Tag

Martin Bakole

Browsing

When Anthony Joshua and his promoter, Eddie Hearn, were discussing the prospect of one day hosting an event in Nigeria, the home of Joshua’s parents, they would have had certain images in mind. If a “homecoming” or celebration, the event would have called for a certain kind of fight and a certain kind of opponent. The traffic, in other words, would have to have been one-way; the winner standing in the home corner.

A heavyweight like Martin Bakole, for instance, would not have been welcome. He would not have been welcome a few years ago, when the idea was first mooted, and he would be even less welcome now, with Bakole not only a feared contender but someone plenty would favor to beat Joshua should their paths cross.

Still, that doesn’t mean Bakole has called off his pursuit of Joshua. In fact, only today (January 6) he released a video on social media in which he stated in no uncertain terms his plan for 2025: knock out Efe Ajagba in an IBF heavyweight title eliminator and then do the same to Joshua.

“I want to knock you out,” Bakole said. “I heard you talking shit saying Ajagba was going to beat me. Shame on you. How many times did I call you out? How many times did I ask to fight in Africa? You should be ashamed of yourself. I want to fight you. I want to knock you out.

“Look at Daniel Dubois. I broke his nose twice. He knocked you out cold. I will knock you out in the first round. You’re talking about Ajagba; Ajagba is a baby. Wait until you see how I am going to knock him out. I want you to be there. You’re talking shit. I want to fight you. Stop talking nonsense. Now you say you’re in Nigeria and are not British anymore. I will knock you out. I’m the African champ. I’m an African warrior. After knocking Ajagba out, I will knock you out as well.”

Ajagba, 20-1 (14), was of course born in Nigeria – in Ughelli to be exact – but has since moved to America and it is there he is now based. His only defeat as a pro came against Frank Sanchez, the Cuban, in 2021, though it is true that many will back Bakole to add a second loss to the Ajagba record when it comes time for them to fight.

Bakole, after all, is on quite the hot streak, having won 10 fights on the spin since suffering his first and only loss against Michael Hunter in 2018. Seemingly improved every time he fights, Bakole, 21-1 (16), was last seen breaking down Jared Anderson inside five rounds in August, which, as a performance, helped to explain why so many heavyweights have given him a wide berth in recent years.

Rather than a one-off, Bakole’s drubbing of Anderson followed other impressive wins against men favored to beat him. These include wins against the likes of Tony Yoka, whom Bakole humbled in France, Ihor Shevadzutskyi, whom Bakole stopped in Poland, and Carlos Takam, who was chopped up inside three rounds in Saudi Arabia. Content to travel, and comfortable in the away corner, Bakole is a man whose single-minded determination is embraced by matchmakers and yet unsettling to those who happen to be standing across the ring from him in the home corner.

For Joshua, someone whose mental fortitude was tested like never before last year, there can be no worse opponent than Martin Bakole right now, whether in Nigeria or anywhere else. It was, after all, only in September that Joshua was dropped four times and knocked out by Daniel Dubois and Bakole, although different, shares similarities with Dubois in terms of how he goes about getting the job done. Not only that, the 33-year-old from The Democratic Republic of Congo cares littles about reputation and has never let up in his goading of Joshua, which in itself is rather telling. As Bakole himself said, this is a fight for which he has campaigned for many years. It is perhaps for that reason it will never happen.

How much money would it take to dethrone the champions in every major division? DAZN Boxing gave their fans a sum of $18 million in a recent social media post to choose their team. So, who are these champions? Undisputed heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk, former super middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez, and former undisputed welterweight champion Terence Crawford. But wait, there’s more.

WBA lightweight champion Gervonta Davis, undisputed super bantamweight champion Naoya Inoue, and women’s WBC super bantamweight champion Yamileth Mercado were also part of the lineup. This was enough to get fans excited as they picked from the options with price tags to defeat each champion in their division.

Terence Crawford VS Canelo Alvarez AND Jermell Charlo

JUST IN: Anthony Joshua Names The Heavyweight Who Beats Everyone Including Oleksandr Usyk: “I’d Pick Him”…

Who are the challengers?

In addition to the defending champions, DAZN Boxing gave their followers five challengers they could pick from each division with a diminishing price tag. The only catch was the total price tag of the six challengers they chose should not cross $18 million. For Usyk, the challengers were Tyson Fury ($5 million), Anthony Joshua ($4 million), Zhilei Zhang ($3 million), Martin Bakole ($2 million) and Moses Itauma ($1 million).

For Canelo, the list of challengers included Edgar Berlanga ($5 million), Osleys Iglesias ($4 million), Jamie Munguia ($3 million), Diago Pacheco ($2 million), and William Scull ($1 million). In a similar diminishing cost, for Terence Crawford, the challengers were Jaron Ennis, Vergil Ortiz Jr., Jermell Charlo, Sebastian Fundora, and Xander Zayas.

Gervonta Davis had Shakur Stevenson, Vasyl Lomachenko, William Zepeda, Abdullah Mason, and Mark Chamberlain. Meanwhile, Naoya Inoue had to face one of the following: Angelo Leo, Brandon Figueroa, Rafael Espinoza, Murodjon Akhmadaliev, and Bruce Carrington. And finally, Yamileth Mercado.

Gervonta Davis vs Vasyl Lomachenko

Her challengers were Erika Cruz Hernandez, Elleie Sctotney, Mea Motu, Phannarai Netisri, and Nazarena Romero. Seeing such a formidable list of challengers, fans quickly took their personalized list to the comments section to challenge the kings of the division.

Fan wonders if they should keep the money

There’s a reason each of those fighters is a champion—nobody can beat them. This led one user to come up with an alternative. The user wrote, “Can I keep the $18M instead? Half of them not losing.” However, Davis and Crawford are yet to face Stevenson and Ennis, so their crown isn’t exactly safe.

However, the next user was all in on the game, as he shared his list to beat the kings of the divisions. “Bakole, Pacheco, Ennis, Stevenson, Carrington,” the user wrote. This user seems to have forgotten about Mercado, and he is even left with $3 million.

The next user had some changes in his list. The user chose, “AJ, Pacheco, Boots, Loma, Shu Shu, Netisri.” Skipping Stevenson for Davis was interesting, but the lack of money may have influenced this user’s decision.

Terence Crawford Vs Jaron Ennis

Another user presented his list to fight the kings. The user commented, “Bakole, Pacheco, Ennis, Shakur, Bruce.” Even this user seems to have forgotten about Mercado, with several million left.

Meanwhile, this user was left bamboozled with the list of challengers provided for Canelo Alvarez. “That Canelo column is pure foolishness…. Im not playing this game …. Yall ruined it,” the user wrote. This could be because of the absence of David Benavidez.

While the list of fighters people chose to defeat the champions of each division is interesting, making those fights in real life can prove a bit difficult. But the post from DAZN Boxing gave a clear idea of what fights people would like to see. Regardless, who would you choose to beat the kings?

 

Verified by MonsterInsights