Watch Ruiz vs Joshua Boxing Fight online free live streaming 2019 high quality(HD) broadcast on Saturday,December 07 ,Watch Boxing Fight free live stream online Fight on any device .You can follow to Watch Ruiz vs Joshua Boxing free live streaming from here details below.
This Saturday on DAZN from Saudi Arabia, Andy Ruiz Jr and Anthony Joshua hook it up again, six months after their first stunner of a bout that set the boxing and sports world ablaze.
Let’s take a look at the matchup, which certainly feels a lot different this time around.
What’s at stake?
Ruiz is defending the WBA, IBF, and WBO titles that he won from Joshua on June 1 in New York. More than that, this is just plain a huge fight, will be one of the biggest of the year. This is can’t-miss stuff.
How did Andy Ruiz Jr get here?
Andy Ruiz Jr was a good amateur boxer in Mexico with a reported 105-5 record, but he never quite broke through on the international level, with notable losses to the likes of Michael Hunter, Zhang Zhilei, Robert Alfonso, and Oscar Rivas. He went pro in 2009 at the age of 19, weighing in at 297½ pounds. 11 months later, he’d gotten himself down to 250 for his third pro bout, but a month after that he was back
Weight has been a common theme for Ruiz’s career and those who have tried to judge his upside. And let’s be completely honest: Andy Ruiz is fat. He’s not boxing writer fat, but he’s fat. It is what it is. And it has just never made a real difference in his career, other than how he’s been treated promotionally, at least until now.
Ruiz was with Top Rank for the bulk of his pro career, and there was constantly talk that he “needed” to lose weight, that he “needed” to look better. He never quite got the push that he might have if he were muscular and lean. In 2013, he beat Joe Hanks, then an unbeaten prospect who definitely looked the part, stopping Hanks in four. But he kept floating under the radar. It was clear he had some skills, but he wasn’t really being pushed much by his opposition, either.
In Dec. 2016, Top Rank sent Ruiz to Auckland, New Zealand, to fight Joseph Parker for the vacant WBO title. Parker eked out a majority decision in a very competitive fight, one Ruiz might well have won on American soil. And then he didn’t fight for 15 months. When he returned, he beat journeymen Devin Vargas and Kevin Johnson in 2018, then left Top Rank for PBC.
A win over veteran Alexander Dimitrenko in April of this year showed Ruiz looking fiery and determined. Prior to that bout, it was reported that Jarrell Miller had lost his June 1 date with Anthony Joshua. Ruiz said if he came through the Dimitrenko fight with no injuries or anything, he’d be happy to face AJ. It was a guy shooting his shot, unlikely as it seemed.
After a lot of negotiations and rumors, Ruiz did land the fight with Joshua. Expected to get trounced by most everyone, Ruiz found himself on the canvas in round three, and it looked like everything was going as imagined. Then he roared back, dropping Joshua two times that round and twice more in the seventh, where referee Michael Griffin stepped in and stopped the fight.
It was, without question, the Upset of the Year. It was probably the biggest upset in heavyweight boxing since Douglas over Tyson. It became the boxing story of the year. A fight with little real buzz going in became a monstrous mainstream happening.
Now Andy Ruiz is fighting from a totally different perspective. He’s got the WBA, IBF, and WBO titles. He’s the defending champion on Saturday in Saudi Arabia. There are at least some expectations of him this time around.
This Saturday on DAZN from Saudi Arabia, Andy Ruiz Jr and Anthony Joshua hook it up again, six months after their first stunner of a bout that set the boxing and sports world ablaze.
Let’s take a look at the matchup, which certainly feels a lot different this time around.
What’s at stake?
Ruiz is defending the WBA, IBF, and WBO titles that he won from Joshua on June 1 in New York. More than that, this is just plain a huge fight, will be one of the biggest of the year. This is can’t-miss stuff.
How did Andy Ruiz Jr get here?
Andy Ruiz Jr was a good amateur boxer in Mexico with a reported 105-5 record, but he never quite broke through on the international level, with notable losses to the likes of Michael Hunter, Zhang Zhilei, Robert Alfonso, and Oscar Rivas. He went pro in 2009 at the age of 19, weighing in at 297½ pounds. 11 months later, he’d gotten himself down to 250 for his third pro bout, but a month after that he was back
Weight has been a common theme for Ruiz’s career and those who have tried to judge his upside. And let’s be completely honest: Andy Ruiz is fat. He’s not boxing writer fat, but he’s fat. It is what it is. And it has just never made a real difference in his career, other than how he’s been treated promotionally, at least until now.
Ruiz was with Top Rank for the bulk of his pro career, and there was constantly talk that he “needed” to lose weight, that he “needed” to look better. He never quite got the push that he might have if he were muscular and lean. In 2013, he beat Joe Hanks, then an unbeaten prospect who definitely looked the part, stopping Hanks in four. But he kept floating under the radar. It was clear he had some skills, but he wasn’t really being pushed much by his opposition, either.
In Dec. 2016, Top Rank sent Ruiz to Auckland, New Zealand, to fight Joseph Parker for the vacant WBO title. Parker eked out a majority decision in a very competitive fight, one Ruiz might well have won on American soil. And then he didn’t fight for 15 months. When he returned, he beat journeymen Devin Vargas and Kevin Johnson in 2018, then left Top Rank for PBC.
A win over veteran Alexander Dimitrenko in April of this year showed Ruiz looking fiery and determined. Prior to that bout, it was reported that Jarrell Miller had lost his June 1 date with Anthony Joshua. Ruiz said if he came through the Dimitrenko fight with no injuries or anything, he’d be happy to face AJ. It was a guy shooting his shot, unlikely as it seemed.
After a lot of negotiations and rumors, Ruiz did land the fight with Joshua. Expected to get trounced by most everyone, Ruiz found himself on the canvas in round three, and it looked like everything was going as imagined. Then he roared back, dropping Joshua two times that round and twice more in the seventh, where referee Michael Griffin stepped in and stopped the fight.
It was, without question, the Upset of the Year. It was probably the biggest upset in heavyweight boxing since Douglas over Tyson. It became the boxing story of the year. A fight with little real buzz going in became a monstrous mainstream happening.
Now Andy Ruiz is fighting from a totally different perspective. He’s got the WBA, IBF, and WBO titles. He’s the defending champion on Saturday in Saudi Arabia. There are at least some expectations of him this time around.

