
AJ to make boxing return this year as two-fight Tyson Fury plan emerges
EXCLUSIVE: Anthony Joshua is recovering from elbow surgery but his team are plotting his ring return for late in 2025 after preferred opponent was ruled out due to being picked for Saudi fight
Anthony Joshua is plotting a return late this year - with old rival Deontay Wilder on a shortlist of potential opponents.
The British heavyweight star has not fought since he was knocked out by Daniel Dubois in an IBF title clash last September.
But now 'AJ' - who is recovering from elbow surgery - is plotting his path to a Tyson Fury double-header next year and American Wilder is one option promoter Eddie Hearn is looking at.
Wilder, 39, is returning to the ring next week against Tyrrell Herndon as he looks to shake off back-to-back defeats by Joseph Parker and Zhilei Zhang amid retirement calls.
Hearn said: 'I don't see why not. I mean, we'd take that fight in October, November, December. It's still dangerous. Like someone said to me, oh, you think he'll be in a dangerous fight? I said, they're all f***ing dangerous, mate.
"We want to fight Fury. And the plan for us is to fight October, November or December, and then fight Tyson twice. Or certainly once. And I can't see that fight not happening. As long as AJ comes through at the end of the year.'
Joshua and Wilder were in talks around 2018 for what would have been an undisputed heavyweight title clash between two unbeaten fights but discussions broke down.
American Jared Anderson, German Agit Kabayel and Efe Ajagba are other names Hearn is considering for Joshua's return. Former foe Dillian Whyte was in contention until he was matched with highly-rated star Moses Itauma for an August showdown in Saudi Arabia.
Joshua is now 35 and has four defeats on his record after earlier career losses to Andy Ruiz Jnr and Oleksandr Usyk twice. Hearn believes 2026 will be the London 2012 Olympic champion's final year in the sport but won't rule out retirement earlier if he doesn't shine in his return bout later in 2025.
The Matchroom chief added: 'The proof will be this fight. Like I said the other day, 2026 will probably be his last year in the sport.
'But this next fight will tell us everything. You know what I mean? If camp doesn't go well, if the performance isn't of the same level, you have to evaluate after each fight. The moment you don't look good in camp or don't start sparring well that's when you have to think about your position. But that's not happened yet.'
Chris Eubank Jr will face Conor Benn in a rematch either on September 20 or October 4 after the September 27 date was ruled out due to the Premier League fixtures. Tottenham are at home to Wolves on the original date.

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


Daily Mirror
32 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Liverpool transfer state of play with £156m swoop sealed and more moves to come
Liverpool are set to announce the record signing of Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen, while a deal has also been agreed to sign Bournemouth defender Milos Kerkez Milos Kerkez is heading to Liverpool along with Florian Wirtz as the Reds ready themselves to splash out £156m this weekend. And their spending may not stop there as it looks set to soar past the £200m mark. Liverpool agreed a £40m fee with Bournemouth on Friday after weeks of negotiating for Hungary left-back Kerkez. The 21-year-old defender will undergo a medical next week to complete the formalities with personal terms agreed. Wirtz, 22, was at the club's training ground today, undergoing his checks before his move from Bayer Leverkusen will be made official this weekend. The Reds agreed a British record £116m deal for the Germany attacking midfielder last week and he jetted into Merseyside on Thursday night to complete the deal. Liverpool will pay £100m upfront to Bayer Leverkusen with the rest due in add-ons which are linked to both the individual success of the player and the team. He will sign a five-year deal with the Reds in a deal which will break the club record £85m they agreed to pay Benfica for Darwin Nunez in 2022. And should they hit all the add-ons in the deal it will surpass the £115m Chelsea paid Brighton for Moises Caicedo in 2023. The Reds negotiated a fee lower than the £127m package which Leverkusen were trying to hold out for. Wirtz made it clear he wanted to move to Merseyside late last month after turning down advances from Manchester City and Bayern Munich. Kerkez will arrive on Merseyside next week to complete his move from the Cherries after the Hungary left-back made it clear he wanted to join the Reds, too. Back in March, Kerkez said: 'As a kid, you dream to play at the highest level, win the trophies, be on the best teams.' Kerkez joined Bournemouth from AZ for around £15.5m in a deal which was brokered by now Liverpool sporting director Richard Hughes, who previously worked with the Cherries. And Hughes is not stopping there with Liverpool's summer business. Jeremie Frimpong has already been signed from Leverkusen for £29.5m Georgia goalkeeper Giorgi Mamardashvili is arriving from Valencia for around £30m after spending last season on loan with the La Liga club. Defender Jarell Quansah is closing in on a £35m move to Bayer Leverkusen and that means the Reds could move for Crystal Palace centre-back Marc Guehi. While a striker remains a target, especially if Nunez departs as expected. Newcastle front man Alexander Isak is certainly admired at Liverpool. Although, the Magpies are under no pressure to sell due to PSR rules so it would take a huge change in stance for them to suddenly listen to offers. The Reds will offset some of their summer spending with player sales and they've already brought in £28m from Caoimhin Kelleher joining Brentford and Trent Alexander-Arnold signing for Real Madrid before the end of his contract. With the arrival of Kerkez, Andy Robertson is mulling over a possible move to Atletico Madrid as his place in the team is set to be taken by the new arrival.
