.jpeg%3Ftrim%3D0%2C0%2C0%2C0%26width%3D1200%26height%3D800%26crop%3D1200%3A800&w=3840&q=100)
Would Jake Paul stand a chance against Anthony Joshua?
After his points victory over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, Paul has been calling out Joshua – believing he has what it takes to beat the Brit.
Eddie Hearn, Joshua's promoter, has admitted that they are open to discussions with Jake Paul.
Hearn told iFL TV: 'We are planning life without Jake Paul, but if that is for real, of course, we take that fight in a heartbeat.'
Paul's manager, Nakisa Bidarian, has since told Sky Sports that they are 'actively discussing it with Matchroom.'
If this fight gets made, it will be a tall order for the Ohio native to be competitive against a two-time unified heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medallist, but could he actually pull it off? Here is the breakdown of all the key factors to consider.
Height and reach
Should the two ever meet, the starkest difference between them would be the enormous five-inch height discrepancy paired with a six-inch reach difference.
'AJ' stands at a towering 6'6' compared to Paul at 6'1'.
This presents a well-documented set of problems. To be able to have any success over a man of Joshua's skill and size, Paul must be able to get himself close enough to land.
Because of his amateur pedigree, Joshua has well-schooled footwork and a long, sharp jab, which, if Paul cannot get past, will leave him at the end of a volley of heavy artillery.
But this is not a challenge unique to the American; such is the breadth of the heavyweight division, with no weight limit, fighters come in all shapes and sizes.
Examples of fighters who have been able to overcome similar height and reach disadvantages are David Haye and Mike Tyson.
When David Haye took on Nikolai Valuev in 2009 for the WBA heavyweight title, 'The Hayemaker' gave away nine inches in height to Valuev, who stood at seven feet tall, but he still got his hand raised.
Meanwhile, Tyson spent much of his career punching up, standing at only 5'10', but was one of the most destructive champions in heavyweight history.
So what is the common denominator for success as the shorter man? Explosiveness.
What Tyson and Haye mastered was being able to avoid incoming fire to get in close, then unloading their own heavy combinations before retreating to safety and out of range of their opponents.
This is the only way Paul would be able to effectively lay a glove on Joshua - applying smart pressure to keep him on the back foot and explode into range to throw his shots.
But as the adage goes…a good big man beats a good small man.
Weight
Joshua has been consistent in his weight throughout his career, usually tipping the scales between 240 and 250lbs, putting him toward the upper end of the division.
Paul usually weighs between 190 and 200lbs as a cruiserweight. But when he fought Mike Tyson, he bulked up to an impressive 228lbs to match the former heavyweight champion.
But this steep increase in weight saw Paul perform sluggishly against Tyson and struggle with his endurance, something he cannot afford to do against an athlete like Joshua, who has been conditioned at his weight for well over a decade.
If we draw a comparison to Oleksandr Usyk, who holds a similar frame to Paul, the way in which he was able to find success, at his size, against Joshua was with constant upper-body and lateral movement.
If Paul can condition himself at 220lbs to be able to maintain that constant motion and work rate, then he might be able to overwhelm Joshua in the early going, but he must be proactive.
Experience
Experience cannot be substituted – thousands of hours of drilling, sparring, studying and most importantly, fighting all carve an elite level fighter out of the stone of a plucky amateur with dreams of one day holding a world title.
This is an insurmountable disadvantage for Paul that would, without a doubt, show if the two were to fight.
AJ had a glittering career as an amateur fighter, winning multiple national championships, a silver medal at the world championships and a famous gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.
Across over 50 fights, Joshua will have had access to the best coaches and sparring partners at the Performance Institute in Sheffield, honing his skills to eventually turn over as a professional.
Paul has no amateur background to speak of, having only one white collar fight before becoming a pro and has since accumulated 13 fights, boxing a total of 70 rounds.
Joshua is more than double Paul's total in both total fights and rounds. This gives him not just the benefit of more time in the gym, but also more experience with different styles and the ability to stay composed in times of trouble.
Recent form
Momentum and activity are essential components for a fighter to be able to build confidence and trust their ability to perform.
Paul certainly has the benefit of both, coming off a career-best win against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr and being undefeated in his last six fights, putting himself in with increasingly staunch opposition.
