
Daniel Dubois' trainer denies ‘party' disrupted preparations before loss to Usyk
Dubois was knocked out in the fifth round by Usyk and Charles does not dispute that his charge did not arrive until 8.20pm at the arena, 90 minutes before his scheduled ring walk time. Footage of what Charles describes as more of a 'cultural gathering' than a party emerged on Tuesday, but the trainer insisted that Dubois and his entourage arrived within their allocated time, and had ample time to undergo all pre-fight preparations necessary to face Usyk.
'It was more like a gathering, a cultural gathering,' said Charles. 'I don't think it was public, in fact it was the same [sort of] gathering that was done back in September last year when Daniel was going to fight Anthony Joshua on the fight day. The same thing occurred where a lot was made of the ring walk. He came in [at Wembley] like a gladiator, he was charged up.'
Charles also brushed off suggestions of a disagreement between Dubois and his father Stanley. 'I wasn't there, but [talk of a disagreement] is all hearsay. I can assure you that wouldn't have happened.'
Charles says the pre-fight 'ritual' organised by Dubois' father helped him. 'So call it a ritual, whatever, it worked and it helped Daniel to be in the mode, fight mode to be destructive,' explained the trainer. 'So the father replicated that again with the view that it should put Daniel in the right state of mind. So many boxers, if you speak to all boxers across the country, they'll all tell you they've all got their little things that they do on fight day to mentally be able to support them to go and do what they do.
'So it didn't work this time and that's why there's a lot of lies going on instead of focus on the actual fight, where the fight was fought, the way it panned out. And there's a lot of focus on this party, it was a gathering, a cultural gathering.
'The only way [the arrival time] would have an impact is if we didn't do all the preliminaries, the hand wraps, the stretches, the normal procedure. We were able to do everything with 10 minutes to spare for the TV, also for the ring walk,' he added.
Despite being the underdog, some pundits had backed the British boxer to defeat Usyk, following his career being revitalised under the wing of Charles. Dubois secured three consecutive KO victories over Jarrell Miller, Filip Hrgovic and Anthony Joshua on his way to winning the IBF world heavyweight championship.
Usyk dominated Saturday's fight, with all three judges having the Ukrainian winning coming into the fifth round, where Usyk closed the show with a looping left hand that floored Dubois, to crown himself undisputed heavyweight world champion.
Charles has admitted there were things that they could have done better, but claimed it was too early to completely digest the fight, with the entire team still 'licking their wounds'.
'I'm in regular contact with [Daniel]. The young man's doing well,' said Charles. 'He's healthy, he's not harmed. He's sustained a terrible knockout and is just resting up. He's going to go on holiday in the next week or so. All we've done in the last two years since I've been working with him is go from camp to camp. Camp to camp is exhausting. I'm exhausted. Imagine how the fighter feels.'
Charles praised fellow heavyweight Tyson Fury for publicly defending Dubois. Fury took to Instagram to implore people to stop referring to Dubois as a 'coward', insisting that 'there are no cowards in boxing', and that Dubois did his best.
'I'm glad someone like that is able to [support Dubois], a big figure like him,' he said. 'People listen to what Tyson says. I'm glad for him and I applaud him for standing up for Daniel too. Because what disappoints is a lot of these people putting these negative narratives out. A lot of them are retired boxers, some of them are current active boxers. And they too should know better than to try to put down a young fighter like him. You've just got to ask what is their motive, what are they trying to achieve?'
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Daily Mail
2 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Moment Princess Charlotte's joy spoke for the nation: Now England's Lionesses look forward to London open bus top parade - and are set for Royal Reception with Prince and King
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BBC News
4 minutes ago
- BBC News
Fine margins: How Norris lost out to Piastri in Belgium
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The start Piastri had demonstrated how difficult it is for the driver on pole to lead by the end of the first lap at Spa by losing the sprint race win to Red Bull's Max Dutchman slipstreamed past Piastri up the hill to Les Combes, and then held the McLaren at bay for 15 laps, while Norris followed closely in the grand prix, it was Norris in front, with Piastri in second and Piastri had been thinking about the opportunity this presented him since losing out on pole the day team boss Andrea Stella said: "This weekend, Oscar, if anything, the only inaccuracy was in qualifying, where his laps weren't perfect."At the same time, we have to say that after the sprint qualifying, he said, 'Yeah, I'm in pole position, but maybe this is not the right place to be in pole position.'"And as a joke, after the qualifying yesterday, he said, 'That was not my best lap in Q3, but perhaps this is the best place not to have the best lap in Q3.'"Sure enough, Piastri took the lead on lap one of the grand prix, just as Verstappen had the day before."I had a good run out of Turn One," he said, "and then tried to be as brave as I could through Eau Rouge and was able to stay pretty close. 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At that point, it seemed like the safest thing to do was go on the medium, because the hard is two steps harder here."Stella said: "We did consider double stacking. At the same time, it was possible for Lando to deviate. He opted to deviate, which would have given him the possibility to go on hard tyres, which is what he decided to do."Actually, I thought at some stage that that would have been a very good move, but I have to say that Oscar managed a very solid and strong stint on the medium tyres. Even if Lando was, on average, a little bit faster, that was not enough to attack Oscar at the end." The chase Norris now had to try to chase Piastri down. He got to within 3.4 seconds by the end of the race, but he probably lost a little more than that with three errors during his ran wide at the fast Pouhon double left-hander on lap 26, costing himself 1.3 seconds, then had lock-ups at La Source on laps 33 and 43, costing a total of just under three a perfect race might have given him a shot at Piastri on the last lap or two. But given how difficult overtaking proved at Spa in both races, the chances of him actually getting by must be considered slim in the said: "Yes, Lando had a couple of lock-ups in corner one and also a little oversteer in corner nine that cost him time. I think this, overall, prevented us from having an interesting battle, possibly, at the end."But, in fairness, even Oscar had a couple of times in corner one a little bit of a time loss."It's very difficult when you push so much in these conditions. 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But in the grand scheme of things, if that's one lap too early, is it worth it? No."


Daily Mail
4 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Pizzas on the pitch, Chelsea star Reece James celebrating with sister Lauren, singing in the tunnel and Ella Toone's tribute to her late dad: Inside Lionesses' party after Women's Euros
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