Anthony Joshua taking ‘astounding’ financial hit after Dillian Whyte fight KO’d and Robert Helenius drafted in

1 year ago 113

IT’S Britain’s first Viking invasion for almost 1,000 years but ticket refunds are already on offer and the pay-per-view has been cancelled.

Robert Helenius, the Sweden-born Finland beanpole, has accepted the task of stepping in and fighting Anthony Joshua following Dillian Whyte’s late doping bust.

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Anthony Joshua is set to take a financial hit after his fight with Dillian Whyte was cancelled[/caption]
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DAZN have pulled the PPV for Joshua’s clash with replacement Helenius[/caption]

With just seven days to save the show, it was always going to be a struggle for promoter Eddie Hearn and 33-year-old AJ’s management team to find a suitable replacement.

And they eventually came up with a bloke who boxed just last weekend on the opera stage of a 15th-century castle.

Helenius was also obliterated inside 40 seconds of his last meaningful fight.

With speculation over a £47million Saudi Arabia showdown with Deontay Wilder swirling, Joshua was never going to take on a serious challenger.

The fact Matchroom are offering punters their cash back on the O2 sell-out while broadcasters DAZN reduced the showdown from a £26.99 fee to its standard subscription is commendable.

Joshua will also take a massive financial hit after opting to fight when he could have cancelled or delayed the event all together.

That has ensured the young prospects on the undercard — who have trained and boiled down their weights — get paid.

This is horrible luck for Joshua, who lost to Andy Ruiz Jr in 2019 when the Mexican was drafted in as a late replacement for Jarrell Miller, who was flagged for a shopping list of steroids.

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Last Wednesday, AJ held a conference call with the British press and over-ran the planned time slot, going in depth on a range of topics and laughing with — and at — some of the press pack.

This week — despite his own squeaky clean doping record after hundreds of tests — he will face a stream of questions about Whyte, Vada, Ukad, B-samples, strict liability and confidentiality agreements.

It has been the same since Conor Benn failed two tests and got his October Chris Eubank Jr fight cancelled.

Even if the fighter protests — or even later proves — his innocence, a dark and toxic cloud hangs over the sport and stinks out every following event until the next scandal strikes.

Daniel Dubois and Oleksandr Usyk will face the same questions in the next big fight, Liam Smith and Chris Eubank after that.

While the accused parties get the luxury of confidentiality agreements, clean athletes are left to defend their trade.

There is one threat Helenius — who was KO’d by one vicious Wilder punch in 2022 — poses to AJ’s reputation and that’s a stinker of a fight.

On his last trip to the UK in 2017 he ran from Whyte for 12 hard-to-watch rounds and deservedly lost a decision.

Those fans that show up on Saturday will not stand for the caution AJ showed against Jermaine Franklin in April. He suffered boos as early as the eighth round.

Hopefully he rips through Helenius in his old vicious fashion and can then turn his focus onto a serious challenge.

Otherwise — through no real fault of his own — turning down the Tyson Fury fight in December and taking a pointless match-up with Franklin could come back to haunt him.

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