.jpg%3Fwidth%3D1200%26auto%3Dwebp%26quality%3D75%26crop%3D3%3A2%2Csmart%26trim%3D&w=3840&q=100)

Scotsman
32 minutes ago
- Scotsman
84-cap Scotland ace urged urged to make move as 'fantastic' ex-Rangers man backed for Liverpool success
Scotland captain Andy Robertson has been offered some career advice by a former Liverpool favourite. Sign up to our Football newsletter 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... Scotland captain Andy Robertson has been urged to make the brave decision to depart Liverpool this summer and take advantage of the 'great opportunity' presented to him in La Liga. The 31-year-old defender has been linked with a summer switch to La Liga giants Atletico Madrid over the last week, with the imminent arrival £40million arrival of Bournemouth left-back Milos Kerkez throwing his Anfield future into serious doubt. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Transfer guru Fabrizio Romano claimed the Spanish giants viewed Robertson as their top target in the summer transfer window, though they are only interested in paying 'paying a small fee', and had targeted Aston Villa's Lucas Digne as an alternative. However, the 84-cap Scotland international has been told he not pass up on the opportunity to make the switch to the Diego Simeone's side, with a move to the Metropolitano Stadium described as 'fantastic' by ex-Liverpool favourite Didi Hamann. Andy Robertson has been told to leave Liverpool amid uncertainly over his future in the starting XI. | PA 'Robertson alongside Trent Alexander-Arnold have been the best full-backs in the league for the last seven or eight years,' said Hamann. 'They were a huge reason why Liverpool have been successful. Robertson came in for criticism last season but I think he still did a brilliant job, but if Milos Kerkez comes for a big fee then he will be the starting left-back you feel. 'Atletico Madrid have now been linked to Robertson and I think it would be a great opportunity for him. He has joked that Liverpool are linked to every left-back in the world and maybe sometimes it's best to leave when you can see you might be out of favour. Liverpool could win it all next season but if Atletico come in for him, they are a fantastic club with great supporters, he might just join Trent in Madrid. I think if Kerkez signs, it's 50/50 for Robertson.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The ex-German international has also backed former Rangers head coach Giovanni van Bronckhorst to be success at Liverpool, after reports last week claimed he was closing in on a coaching role at Liverpool ahead of the new English Premier League season beginning in August. Ex-Rangers boss Giovanni van Bronckhorst is set join Liverpool as a first team coach, according to reports. | Getty Images Slot side lost respected coach John Heitinga to Ajax last month, who was appointed as the new manager at the Johan Cruyff ArenA. Following an extensive search to find his replacement, the Reds look set to hand Van Bronckhorst a senior role on Merseyside. The ex-Ibrox manager has been out of work since being dismissed as manager of Turkish giants Besiktas in November 2024, but will become part of Arne Slot's backroom staff, according to reports.