Both of the American's last fights have gone the distance, with Paul walking away as the clear winner, showing a man full of confidence in his ability to see out a contest.
A knockout defeat against Daniel Dubois has punctuated a downturn in Joshua's career, started by back-to-back losses to Usyk.
Joshua has not beaten a fighter resembling elite level since Andy Ruiz in 2019.
It is important to mention that 'confidence' is an intangible asset and cannot be measured, but if Paul enters the ring with the belief to go at the former champion and ignore the obvious physical disadvantages, then he might just stand a chance at being competitive.
A DAZN subscription provides access to over 185 fights a year across a range of combat sports from the world's best promoters.

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


Times
17 minutes ago
- Times
Chris Davies: I spent my dream family holiday on Zoom calls with Tom Brady
On Thursday, a screen outside St Andrew's played excerpts from Amazon's new Birmingham City documentary. It kept looping back to a clip of Tom Brady: 'I have no f***ing fear. I have no fear in anything I do,' says the GOAT of American football. In his personable yet steely way, Chris Davies is similar. Last June there he was, only 39 but 20 years into his preparation — 20 years of working towards The Moment. That point where he would take the plunge and become a manager, his ambition since injury killed his playing dreams as a teenager. The former Welsh youth international had built such a reputation in coaching circles that for some time good offers, including from Championship clubs, were flying in. He turned them down. In football management, you're cooked if you don't get the first job right. Then Birmingham called. 'I knew I'd have six games. I was a complete unknown to most people and if I didn't get early results, I'd have been gone,' he says. 'But this one was different. It was a feeling in my gut.' So he took those dreams, those 20 years of careful preparation, and staked the lot on blue. A story that sums up Davies' mentality. He had said his goodbyes at Tottenham Hotspur, where he was assistant head coach to Ange Postecoglou, and arrived at St Andrew's with Birmingham's sporting director, Craig Gardner, and then chief executive, Garry Cook. Outside the main stand he met Jasper Carrott and remembers embarrassing himself somewhat by telling the comedian he was his hero. Then he went out to the pitch with the club historian who casually hit him with a fact. 'He said no team in English football, in the last five seasons, had lost more games than Birmingham City,' Davies recalls. 'I thought . . . wow. But then, it conversely excited me. I thought, 'What if we win more games than any team?' ' Davies went on to take Birmingham up from League One with an all-time English points record (111) and the most league victories (34) of any side in an English season. Of course, Birmingham had the biggest budget too and a hyper-ambitious ownership group including chairman Tom Wagner and minority investor Brady, and the cameras were rolling on the documentary Built in Birmingham: Brady & The Blues. All of that fuelled the expectancy that led Davies to calculate those six games were all he had. Yet he rather liked the thought. 'I want to be under pressure because I think that's when I'm at my best,' he says. His education was at clubs expected to win all the time. He was assistant coach to Brendan Rodgers at Liverpool (and Swansea City) and Rodgers' No2 at Celtic and Leicester City. At Spurs, he took training while Postecoglou observed (Davies' departure was perhaps a factor in last season's slump). 'Even at Leicester we were at the higher end of the Premier League so I was used to teams who were going to have the ball and be dominant,' Davies says. 'I wasn't a specialist in relegation battles and thought the job here suited me more than one down at the bottom of the Championship.' He learned so much from Rodgers, stretching back to captaining his youth team at Reading, and describes his season with Postecoglou as 'finishing school'. 'Brendan's core is being able to set up a team to have possession of the ball and how Ange would want the team to train, let alone play, was just relentless. And it all connected with my own idea of how I want football to look like,' Davies says. 'What I want to see in players is an energetic team, but a brave team. A team that can get on the ball and play.' Davies' first competitive game was a 1-1 draw with Reading. In the comments section under the BBC match report, a fan wrote: 'If Birmingham think playing tippy tappy and possession-based football gets you promoted out of this league they will soon find out it doesn't.' However, Birmingham won the title by 19 points with an average 67.1 per cent possession, the highest in England's top-four leagues, while pressing the ball quicker than any team as well. 'As I said to the players, I've never seen myself as talented, I've seen myself as having a work ethic others won't always match,' Davies says. 'This club is working class to the core and our fan base want that reflected on the pitch. 