Anthony Joshua defeated Wladimir Klitschko by TKO in the 11th round of their WBA world heavyweight title showdown at Wembley Stadium in London on Saturday.
That Upper cut will definitely Knock out Poverty from One’s Life 😁😁#JoshuaKlitchsko pic.twitter.com/Zovq9Wuidx
— Ugo Nwankwo (@ugonwankwo8) April 29, 2017
Check out incredible footage of Joshua pummeling Klitschko to cement the victory.
Ohh Ohhh🥊🥊🥊 #joshuaklitchsko @SFR_Sport @anthonyfjoshua 🌍🥊🥇pic.twitter.com/SMqJRdPq0h
— Jawad Karroum (@Jawadino7Love) April 29, 2017
This angle of Joshua’s devastating uppercut is purely insane.
Ouch.. RT @SergeMUFC: Another angle of that upper cut 😵😲 #JoshuaKlitchsko pic.twitter.com/Pcgtf89IW0
— adrian tate (@actate) April 29, 2017
Joshua was clearly delighted.
Heart of a lion! #JoshuaKlitchsko pic.twitter.com/KANmV4ZmJX
— Eddie Hearn (@EddieHearn) April 29, 2017
From BBC:
Anthony Joshua produced the performance of his career to add the WBA world heavyweight title to his IBF crown with an enthralling knockout win over Wladimir Klitschko at Wembley Stadium.
A post-war record 90,000 fans at the national stadium were treated to a see-saw contest, Joshua dropping the former unified world champion in the fifth round, before being put down – for the first time in his 19-fight career – in the sixth.
Both men looked in danger of being stopped over two rounds which will live long in the memory, before Joshua delivered the clinical blows in the 11th.
The Briton landed a brutal uppercut which gave him the platform to send Klitschko down with an immediate flurry.
The Ukrainian stood, was dropped by a left hook again moments later, then stood again, only for referee David Fields to save him when pinned against the ropes.
Joshua threw his arms into the air as roars rolled down the Wembley tiers. He had come through his stiffest test to date, while Klitschko too had answered questions, showing he remains competitive at world level, even at 41.
He will rue not finishing the job when he floored Joshua and appeared tantalisingly close to reclaiming two of the titles he lost in his last fight against Tyson Fury in 2015.
At the time of the stoppage, Joshua was up 96-93 and 95-93 on two cards, with Klitschko leading 95-93 on the other.
Boxing isn’t extinct quite yet, folks!