Parker and Wardley ready for ‘all or nothing’ rumble with shot at Usyk on the line

A picture


Boxing is in a real slump this year, with few major fights and far less compelling bouts than usual, and so the prospect of a serious and intriguing heavyweight contest between Joseph Parker and Fabio Wardley at the O2 Arena brings a measure of relief to the beleaguered business.The winner will almost certainly face Oleksandr Usyk, the world champion, next year.In contrast, the loser is likely to lament the inevitable erosion of the hard-won plaudits he had gained.Danger and risk surround this clash.Parker is on a hot streak since his last defeat, to Joe Joyce, three years ago.

The New Zealand veteran, who won the WBO world title in 2016, has been rejuvenated by his switch of trainers to the inspirational Andy Lee.He has won six fights in a row, earning particular acclaim for the poised way in which he crushed Deontay Wilder, Zhilei Zhang and Martin Bakole.Wardley has steadily built his unbeaten record over 20 bouts, while displaying astonishing power against Frazer Clarke in a rematch last year and, this summer, when he knocked out Justis Huni with one chilling punch.But Clarke took Wardley to hell and back when their brutal first fight ended in a draw – and Huni had an unassailable lead on all three scorecards before he was felled in the 10th round.The low-key appeal of both men is enhanced by the fact that they now stand on the verge of a world title shot.

Yet both are vulnerable.This is Parker’s 40th fight and, apart from three losses, he has been dropped multiple times by different opponents.He always gets up but Wardley hits harder than anyone he has faced – with the exception of Wilder who looked a shell of a knockout artist when Parker swept to a one-sided points victory in December 2023.Wardley, a former white-collar slugger who only started boxing when he was 20, had no amateur experience and has always had to overcome doubts about his comparatively limited skills.But he is also within sight of a world title challenge.

Frank Warren, the promoter, believes “this is the most significant fight, at the moment, in the heavyweight division.These two guys have stepped up when neither of them needed to make this fight.Joe Parker is the WBO interim champion and they have already ordered Usyk to fight him, but [the Ukrainian] was injured.Joseph wants to fight anyway.“Fabio is also in a fantastic position and he only had to wait for his time.

He said ‘No.’ He wanted to fight – and against Parker because it gives him a chance to jump the queue.”Parker, who turns 34 in January, said: “This is all or nothing.I am not thinking about losing.I respect my opponent and what he has done and how he has prepared for this fight.

But I am on a different level and I am going to show it on Saturday.”Wardley will be 31 in December and he said: “It is a massive night for the pair of us.It is obviously the biggest fight of my career and the biggest fight of my life.But every time I step up I rise to the occasion.Saturday will be no different.

The separation between where Joe is and where people think I am has been a common theme throughout my career.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“He has been going around the block for a long time, with a lot of fights on his record.By no means is he an old man but he has been in the sport for a long time and had some heavy fights.I’ve been in a few wars myself and I know they put miles on the clock.He has been in a lot more of those than me.

”But the suspicion remains that Parker will be too seasoned, and too skilful, for Wardley,He should win a bruising battle with the conviction that he is next in line for Usyk – still the world’s best heavyweight by a comfortable distance,
societySee all
A picture

Resident doctors in England to go on strike for five days next month

Resident doctors in England will strike again next month – the 13th time since 2023 – a decision NHS bosses say is “the last thing the NHS needs”.Hospital chiefs predicted that the stoppage would make it harder for the NHS to manage the increase in winter viruses and hamper its efforts to tackle the 7.4m waiting list backlog.The British Medical Association (BMA) and Wes Streeting, the health secretary, blamed each other for the five-day strike, from 7am on 14 November to 7am on 19 November.Dr Jack Fletcher, the chair of the BMA’s resident doctors’ committee (RDC), said on Thursday that the strike was a response to Streeting offering only “vague promises” after the union’s “reasonable” demands on pay and career progression