'Tom [Brady] asked Sir Alex [Ferguson] about Birmingham and [Ferguson] spoke about how hostile St Andrew's is. There's an edginess to it. So I've been cautious that the football's not too pretty. The pressing gives you that.' I've known Davies since his days at Swansea, where initially he was Rodgers' opposition analyst, and he always stood out: a young British coach with a sharp and serious mind about the game, and gift for conveying concepts with clarity and passion. He traces his drive to being released by his hometown club, Watford, at 11, then after rebuilding at Reading having his playing career curtailed by a foot injury. 'The setbacks gave me a hunger and resilience I wouldn't have had,' he reflects. His 20s was a decade of pouring enormous energy into carving a coaching path. He took a BSc in sports and exercise science at Loughborough (graduating with first-class honours), coached at Leicester's academy then schlepped to New Zealand to coach at two academies there. His first talks with Wagner and Brady were video calls while in the Maldives with his wife and three children. 'I remember the calls. Six o'clock every day, the perfect time to go out for dinner with the kids. I've promised we'll go back there one day and actually enjoy the Maldives. It was our dream holiday and I spent it on Zoom, basically.' He and Brady have forged a connection. They converse two or three times a week, sometimes by video call, more usually on WhatsApp. 'Tom sent me a message today. We often talk back and forth about how the team's doing, training's going and one of his big things is process over outcome. He built his identity of success on what he did day to day,' Davies says. 'I've found there's a lot more layers to just that superficial Tom Brady [image] and as a person he's really switched on — and not just win, win, win all the time. He understands the challenges. He's been helpful to me in terms of high-performance culture and probably reminded me of Steven Gerrard. 'I've worked with some top, top players and Steven is a real reference point for me as an elite player, England captain, Liverpool captain. These people, they have this relentless drive. 'Harry Kane is another. These types are never satisfied. But typically they're really good people — they just have this aura.' Brady has organised Zoom calls for Davies with NFL coaches and regales him with stories about Bill Belichick, the legendary former New England Patriots head coach. 'How he pushed his players is sometimes very funny and not conventional,' Davies says. 'He would question them so they reacted. You've got to be careful with that, but as a psychologist and in terms of coaching strategy, from the stories Tom tells, he was incredible. He was very, very demanding — and that's what I've tried to be.' Knighthead, Wagner's ownership group, has already invested £35million in improving Birmingham's stadium, training ground and academy, and £100million in helping regenerate East Birmingham. Wagner's vision is to create a Sports Quarter with 62,000-capacity Birmingham City Stadium at its heart, at a projected cost of £3billion. Knighthead's original plan was for Premier League football by 2026 and it is thought the target is immediate promotion this season. Internal data and analytics suggest a top-two finish is possible. Davies' brow furrows momentarily, but he takes mention of this in his stride. 'I think everything is with a pinch of salt in the sense that we believe our squad is stronger than last year, but we need a few more pieces to be a real contender,' he says. Summer signings include Demarai Gray, whom he coached at Leicester and is returning to his first club from the Saudi Pro League. 'When Demarai is fired up he's as good as almost anyone and he needed something like this to really motivate him,' Davies says. Birmingham have also brought in James Beadle, the 6ft 7in, highly rated England Under-21 goalkeeper, and paid Rennes about £10million for the Japan striker and modern Celtic legend, Kyogo Furuhashi. Their opener is at home to Ipswich Town on Friday night and tickets were sold out a month ago. 'Looking at their squad, I would class Ipswich as favourites [for promotion], with Leicester potentially there. So to test ourselves against them is going to be a great start for us,' Davies says. 'St Andrew's will be louder than I've ever heard it. Next Friday under the lights is going to be one of those games to remember.' The quality he loved most in Postecoglou was his authenticity — 'Ange doesn't change for anyone,' Davies says, smiling — but while rising to be one of the hottest prospects in British coaching, Davies is no different to the helpful, young analyst I met when trying to tell the story of Swansea's rise 14 years ago. His children have been enjoying watching their cameos in the Amazon documentary, but what does he think of it? 'Well, the first thing I said when I watched it was, 'God, why do I swear so much?' I warned my parents. My dad comes to every game and my mum said, 'It's all right, don't worry'. She's heard it all before. 'I guess it's passion, and sometimes you don't realise you're doing it.' Birmingham City v Ipswich Town


The Guardian
17 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Cut-throat NFL roster cull pits Australian pair against each other with millions at stake
