DANIEL DUBOIS wants to floor the bookies who have made him a red-hot favourite to batter Joe Joyce.
The 22-year-old British and Commomwealth heavyweight champ puts his belts on the line against his fellow Londoner on October 24.
Daniel Dubois and Joe Joyce faced off in the open air and behind a screen due to coronavirus protocolsCredit: Reuters
The pair are finally set to fight on October 24 with the hope of fans being able to attendCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
Before that O2 battle – planned for a sell-out crowd – both undefeated sluggers must come through tricky warm-up fights behind closed doors at the BT Sport Studios in Stratford.
Dubois, the massive 1-3 favourite, expects to wallop Michael Erik Pfeifer on August 29.
And Joyce, 33, is currently the 4-1 underdog if he comes through Michael Wallisch on Saturday.
Dynamite Dubois said: “I prefer to let my fists do the talking.
“I don’t care about odds or numbers. I just want to fight. I am ready to rumble.
“Of course I will watch Joe’s show on Saturday, I wouldn’t miss any show during lockdown.
Dubois also faced off with Michael Erik Pfeifer before their warm-up bout on August 29Credit: Reuters
Medical protocols were the order of the day at Tuesday’s media dayCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
“Then it’s 100 per cent focus on him and me getting on and settling things.”
Joyce, who will be 35 in September, lost around £60,000 when his Las Vegas training camp for the original April clash was axed for lockdown.
But he could earn a large chunk of that back if he backs himself to upset the Dubois steam train.
Joyce said: “I would say I am the favourite but the bookies don’t see it that way.
“I am the underdog so I have nothing to worry about. I have no pressure and Daniel has it all.
“I was surprised that Daniel took this warm-up fight because Erik Pfeifer is no joke, he’s done two Olympics and I have sparred him so he is in a big fight, definitely.”
Promoter Frank Warren fancies his chances of getting around 18,000 fans into the Greenwich venue once lockdown is lifted.
So the need for both men to defend their undefeated records faultlessly has never been higher.
They’ll even be backing each other to score wins just to make sure their clash finally happens after two Covid-19 postponements.
Warren said: “Who would ever have thought these two would be cheering each other on?
“But that is exactly what they’ll be doing because they both need to win their fights to guarantee a huge British battle.”
Source: Boxing - thesun.co.uk