logo
Jake Paul told his plan to fight Anthony Joshua after Gervonta Davis will fail

Jake Paul told his plan to fight Anthony Joshua after Gervonta Davis will fail

Daily Mirror4 hours ago
Jake Paul was reportedly in line to face both Anthony Joshua and Gervonta Davis, but the American has been dealt a blow as the heavyweight intends to move on
Jake Paul has suffered a significant setback in his quest to secure bouts with both Anthony Joshua and Gervonta Davis after confirmation the heavyweight plans to pursue other opportunities.

The YouTuber-turned-pugilist is set to return to action on November 14 against Davis in an exhibition match at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. This marks Paul's second outing of the year following his victory over former middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr in June.

For several weeks, it appeared highly probable that the American would clash with Joshua in a heavyweight encounter early next year. The British fighter's promoter, Eddie Hearn, recently disclosed that the YouTuber-turned-boxer was leading the race for the fight.

Paul was so keen to share the ring with the heavyweight sensation that he was prepared to accept just ONE PER CENT of the prize money. Nevertheless, despite the latest developments, Paul suggested he still has Joshua in his sights. In a message posted on X - previously Twitter - the social media star declared he would "kill David," then "slaughter Goliath" - possibly hinting at his desire to face the two-time heavyweight champion next year, reports All Out Fighting.
"His nickname might be Tank, but I'm an FPV drone and I'm about to disable tiny boy. Yes, he's one of the top pound-for-pound boxers in the world, but my motto is anyone, anytime, anyplace, against all odds. And I like my odds. First, I am going to kill David, then I will go on to slaughter Goliath," Paul wrote. Despite cryptically revealing his plans for the next year or so, it now appears more likely that Joshua will move on - serving as a real blow to Paul.
In an interview with FightHype, 'AJ's' promoter Hearn clarified the Brit's future, explaining that the 35 year old will fight another opponent in either January or February.
When asked whether he has spoken to the British boxer since the Paul news, he replied: "No. He was quite chilled about the whole thing anyway. He is kind of like that guy that just says 'look, just phone me when it is done.' And, until it is done, I do not think a lot of it. I do not know if it is real or not, but whatever. We were talking about a fight in February or March. We knew that Jake Paul might fight November. I did not expect it to be Gervonta (Davis)."
Hearn added: "I do not know how it affects us in terms of would we do the fight. The issue is, we are not going to wait until November. I won't speak on his behalf like that, but I doubt we commit to the fight until the Tank fight is over. We are not going to wait until November to make our move. So it is very likely that AJ will fight January, February, now probably against someone else."
Regarding who's lined up next for Joshua - that remains unclear. The two-time world champion hasn't stepped into the ring since his devastating knockout loss to Daniel Dubois. Recently, Dubois' manager, Sam Jones, suggested that a rematch between the pair of heavyweights could be in the pipeline. "The rematch with AJ is always there. I'm a big AJ fan - I've made no secret of that," Jones told Sky Sports.
"He's a proud man, and I know he won't want to keep seeing that knockout by Daniel on his screen. I'm sure he'll want to right that wrong. And if he ever wants to, then let's get it on. It's all about what's best for Daniel now - WBO, IBF, WBC. He belongs at the top table in heavyweight boxing. He's an elite-level heavyweight. All those names you mentioned - Daniel will be back in the mix."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Emma Raducanu handed ANOTHER nightmare Grand Slam draw at US Open - but Jack Draper has quarter-final shot before meeting world No 1 Jannik Sinner
Emma Raducanu handed ANOTHER nightmare Grand Slam draw at US Open - but Jack Draper has quarter-final shot before meeting world No 1 Jannik Sinner

Daily Mail​

time26 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Emma Raducanu handed ANOTHER nightmare Grand Slam draw at US Open - but Jack Draper has quarter-final shot before meeting world No 1 Jannik Sinner

Emma Raducanu has been handed a choppy path to a second US Open final, with the British No 1 on course for a possible third meeting with world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka in as many months should she reach the quarter-finals. Before that, Raducanu will have to overturn two top-ten players in Elena Rybakina and Jasmine Paolini, both of whom are in red-hot form coming into Flushing Meadows. Rybakina reached the semi-finals in the Canadian Open and the Cincinnati Open last week, while Italian star Paolini reached the final in Ohio and looks someway back to the form which won her the Italian Open in May. Some small comfort to Raducanu - who has enjoyed a promising hard-court swing ahead of the tournament - might be a chance to improve upon her personal record at the tournament where she made her name. The 22-year-old has failed to get past the first round since her miraculous win in 2021, but could have a strong opportunity to do so as she opens her campaign against a qualifier. Fellow British No 1 has also landed in the same quarter of the draw as his sport's highest-ranked player, with the number-five seed on course for a meeting with his friend - and opponent in last year's landmark semi-final - Jannik Sinner awaiting him should he make the last eight. But before that, Draper should have a decidedly easier navigating the draw than Raducanu, with clay-court specialist Lorenzo Musetti his highest-ranked opponent in the build-up. The Italian has had a torrid time on the American hard courts this summer, failing to make it past the first round in Cincinnati and Washington and knocked out in the second in Toronto. Draper will begin his travails against a qualifier before facing either Zizou Bergs or Tseng Chun-Hsin - both of whom Draper has beaten in their only meetings to date. Elsewhere in the draw, Jacob Fearnley will play Roberto Bautista Agu and Cameron Norrie begins his campaign against home favourite Sebastian Korda. Katie Boulter has been handed an opening test against No 27 seed Marta Kostyuk, and Sonay Kartal will face the 18th seed Beatriz Haddad Maia - should she win, her next match would see her clash with French Open fairytale semi-finalist Lois Boisson.

