Promoter Frank Warren views Saturday’s heavyweight clash between Joe Joyce and warhorse Derek Chisora as a defining moment for them. The loser’s career could end, whereas the winner moves on to bigger and better things.

Both of these guys are up there in age, and it’s difficult to see either of them progressing, no how good the winner of this contest is. The 17-year-old professional Chisora has lost many fights recently and likely would have retired a long time ago if he weren’t being paid so well for his UK fights.

Chisora: The Entertainer Who Can’t Win

If Derek were fighting in the U.S., he wouldn’t make it onto a card, even in the bottom spot. The standards are too high.

Chisora claims it won’t be the end if he loses to Joyce, but will he still be given headliner gigs after this? I think not. What promoter on earth would want to stick Chisora in a headliner spot if he gets blown out of the water on Saturday by Joyce?

Joyce (16-2, 15 KOs) believes he will finish the 40-year-old Chisora (34-13, 23 KOs) when they meet for their 12-round contest at the O2 Arena in London.

“It’s a tough fight. It’s a defining moment for both of them. They’re in a fight where one of them is going to move forward, and the other one is not going to be in such a good place,” said promoter Frank Warren to BoxNation about this Saturday’s clash between Derek Chisora and Joe Joyce at the O2 Arena.

A Bleak Future for the Loser

Chisora and Joyce are two of a kind. Joyce, 38, isn’t as bad off as Chisora, but he’s very close. He’s looked 100% awful in his last three fights since 2023, losing two and looking very slow.

If Joyce is victorious, he’ll still have major problems if he’s put in with a decent heavyweight with power because his hand speed has deteriorated in the last year, and his punch resistance has disappeared. Zhilei Zhang destroyed Joyce in consecutive fights in 2023, and even Kash Ali had him looking shaky in spots last March.

“He comes to fight. I said a couple of years ago that he should retire,” Warren said about Chisora. “He wants to prove me wrong, and we’ll see if he does. He really feels he’s got a lot of juice in the game, and he feels he has what it takes to beat Joe.”

Chisora describes himself as an “entertainer”, and he’s certainly that. That’s not enough to bring in the fans if he’s losing 90% of the time, and sounding like he’s not all there outside of the ring.

His chances of him beating Joyce as slim on Saturday unless The Juggernaut can no longer take a shot without nosediving, which is highly possible. I don’t see it happening, but that’s the one interesting thing about the Joyce-Chisora fight. Does Joyce still have a chin?

“Up until those two fights against Zhang, he was the guy that everybody wanted to avoid,” said Warren about Joyce. “He was the guy who stopped for the first time Joe Parker, who has come back in a sensational way. He’s gotten himself back in the game and Joe will be trying to do the same.”

The way that Joyce was obliterated by Zhang in those two fights in 2023 took away any belief fans and the media had him challenging for a world title. Joyce looked washed up in those two fights, and that was confirmed in his last contest against British domestic-level heavyweight Kash Ali.

This was a guy that any fighter in the division worth their salt would blast to the moon in one or two rounds, but Joyce labored before stopping him in the tenth. He looked purely awful in that fight. Hence, Joyce finds himself fighting Chisora in a fight where both fighter’s careers are on the line. It’s clearly the last chance saloon for these two, where the loser will be sent to skidrow and will need to scrap for a living in a tent city on the sidewalks.

“For both of them, it’s an important fight and landmark to where they’re going to wind up. It’s where their career is. Is it going to end at the top echelon or not? One of them, that’s going to be the case,” said Warren.

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