
Parker's team will be wary about heavyweight unification bout claim
Parker has been burned by Warren and Dubois before – the south Aucklander was scheduled to fight the Englishman for the IBF world heavyweight title in Saudi Arabia in February only for Dubois to pull out with a conveniently timed illness after Usyk arrived in Riyadh and made it clear he was open to a fight for all the belts.
Dubois is Warren's man and while the promoter helps put on fights for Parker, there is no doubt about where his priorities lie.
But there is a more prosaic reason for Parker and his manager David Higgins to be wary about buying into Warren's messages as he hypes a rematch between the pair two years after the Ukrainian stopped Dubois in a controversial fight in Poland: Usyk will be a heavy favourite to win, and Warren has no influence over him.
At the age of 38, Usyk has done it all in the fight game and may decide, after clearing out the cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions, including big wins over former champions Anthony Joshua (twice) and Tyson Fury (twice), that there is nothing left for him to achieve.
He may choose to retire after a big final payday on July 20 NZT which will leave the four major heavyweight titles (WBO, WBC, IBF and IBO) vacant.
As the WBO mandatory challenger, Parker, 33, remains in a strong position and more so if Dubois upsets Usyk. But a win for Usyk could set in motion a chain of events that could see Parker's path back to the WBO world championship thwarted by more politics.
Dubois has never fully explained about why he pulled out of the fight with Parker in Riyadh, which forced a late call-up for Martin Bakole, whom Parker stopped convincingly in the second round.
And Warren, an industry veteran, has appeared frustrated with questions about Parker's plight, including this morning in London after a press conference promoting the Dubois v Uysk rematch.
"With Joe Parker, the WBO just put a mandate out saying that the winner of this fight [Usyk v Dubois] has to defend against the WBO mandatory challenger, which is Joe Parker," Warren told Sky Sports television.
"People might be saying 'Oh, Joe must be peed off he's not fighting Daniel'.
"Well, he'll be fighting for four belts now. Whoever wins it [the undisputed title fight], which I hope is going to be our man [Dubois], they'll be challenging for four belts so he's in a better place."
As always in professional boxing, it's unlikely to be as straightforward as that.
Dubois, who beat Joshua for the vacant IBF belt after the organisation stripped Usyk of it when he elected to honour a rematch clause against Fury, is an improved fighter and was disappointed by the way his first bout against Usyk played out in Wroclaw in 2023.
The now 27-year-old Dubois felled Usyk with a punch ruled a low blow by the referee, and, once Usyk was given time to recover, he systematically dismantled Dubois, flooring him for the second and final time with a simple straight jab in the ninth round.
The rematch will be highly anticipated, especially by fans in the United Kingdom, but Usyk's bravery in taking on all comers, his quick sense of humour, and the stoicism of the man born in Crimea in the face of Russian aggression in his homeland has won him a legion of supporters everywhere, especially in England.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
9 hours ago
- RNZ News
NRL live updates: NZ Warriors v Gold Coast Titans
Charnze Nicoll-Kolkstad of the Warriors goes in for a try. Photo: Andrew Cornaga / Revenge will be on the minds of the Warriors, as they take on a Titans outfit that handed them one of the worst losses in club history the last time they met. Kickoff is 5pm NZT. Follow all the action with RNZ's live blog: Warriors: 1. Charnze Nicoll‑Klokstad, 2. Dallin Watene‑Zelezniak, 3. Adam Pompey, 4. Kurt Capewell, 5. Roger Tuivasa‑Sheck, 6. Chanel Harris‑Tavita, 7. Tanah Boyd, 8. James Fisher‑Harris (c), 9. Wayde Egan, 10. Jackson Ford, 11. Leka Halasima, 12. Marata Niukore, 13. Erin Clark Interchange: 14. Te Maire Martin, 15. Jacob Laban, 16. Demitric Vaimauga, 17. Tanner Stowers‑Smith Reserves: 18. Taine Tuaupiki, 20. Samuel Healey, 21. Bunty Afoa, 22. Ali Leiataua, 23. Eddie Ieremia‑Toeava Titans: 1. AJ Brimson, 2. Jaylan De Groot, 3. Brian Kelly, 4. Jojo Fifita, 5. Phillip Sami, 6. Kieran Foran, 7. Jayden Campbell, 8. Moeaki Fotuaika, 9. Sam Verrills, 10. Jaimin Jolliffe, 11. Chris Randall, 12. Beau Fermor, 13. Klese Haas Interchange:14. Jacob Alick‑Wiencke, 15. Reagan Campbell‑Gillard, 16. Iszac Fa'asumaleaui, 17. Josh Patston Reserves: 18. Arama Hau, 19. Sean Mullany, 20. Tom Weaver, 21. Ryan Foran, 22. Alofiana Khan‑Pereira


NZ Herald
12 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Claressa Shields v Lani Daniels: Champion's warning for Kiwi rival ahead of undisputed title fight
'I'm grateful and blessed to be here. I'm grateful to have a voice. I'm not as good as these fullas at talking but I think I'm better at fighting,' Daniels said. 'I'm grateful for the talk practice, because it'll prepare me for Saturday when my hands go to work. I don't have too much to say, I just want to thank everyone for making this fight and event possible.' Daniels goes into the bout with an 11-2-2 record, most recently defending her light heavyweight title last September. She faces a big step up in competition against Shields, with the bout scheduled to play out over 10 two-minute rounds. American Claressa Shields will put her undisputed heavyweight crown on the line against Kiwi Lani Daniels (inset) in Detroit this weekend. Photo / Getty Images, NZME 'I have a very sturdy opponent in front of me in Lani Daniels,' Shields said. 'I want to tell you something; I have not taken you lightly. 'People keep saying they don't know who Lani is and sad to say you guys don't know who half of the girls, who any of the girls fighting [are] because nobody works on building their brand like I do. You can't try to shoot me in the foot over that. 'I've been building my brand so I have 1.4 million followers, I think it's over 2 million worldwide, so to share that platform with Lani is very, very special. 'There's going to be more eyes than have ever been on you on Saturday; in the building, online, on DAZN, it's going to be huge... I cannot let you beat me up. I can't do it. 'There's a lot on the line here... I have prepared for you and your coach very, very hard, and me and my team know what you bring to the table. We respect you and I thank you for coming all the way over here from New Zealand, bringing your family. I look forward to sharing the ring with you.' While Daniels goes into the bout as the underdog, Shields was expecting the Kiwi to present her with a challenge. 'Everyone keeps saying that they're a little scared for you. I'm not. I'm not a little scared for you. 'I know you're going to come and you're going to bring it, but if you can bring out a different beast in me to where I have to rise to a different occasion, then I'll be scared for you,' she said. 'I'm not scared for you yet. I am ready to see how hard you're going to come out there and fight on Saturday, and... if you really want to be champion. If you do that, that's when you're going to see a great fight.' How to watch The bout will headline the card in Detroit on Sunday, which begins at midday NZT on streaming platform DAZN. According to DAZN, Shields and Daniels are estimated to make their walks to the ring about 2pm.