Edinburgh International Book Festival round-up: Paul French  Mark Watson
Edinburgh International Book Festival round-up: Paul French  Mark Watson

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Edinburgh International Book Festival round-up: Paul French Mark Watson

Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Paul French's 2012 book Midnight in Peking, effectively solving a young British girl's gruesome murder there in 1937, was true crime at its most spellbinding. I remember the way he talked about it - in pithy tabloidese, each sentence like a movie pitch. He knows China backwards, having made his money as a marketing expert predicting the country's future while all the time fascinated by its wild, pre-communist, 20th century past. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mark Watson Which is where Wallis Simpson comes in. In French's new book, Her Lotus Year, she arrives in Shanghai because she's heard she'll be able to get a divorce there from her abusive US Navy pilot husband Win ('He's America's first Top Gun. Taller and more handsome than Tom Cruise but with worse planes'). 'Shanghai back then was the maddest place in the world,' said French. 'Whatever you can imagine, times it by ten.' It's a city of warlords, brothels, drugs, famine, and jazz. We know about its degeneracy, because that's what the so-called China Dossier - the one that accused Wallis of sexual practices so outré that when she read it the Queen Mother is reputed to have required smelling salts - spelled out. Yet all that is all fake news, says French. Wallis might have been good at holding her drink, but that's about it. She's an abused woman fleeing a violent husband. She has an independent streak, and finds happiness in Peking, where she gets a sense of style, is taken in by rich friends and becomes more confidently cosmopolitan. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The subtitle of your book is 'China, The Roaring Twenties and the Making of Wallis Simpson',' said journalist Isabel Hilton (another China expert), chairing the event. 'A big claim. Are you sure you can stand it up?' Sure he can. And so to the making of another grande dame forced to flee an abusive husband. Dan Gunn has spent the last seven years editing the first volume of Muriel Spark's letters, from 1944 to 1963, and is hard at work on the second, which takes the story up to her death in 2006. But it's the first volume, he emphasised, where Spark changes the most: from unknown poet to acclaimed writer, where she has the only true love affair in her life (though it ended in betrayal and bitterness), where she suffered real hardship, a miscarriage and attempted rape, had a serious breakdown and two conversions (first to Anglicanism, then Catholicism). Asked why the project had taken so long, Gunn pointed out reasonably enough that working with 40 different archives (half public, half private) took time and, considering that editing Samuel Beckett's letters took him a quarter of a century, 'deciphering the most difficult handwriting in the 20th century in five languages', the Spark letters were a comparative doddle. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The hour sped by for two main reasons. The first was the way in which Gunn communicated the joys of following a trail of writer's letters rather than writing a biography. Instead of telling a linear story arcing towards success, he said, the letters make clear how contingent the whole process is: how much depends on the luck of finding the right publisher at the right time and having supportive patrons and friends – how easily, in other words, everything could go wrong. The second reason was Spark herself, and the delight in seeing her try out her writing wings. I went along later to comedian Mark Watson's sparsely-attended event later on, hoping for laughs, but not for a second did he come close to just one letter Muriel Spark wrote (20 January 1955: look it up) in which she describes a talkative neighbour with a verve only the truly comic writers - Victoria Wood, say, or Alan Bennett - could match. David Robinson

ITV will continue to make shows such as Mr Bates despite challenges
ITV will continue to make shows such as Mr Bates despite challenges

Leader Live

timean hour ago

  • Leader Live

ITV will continue to make shows such as Mr Bates despite challenges

The show, detailing how hundreds of innocent sub-postmasters were wrongly accused of theft, fraud and false accounting because of a defective IT system, prompted public outrage and helped put the Horizon scandal under the spotlight. Polly Hill told the Edinburgh TV Festival: 'Drama does really, really well for us, and it's a really important and integral part of ITV. 'We still make the same amount. My priority is finding stories that are right for ITV. 'That is absolutely what I spend most of my time doing, talking to producers and writers about commissioning. 'So funding at that level, at that point, which is when you're thinking about what ideas to bring to ITV. It's about making sure it's realistic, that we can make it. 'If it is a really big budget, take it to a streamer, that's fine, we can all exist together. 'But if it's right for us, and if it feels like the right sort of story, we can make it for you… I know it's much tougher, and there is less opportunities, but we haven't, so far, not funded the show that we wanted to do.' Earlier in the year, Wolf Hall director Peter Kosminsky told BBC current affairs programme Newsnight that American streaming companies have pushed up prices so the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5 'can't afford to make dramas like Wolf Hall anymore' or programmes such as ITV's Mr Bates and Hillsborough. Asked if it is true that ITV could not make the show today, Hill said: 'I don't think that's true. 'When we made Mr Bates it was really hard to make. It took passion from all of us and we really dug in deep to make sure we told that story. 'That was true then, and that's true now. And we still make them. 'Those four part-ers are hard, but I will continue to commission them while producers still want to make them, and we will try and find a way to make them together. 'Most of what we're doing is finding dramas that a lot of people want to watch. 'But we also can make certain decisions to make shows that we think (are) important, that we put that story in front of the nation.' A report from the Culture, Media and Sport (CMS) Committee published earlier in the year said the Government needs to ramp up support measures for the UK's high-quality drama sector while safeguarding the creation of distinctly British content, such as Mr Bates. The report said the commissioning budgets of PSBs have been 'squeezed by the real terms reduction of the BBC licence fee', as well as a reduction in advertising revenue.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store