There is a brutal ritual involving Australian punters that takes place this time of year in Louisiana's intense summer heat, near the bayous and swamps that are home to alligators and venomous cottonmouth snakes. It features former Australian rules footballers battling for a single $US3m NFL punting contract with the New Orleans Saints. This year's showdown began with Matt Hayball, a former Geelong Cat and the Saints' incumbent punter, against James Burnip, a 198cm rookie from Mount Macedon in Victoria, who just wrapped a standout punting career at the University of Alabama. The Saints complicated the battle this week by signing a third punter, American Kai Kroeger. Only one will survive final cuts on 26 August, when NFL teams must slash their training camp rosters from 90 players to 53. The winner will enjoy the spotlight and riches of playing in America's most popular sports league, while the losers will be unemployed and left with the long shot hope one of the other 31 NFL teams might need a punter. 'It's the nature of the NFL,' Hayball tells Guardian Australia from a boisterous Saints locker room inside the Ochsner Sports Performance Center in New Orleans. 'You're always competing for your position, and it's the same for every other player in this building.' This isn't Hayball's first showdown. Last year, he was the rookie and edged out West Australian and Saints incumbent punter Lou Hedley. A year before that, it was Hedley who was the rookie and ousted the incumbent, American punter Blake Gillikin. No NFL team has embraced Australian punters more than the Saints in recent years. They prize their mobility, toughness and versatile kicking skills, honed from years of booting a Sherrin on both feet. Special teams coordinator Phil Galiano even dubbed Hayball 'The Aussie Flash' last season after a successful fake punt saw him dash 11 yards for a first down. Despite the cutthroat stakes, Hayball and Burnip maintain a relaxed camaraderie. 'There's only going to be one punter at the end of camp, but it's friendly,' Burnip says. 'We still wake up, get a coffee together, eat, and head out to practice. We're trying to make each other better.' 'James is talented and a good dude,' says Hayball. 'It's a similar situation to last year with Lou. We're learning from each other while competing. But really, we're competing against ourselves.' Hayball and Burnip are graduates of ProKick Australia, the Melbourne-based punting academy that has sent several hundred former Australian rules footballers to play with US colleges. 'Matt was leaving ProKick for the US when I was just starting,' Burnip says. 'We kept in touch whenever he came back to Australia.' Like many before them, both endured the heartbreak of seeing their AFL dreams fade. Hayball was raised in Adelaide, played U18s as a midfielder with the West Adelaide Football Club and was drafted by Geelong in 2015. But after three years playing for the Cats in the second-tier VFL, he was delisted. He joined ProKick, secured a punting scholarship at Florida Atlantic University, and later transferred to Tennessee's Vanderbilt University. Burnip played junior footy in the Riddell District Football League, but when it became clear the AFL wasn't in his future, he pivoted. 'I found ProKick, and the rest is history,' he says. Burnip landed at US college football powerhouse Alabama in 2021, won the starting job under legendary coach Nick Saban, and became the Tide's punter for four seasons – although Saban often referred to him as a 'rugby player'. While Hayball enters the Saints camp as the incumbent and having led the NFL last season in punts downed inside the opponent's 20-yard line, recent history favours the rookie. The Saints have opted for the rookie punter in each of the last three training camp duels. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Hayball is in the second year of a three-year, $US2.84m contract, so has already pocketed close to $US1m. Burnip, undrafted at April's NFL draft, quickly signed a three-year $US2.975m free agent deal with the Saints. But with just $US35,000 guaranteed, that's all Burnip will keep if cut later this month. Kroeger, also a rookie, has had a short and tumultuous NFL career. He punted for the University of South Carolina the past four years, also was undrafted in April, was signed by the New York Jets, waived on 27 July and picked up by the Saints four days later. They are all well aware of what Saints head coach Kellen Moore and Galiano are looking for. 'It's about consistency, hang time, distance, direction, getting the ball off quickly, and flipping the field,' Burnip says. 'If you can do those things, you'll have a pretty successful career.' Hayball says he is 'chasing perfection with every punt.' 'Last year I did a good job getting it inside the 20, but this year I want more plays down inside the 10 or five. Those can be game changers.' If Hayball wins the job and stays in New Orleans, he has one non-NFL goal: exploring the Louisiana swamps on an alligator sightseeing tour. 'I know [Saints kicker Blake] Grupe is into that kind of stuff, so I might tag along next time he goes,' Hayball says. When asked if Americans might expect him to go full Steve Irwin and jump out of the boat and wrestle an alligator, he grins. 'Nah, I couldn't see myself doing that. Even though our crocs are way bigger in Australia, I still wouldn't want to share the water with them.'


