Joshua (28-4, 25 KOs) comes off a long stretch rebuilding his timing, his balance, and his shot selection after inconsistent fights at the top level. He is still one of the division’s biggest names, but the margin for error at heavyweight stays thin when a man across from you carries full knockout authority.
“It’s no secret I’ve taken some time to consolidate and rebuild to be ready for stepping back into the ring and today is the next step on that journey,” Joshua said. “I’m delighted to have agreed a multi-fight deal starting with July 25th in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia.”
Prenga (20-1, 20 KOs) brings a different kind of problem. No padding on that record. Every win has come inside the distance, and that tells you how he fights. He commits to his shots, looks to close space, and throws with bad intentions the moment he gets within range.
“Anthony Joshua is a great fighter, but he made a terrible miscalculation in picking me as his opponent,” Prenga said. “I will derail their plans and shock the world this July in Saudi Arabia.”
Joshua has dealt with big punchers before. Klitschko checked him and he got up. Ruiz caught him and finished the job. That history sits there. It does not disappear. It shapes how this fight gets approached.
The early rounds will show everything. If Joshua holds his ground, keeps his feet set, and keeps the exchanges on his terms, he should take control. If Prenga gets inside that lead hand and forces trading, the fight changes quickly.
The game plan is clear. Control the distance, stay disciplined, and don’t give a puncher a free look.
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