Newsroom
12 hours ago
- Newsroom
Champion Fairweather goes for a medal three-peat
Erika Fairweather will be the first New Zealander to defend a swimming world title at the World Aquatics championships in Singapore starting on Sunday. Should she place on the podium in the 400m freestyle on July 27, she, at just 21, will become the first Aquablack to win a medal at three different World Aquatics long course championships after her efforts in 2023 and 2024. She may have to be on top form even to be just outside the medals as she was at Paris. But it is the podium that Fairweather and her new coach Graham Hill will be aiming for. Just one other female -Lauren Boyle – has stood on any level of a world championship swimming podium for New Zealand. But she was six foot and aged 25 when she got her first medal in 2013. Fairweather was a teenager when she won her first. Now she is off to her sixth world championships. Her first was as a 15-year-old when she won the 200m freestyle at the 2019 World Junior championships. Fairweather switched to Hill in Auckland from Otago earlier this year after her previous coach Lars Humer retired from international coaching. Hill, whose swimmers have won six Olympic medals across four Olympic Games, arrived from South Africa where he was the head coach of the South African swim team. As Swimming New Zealand's head Olympic coach, he wants medals from Aquablacks now. Hill likes winning medals. Australian Ariarne Titmus, unbeaten in the 400m freestyle since 2018, is taking a break from competitive swimming. This may not even make a podium placing easier for Fairweather as competition this year is faster than any Olympic year. Without Titmus at Paris, Fairweather would have been New Zealand's first female Olympic swimming medallist since 1952. It's rare for a Kiwi to come away from a long course world swimming championship with a medal. Since Danyon Loader won three medals at Rome in 1994, only three have. Indeed, it is rare for a Kiwi to compete in an individual final; just four have since 2015. While New Zealand got its first 4x200m women's freestyle relay in an Olympic final at Paris, there will not be a Singapore repeat; New Zealand is not entering one, preferring to focus on Fairweather's 800m event the following day. At last year's worlds, Fairweather won an 800m bronze medal and her relay the day before was placed fourth. Fairweather deserves to rub shoulders with her main rivals, former world record holder Katie Ledecky of the US and the hot favourite and current world record holder, 18-year-old Canadian Summer McIntosh, the world's best athlete in a swim cap. At the 2023 world championships, in beating McIntosh, Fairweather shared a podium with Ledecky and Titmus when she became the world's fifth woman to ever break four minutes in the 400m freestyle. In less than a year, things have changed. At Paris last year, Fairweather was competing against the best 400m freestyle swimmers of all time. But they have just got faster as they use this year as a launching pad for the 2028 Olympics. Ledecky currently holds four world records. McIntosh holds six, three of which were set in one competition last month, the first swimmer to do that since Michael Phelps in 2008. Australian Lani Pallister and Tokyo Olympic medallist Li Bingjie from China added their names to that exclusive sub four-minute group, with US teenage swimmer Claire Weinstein just 0.05 seconds shy. Pallister is ranked second this year in the 25m pool. Fairweather looks for her time at the Swimming NZ Champs. Photo: David Rowland/ and Swimming NZ Before Paris, it was Fairweather who was setting lifetime bests when others were not, so she will be looking for a competitive time again this month. Her last lifetime best across her top events (3:59.44 seconds) was at trials for Paris, but her best this season is 4:03.06 seconds. Hill will be hoping Fairweather hits her straps for a big season best to touch the wall ahead of some of the top four seeds in Singapore. It's unlikely she will successfully defend her title unless she improves on her season best by at least eight seconds. But if she clocks a lifetime best, as she has done at each of the past two world championships, she could be on the podium with Ledecky and McIntosh unless Pallister shuts her out. Ledecky was just 0.26 seconds (or about 40 centimetres) ahead of Fairweather at Paris. It's not much. Fairweather has indicated she wants to compete at her third Olympics in Los Angeles in 2028, where she will still only be 24. As times get quicker and a couple more like Weinstein join the sub-four club, it may take a sub four-minute swim to make a 400m freestyle Olympic final, with Ledecky at her home Olympics and Titmus back for her final Olympics, to attempt a three-peat.