.

We’re around an hour from the main event ringwalks. Plenty to come between now and then.

Bryan will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s Donald McRae’s lookahead to tonight’s fight in Riyadh.

Anthony Joshua desperately needs to beat Francis Ngannou – and he should | Donald McRae
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