Wales Online
38 minutes ago
- Wales Online
Shaun Edwards' true feelings on Andy Farrell as he ordered boss to make decision
Shaun Edwards' true feelings on Andy Farrell as he ordered boss to make decision Edwards and Lions head coach Farrell were team-mates in their playing days before becoming two of the best rugby union coaches in the world Andy Farrell, the Lions head coach (Image: 2025 Getty Images ) When Andy Farrell leads the Lions in Australia this summer he will hope for fewer obstacles than his experience three decades ago when he was thrust into a leadership role on a very different Lions tour. At just 21, Farrell was part of what is regarded as one of the most disastrous rugby tours ever embarked upon when he captained Great Britain Lions rugby league team in Papua New Guinea, Fiji and New Zealand. Even for such a precocious talent, the fact that Farrell was captaining the side was an indication of the challenges facing the side before they even left English shores. Set against the backdrop of a rugby league civil war, proposed mergers and the imminent professionalisation of rugby union, meant that a host of experienced internationals were forced to withdraw from the squad. Then when the team arrived in Papua New Guinea, things did not get any better, with tour manager Phil Lowe dealing with personal issues and finance becoming a major issue for those on the ground. Phil Larder, who went on to be the mastermind of England's defence on their way to 2003 World Cup glory in union, was the head coach, and remembers how Farrell was able to rise above the many obstacles thrown the players' way. Article continues below He said: 'It was pretty difficult, we didn't realise how difficult it was until we landed in Papua New Guinea. That was our first stop, there were problems straightaway. We hadn't got any finance in the group to purchase water, so we had no water. 'So after four or five days, myself and half the squad were puking up and shitting all the time because we had this infection. 'We managed to get a reasonable result against PNG and by the time we hit Fiji, things had turned out a little bit better. But it was a major concern and some of the players were still struggling, they had lost quite a bit of weight.' Things got even worse when Maurice Lindsay, the chief executive of the Rugby Football League, brought home half of the squad early to cut costs, destroying the morale of those who remained. And yet Farrell, who was not initially named as captain, very quickly became the leader of this group. Watch the Lions rugby tour on Sky Sports This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more £35 Sky Get Sky Sports here Product Description Sky Sports is the exclusive broadcaster of the 2025 British and Irish Lions tour of Australia, with all three Tests and six warm-up matches available to enjoy with Sky's Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle. Larder added: 'Andy wasn't somebody who I had identified to be captain, but as the tour developed, it was obvious that he was the leader of the lads, he was the one that they all looked up to and he was playing exceptionally well, as well. He became my captain, that was how it happened. 'He, like me, and like Phil Lowe, found it very difficult. It wasn't easy for Lowey, because he had no money to play about with, it wasn't easy for me as head coach and it certainly wasn't easy for the players. And Faz just came through as a natural leader, not only on the pitch but outside as well. Everybody in the squad looked up to him. This was the reason I made him captain. 'The thing about Andy is he's got presence. If he walks into a room, he seems to attract people to him. Players latch onto that. 'I'd been to Papua New Guinea and Fiji and seen the boys train and play and seen how Andy bossed the show. It became an automatic choice to make him captain. 'For everybody, it was a completely miserable tour but particularly the second string who were forced to go home before the end of the tour. That broke everything up and the Test team were furious about it because their mates were in the other team. It was the most difficult job that I've had and the most difficult job for the players. But Andy was the one that seemed to be able to handle the situation better than most and the players looked up to him.' That should probably not have come as a surprise. After all, Farrell had been tipped as a massive talent from his early schoolboy days. Shaun Edwards' order to Wigan boss Shaun Edwards was one of the key figures at Wigan at the time, and told Lindsay, who was the Wigan chairman, that he had to do everything in his power to get Farrell onboard. The France defence coach recalls: 'Everybody was after him, he was potentially one of the best players ever. I thought it was absolutely vital that he signed for Wigan. I remember speaking to Maurice because I was a senior player by that stage. Whatever financial packet it took, we needed to give it to him because he was a special talent. Alan Tait of Leeds is tackled by Shaun Edwards and Andy Farrell of Wigan during a match in 1995 'He settled straight in, he is probably one of the most mature lads I've ever known at 17. He was physically mature and also mentally mature. He was playing in his first-ever final, Dean Bell was the captain of our team. They put Faz in with Dean Bell because they thought he would help support Andy with it being his first game at Wembley. 'The morning of the match, Faz was watching TV and Dean Bell was in the toilets being sick with nerves, so Faz went and had his arm around him saying 'Don't worry Deano, we'll batter these lot'. That sums him up, very confident, with a bit of humour about him and absolutely world class.' France defence coach Shaun Edwards (Image:) A 20-14 win over a Larder-coach Widnes duly ensued and Farrell has not looked back. Having achieved everything there was to achieve in league, he made the jump across to union in 2005, joining Saracens and quickly becoming a dual-code international. When injury forced him into retirement in 2009, he turned his hand to coaching, for Saracens and then under Stuart Lancaster with the England Saxons. Lancaster recalled: 'On a hunch, not really knowing Andy at all, I asked if he was interesting in helping me coach the Saxons through the Six Nations games and the Churchill Cup. 'We both got on very well straightaway. I needed someone to come in a coach the backs and run the defence. 'I think Andy enjoyed the responsibility of coaching the attack, the backs as well as the defence. There were only two of us so we basically did it all together. Not only was he very good on the defence, but he was also very good as a second set of eyes but also as a second presence. 'As a head coach, you are always looking for someone who could support you. Sometimes you can step back a bit and the other coach steps up, Andy was very good at that. He would bring energy at the right time and bring his presence to support me as the head coach.' That word presence is one that keeps coming up, and will no doubt be a big part of how he leads in Australia. Nearly 30 years from the absolute disaster of New Zealand, expect Farrell the head coach to enjoy a lot more success this time around. After all, as Edwards says: 'He's a proven winner.' Article continues below A Lions Rugby Club membership gives you access to a whole series of member-only benefits such as priority ticket access, live events, bespoke welcome pack, competitions, exclusive content, and much more. Find out more at