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Hughes and Hunt win British 100m titles
UK Athletics ChampionshipsVenue: Alexander Stadium, Birmingham Dates: 2-3 AugustCoverage: BBC iPlayer, Red Button, BBC Sport website & app. View coverage details Zharnel Hughes and Amy Hunt claimed the 100m titles at the UK Athletics Championships as pole vaulter Molly Caudery also starred on day one in bronze medallist Hughes clocked a wind-assisted 9.94 seconds to cross the line ahead of Jeremiah Azu (9.97) and Louie Hinchliffe (10.01) and secure his place on the Great Britain team at September's World Championships in star Hunt, 23, also secured qualification by dominating the women's final in a personal best 11.02 after defending champion Daryll Neita was disqualified for a false must achieve a top-two finish in their events and have met the World Athletics entry standard to be assured of a place in the squad, which will be announced on 27 runner Hannah Nuttall and discus thrower Lawrence Okoye were among those to also triumph on Saturday and earn are 26 gold medals to be won on the final day of action at Alexander Stadium. Olympic 1500m medallist Georgia Hunter-Bell and Max Burgin qualified fastest for Sunday's 800m finals, while 400m favourites Amber Anning and Charlie Dobson also secured comfortable victories before their finals. A relaxed and confident Hughes turned his head and stared down his closest rivals as he cruised over the line in the final event of the 30-year-old came into the championships as the fastest Briton this year after his 9.91 run in Eugene in July, holding off world indoor 60m champion Azu and the fast-finishing who won last year's title to secure a fairytale rise from obscurity to Olympic qualification, and Azu have not achieved the sub-10 standard needed for the a dramatic start to the women's final, Neita, who had run a season's best 11.00 in a strong semi-final showing, was denied the chance to compete after making a slight movement in her starting her absence, former training partner Hunt finished well clear of Desiree Henry (11.32) and Faith Akinbileje (11.34).Hunt and Neita are doubling up in 200m, where they will have competition from former world champion Dina Asher-Smith. Caudery won the pole vault with a first-time clearance of 4.45m, before pushing herself to equal her best performance of the year by going over at 25-year-old won world indoor gold in a breakout 2024 season, during which she broke the British record with a 4.92m jump, but failed to qualify for the Olympic final."I've just been finding my flow again and figuring a few things out, so I didn't push it today, but it is really exciting to jump back over the 80s again and I'm hoping to attempt [the British record] soon," Caudery sealed her place on the team by winning the women's 5,000m in 15 minutes 46.90 seconds, having achieved the qualifying time before the 19-year-old Innes FitzGerald, who achieved the qualifying standard in breaking the European Under-20 record in London last month, must wait to see if she is selected after finishing third behind India confirmed his place in Tokyo by winning the men's discus with a 65.93m throw, while Anna Purchase threw a championship record 72.96m to win the women's hammer title - a distance within UK Athletics' (UKA) consideration standard. Elise Thorner, who also has the UKA standard and will go to Tokyo if she qualifies by world ranking - ran a championship record 9:22.05 to win the women's 3,000m Barrett clocked 13.06 to win a chaotic women's 100m hurdles final in which several athletes Duruaku and Charlie Husbands agreed to share the men's high jump title after both cleared 2.14m, while Alessandro Schenini won the men's long jump with 7.85m in the first Lincoln, who has the UKA standard, won an 11th consecutive men's shot put title with 20.77m, and Adelaide Omitowoju claimed women's triple jump gold with a personal-best Alisson won the men's javelin title with a personal best of 78.48m, as did two-time Paralympic champion Daniel Pembroke with 63.62m to take the para men's title, while Daniel Greaves won the para men's discus with Young won the men's 100m ambulant final in 11.19, and the women's 800m wheelchair event was won by Kare Adenegan in 2:12.87.