ANTHONY JOSHUA insists 2017 victim Wladimir Klitschko hits harder than his June 1 conqueror Andy Ruiz Jr – so which heavyweight monster carries the biggest punch?
When the Ukraine-born heavyweight legend floored AJ in the sixth round of their Wembley thriller, the Watford ace knew it was the sort of skull-rocking shot that could leave him carried out of the ring on a stretcher.
But, after coming through that Wembley war with a win, his three heavyweight belts were snatched away by a shapeless 19st Mexican with rapid hands and a peach of a shot that concussed him.
It was not the power in the third-round left hook, the punch Joshua has always looked most vulnerable to, but it’s accuracy.
By clipping the softest part of Joshua’s skull, the temple, he left him in a fog for four more rounds and primed for three more floorings, before the action was stopped.
With Tyson Fury looking by far and away the most talented all-round fighter in the top division, but lacking savage one-hit wonders, can anyone blast through him?
Tyson Fury was floored twice by Deontay Wilder in their heavyweight scrapCredit: Alamy Live News
If Ruiz’s hands are the fastest, AJ is the most instinctive finisher and Dillian Whyte and Alexander Povetkin are swinging the best left hook, who is the biggest banger in the heavyweight division over all?
SunSport’s boxing experts put their heads together to determine the biggest hitters of the lot – let us know if you agree by voting in the poll.
Anthony Joshua was floored four times in his shock KO loss to Andy Ruiz Jr – they both make the listCredit: AP:Associated Press
1 Deontay Wilder 42-1-1, 42KO
Until Tyson Fury took the WBC to deep water last December, the Bronze Bomber had blown all of his 40 opponents away.
Wilder only weights around 15st and appears to have very little muscle in his legs, but he has a freakish talent for destroying 20st men
Criticised for an ungainly approach to the Sweet Science, Wilder generates terrifying power through his 83in arms and the unorthodox shots he throws from unexpected angles.
But his power alone was not enough when he suffered his first career defeat to Fury in February.
2 Anthony Joshua 23-1, 21KO
One shock loss will not define AJ’s career, or his place in this list.
Everyone apart from a hyper-negative Joseph Parker was firmly dealt with, up until June 1.
While AJ is not a concussive one-punch assassin, like Wilder, his natural instinct to finish a fight was super, until he met Andy Ruiz Jr.
He redeemed his reputation with a win over Ruiz when they went to war for the second time in December.
3 Dillian Whyte 27-1, 18KO
The Brixton Body Snatcher’s highlight reel is littered with sensational KO wins and the Lucas Brown and Derek Chisora wins leap out.
Both were dispatched with Whyte’s venomous left hook and both needed medical attention.
Dillian Whyte has delivered some stunning one-punch finishes in his careerCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
4 Daniel Dubois 14-0, 13KO
The loudest thing about Daniel Dubois is the thud of his fist into his opponent on fight night.
Nathan Gorman used to toy with his old amateur rival on the Team GB squad but Dynamite Dan’s man power shone through in July when the Greenwich man added Gorman to his victim list.
DDD is the closest this list has to Mike Tyson and we have only just scratched the surface.
5 Alexander Povetkin 35-2-1, 24KO
There are plenty of question marks over the Russian’s career, after two doping charges but, chemically induced or not, he has always carried vicious power.
Only Wladimir Klitschko and AJ have ever beaten him and Wlad needed all 12 rounds and the judges.
And, although the Hughie Fury fight in August made paint drying a must-see sport, The 2018 destruction of giant David Price was ferocious.
6 Andy Ruiz Jr 33-2, 22KO
An overweight 30-year-old hopeful on May 31.
A rapid-handed unified world champion by June 1.
Joe Hanks was the best name on his record before he went into his battle with AJ but he showed with THAT third-round left hook that his hands are either quick, heavy or accurate enough to change the course of history.
Was it a fluke? The rematch saw AJ run rings around the Mexican.
This stunning uppercut from Anthony Joshua set him on the way to a thrilling KO win against Wladimir KlitschkoCredit: Getty Images – Getty
7 Adam Kownacki 20-1-0, 15KO
Another from the Andy Ruiz Jr modelling agency. The New York-based Poland hero does not look up to much but he’s rapidly on the rise.
Recent points wins over ex-world champ Charles Martin and Chris Arreola have calmed his reputation as a KO specialist but there’s every chance it could come back with a bang.
8 Filip Hrgovic 10-0, 8KO
You don’t get nicknamed The Animal in boxing because you like to roll over and have your belly stroked.
The Croatian powerhouse enjoyed a medal-laden amateur career including a heavyweight silver at the 2016 Olympics and has now started his assault on the pros.
9 Derek Chisora 32-9, 23KO
There’s no denying the 35-year-old slugger can be outboxed at elite level, especially when up against Vitali Klitschko, David Haye or Tyson Fury.
But stand and trade with the no-nonsense Zimbabwe-born brute and you are in trouble.
Just when Chisora looked to be sliding down the card from main event to novelty act, he produced two brilliant KO wins over Carlos Takam and Artur Szpilka and could shoot up this list with a win over Joseph Parker on October 26.
Derek Chisora could have packed it all in – until he found this stunning fight-clinching punch to beat Carlos TakamCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
10 Joe Joyce 10-0, 9KO
The Juggernaut is biting off huge fights for someone so new to their pro career and the figures read well.
But every almost every fighter the Putney man has beaten has described a worrying lack of brute strength.
The 6ft 6in star is relentless, resilient and super-fit.
But Brit fans need to see something spectacular to agree the fighter befits the nickname.
Source: Boxing - thesun.co.uk