A picture

Challenges of council restructure in Kent | Letter

Your report on the problems in Kent county council stresses the conflicts in the ruling Reform UK party over the budget (‘Suck it up’: leaked video exposes bitter infighting at Reform UK’s flagship Kent council, 18 October). These squabbles must not obscure the very real problems that the county faces in meeting government requirements to restructure into three or four new unitary councils.The new pattern of unitaries is likely to divide wealthy West Kent from East Kent, which has the highest concentration of social need and the least capacity to raise council tax. The level of debt that unitaries will inherit from the existing district councils makes things much worse – virtually zero in West Kent and probably near £500m in East Kent. Kent county council’s additional £750m debt makes matters worseThe issues of social need, the capacity to invest in good-quality jobs and how to address the debt crisis must be at the forefront of debate about how we go forward

A picture

Asda hires autistic man who was let go by Waitrose after years of volunteering

An autistic man who was let go as an unpaid shelf stacker at a Waitrose supermarket despite volunteering there for years has been offered a job at Asda.Tom Boyd, 28, had worked in the Cheadle Hulme Waitrose store since 2021 with a support worker, as his mother, Frances Boyd, said the role gave her son “a sense of purpose and belonging”.In a Facebook post last Friday, she wrote that her “autistic son has been treated so unfairly, and we feel deeply let down” by Waitrose. She said the supermarket declined to give him a paid job despite him offering more than 600 hours to the store “purely because he wanted to belong, contribute, and make a difference”, and that he was a well-liked member of the team by his co-workers.Boyd added that they had only asked for a few hours of paid work “not as charity, but as recognition for all the time, effort, and heart” Tom had given to the store, and that she and her family were “shocked by how dismissive and cold” the management’s response was, and that Tom was asked not to return

A picture

Ministers confirm plans to reduce London’s affordable housing quotas

Ministers have confirmed plans to reduce affordable housing quotas in London as they try to reverse the recent collapse in housebuilding in the capital.Steve Reed, the housing secretary, said on Thursday that developers would be allowed to qualify for fast-track planning status if their projects included 20% affordable housing, down from the current target of 35%. Of those 20% however, 60% will have to be available at the cheapest social rents.The plans, which were revealed last week by the Guardian, come after new housebuilding in London shrank to just a few thousand units a year, with developers saying they are constrained by high interest rates and sluggish planning procedures.They have caused anger among homelessness campaigners and some Labour MPs, however, who say the government is undermining its pledge to tackle homelessness

A picture

Dozens of Labour MPs warn of chaos for firms over gender recognition advice

Dozens of Labour MPs have written to ministers warning that upcoming regulations on how to implement rules on gender recognition could cause chaos for many businesses.In a private letter to the business secretary, Peter Kyle, the MPs said they had been contacted by large numbers of companies that were deeply alarmed at the implications of the guidance, citing significant potential costs and a “minefield” of competing legal rights.Ministers are still considering the final guidance, drafted by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), so it is not yet public. Sources at the watchdog, however, have briefed that it is broadly similar to interim advice issued shortly after April’s landmark supreme court ruling that sex in the Equality Act refers only to biological sex.The interim advice, which was withdrawn last week, said the supreme court ruling meant transgender people should not be allowed to use toilets meant for the gender they live as, and that in some cases they could not use toilets consistent with their birth sex

A picture

Care Quality Commission chief quits over maternity inquiry into NHS trust he led

The chief executive of the Care Quality Commission has quit after the announcement of an independent inquiry into maternity failings at an NHS trust he led for a decade.Sir Julian Hartley said staying in his current role was “incompatible” with the investigation into Leeds teaching hospitals NHS trust (LTH), which he led for 10 years until 2023, and said it could “undermine trust and confidence in the regulator”.In a statement, he said: “This has been an incredibly difficult decision. However, I feel that my current role as chief executive of CQC has become incompatible with the important conversations happening about care at LTH, including during the time I was chief executive there.“I am so sorry for the fact that some families suffered harm and loss during this time