Teddy Atlas believes Anthony Joshua’s huge wealth that he’s amassed during his nine-year professional career has eroded his hunger for boxing, reports boxingnews24.com.
Unsurprisingly, the experienced former trainer, Atlas, is picking unified heavyweight champion, Oleksandr Usyk, to defeat Joshua in their rematch on August 20 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
The two fighters have a different outlook going into their rematch, and Atlas sees Usyk as wanting it more and willing to do what it takes to get the victory.
Atlas feels Joshua (24-2, 22 KOs) is just going through the motions and disengaged mentally, having lost his hunger because of his massive bank account.
According to Celebrity Net Worth, Joshua’s net worth is $80 million, which is a drop in the bucket for the money he’s going to make before his career is over.
When you have that kind of wealth, it’s got to be hard for Joshua to stay focused on the sport because he can go anywhere, buy anything, and live a life of luxury without the labour and pain involved in boxing.
“Joshua is no spring chicken; they’re both getting up there. I don’t know who’s older, but he’s getting up there a little,” Atlas said.
“He’s (Joshua) made a lot of money, and you must put that into the factor. Are you as hungry? He’s made a lot of money. I don’t know if he is (hungry),” continued Atlas about his belief that Joshua has lost his hunger for the sport due to his immense wealth.
“I think he showed the possibility of being influenced in those dimensions when he fought at Madison Square Garden and got knocked out by (Andy) Ruiz. He didn’t look like a hungry guy, he didn’t,” he added.
“He came back, give him credit, he came back and got the title from Ruiz. He fought in a different style and become another person, a different physical being for that, and took a lot of weight off.
“Okay, so Usyk is even older, but sometimes you judge age differently. For me, Joshua is starting to get older in a way that I started to touch on. He might have satisfied himself in certain realms of making money.
“When you do that, you get old. Yeah, because you get disinterested. I think that’s at play a little bit, and I think a guy like Usyk, it’s never about money,” said Atlas.
“I think it’s about the fight,” Atlas said about what’s important for Usyk. “I think it’s about honour and pride. I’m not saying the other guy (Joshua) doesn’t have that, but for Usyk, I think it’s about, like Beterbiev.
“I think it’s about honour, pride, legacy, and now there’s an x-factor. I think it’s about his people,” Atlas said of Usyk. “That terrible war going on. In some ways, he may attach himself, and I’m sure he will, that he’s fighting for the people.
“Usually, in these kinds of match-ups, the hungrier guy, which I think is Usyk, was the underdog going in. Of course, he not only beat Joshua, but he also came close to stopping him.
“It was a close fight, but he (Usyk) dominated at the end. It was a chess match, but then it was a little bit of the quickness and dimensional ability of Usyk; the cerebral-ness and determination were there against their right hand of Joshua.
“Usually these fights, when I look at history, as I said, in the way, I just drew it up, the way I just described it, when the fighter wins the first fight, (Usyk) the hungrier guy, in the end, he dominated, I think, the guy that showed himself to be the better all-around fighter.
“When that guy wins the first time, he usually wins the second time easier. Here’s another x-factor on another side of the ledger. Usyk just went through a life-changing experience.
“He saw his countrymen die, he saw his country taken apart, and he has seen things that he’d seen as a baby destroyed – buildings, factories, people’s lives.
“He’d seen that destroyed with artillery. Not artillery of a left or a fight hand; artillery of bombs, of machine guns, of missiles. That affects you. I don’t care what kind of fighter you are. That affects you.
“When you’ve seen that, it puts things into perspective. It puts things in perspective about him; important is anything compared to life? How important is boxing? How important is making millions of dollars. I know it’s important, but how important is that compared to your countryman, to your children, to your future, to the life that you’ve known?
“All of a sudden it becomes minimal. All of a sudden, boxing doesn’t become as important as it once used to be. And that perspective, as proper as it is, and it is proper. There are things more important than anything we do.
“Our family, life itself, is always more important. But when that perspective strikes home, and it doesn’t always, but in this case because of the war, when you live through that, as Usyk has and you’re touched by that, as Usyk has your perspective changes.
“As healthy as that perspective is, it’s not healthy for a fighter. It’s not healthy for a guy that has to go in that ring, and that has to be the priority. That has to be the priority.
“You win your career, some selfishness because it’s your career, putting yourself, and, yes, your family, but it’s putting yourself first. All of a sudden being awakened by this experience and having that new perspective can be a danger to a fighter.
“All of a sudden, it’s not important. It’s either going to be that and that’s what makes the x-factor. It’s either going to be that or what he attaches himself to, what I said earlier.
“‘I’m fighting for that flag. I’m fighting for the pride of my country, and I’m fighting for the people to give them something of hope, to give them something to leave them out of the rubble.’
“He can become that symbol of hope. So it’s going to be one or the other. That’s what makes this fight intriguing to me. Otherwise, I think it’s a one-sided fight or potentially, except for there’s always the power of that right hand (from Joshua) that could change things.
“That’s how I break the fight down; that’s what makes it interesting, that’s what makes it semi-important, and I will go with Usyk again,” he said.