‘Prince’ Charles Martin on unorthodox home-schooling, Tyson Fury’s poker face and not being frustrated by Anthony Joshua defeat (or is he?)

Watch Martin’s royal ring-walk for the Joshua fight

Martin lights up when talking about new WBC champion Fury, the man who clambered into the ring to congratulate him when he became IBF champion four years ago.

Fury’s backstage antics before destroying Wilder were of interest: “He was dancing around, smiling. He’s a confident dude and a big lad who can fight and talk. That’s great, man.

“You don’t show people your hand even if you are nervous. You have to have a poker face.

“Everybody deals with nerves differently. If you didn’t have nerves you would get knocked out in the first round. It’s impossible not to have nerves – you need to be alerted, to have adrenaline. But you also need a great poker face. When you don’t handle your nerves correctly it can lead to feeling flat or tired in the ring, like you’ve already had 10 fights.”

Martin’s own pre-fight mentality is in stark contrast to Fury’s: “I may appear to be quiet to other people but it’s focus. You think about the fight, play it over in your mind 1000 times.

“Think about how you want the fight to play out. Seeing it before it happens. It is a form of meditation. Meditation isn’t about closing your eyes or going into a dark room.

“As an amateur we had doctors who were part of the camp that taught us breathing techniques – when you know how to do it, it drowns everything out. It helps with everything, with your peace of mind.

“If you’re not having a good day then meditate and visualise yourself conquering your day.”

It is always difficult knowing when or how to mention the Joshua fight when interviewing Martin, whose chilled mood suddenly changes when he is finally asked.

“I don’t want to talk about that anymore,” he snaps, and swears. The memory of his first loss has riled him. You sense he is annoyed by the lasting reputation that he carved for himself on that disastrous night in London.

“That doesn’t count. That was some b******. I don’t care.

“You want to see the real me? You want to see what I will really to do him? Then holla at me.”

It sounds like it still frustrates you, Charles?

He barks back: “No it doesn’t!

“He knocked me down twice but I would knock him out. There wouldn’t be no referee stoppage. KO.

“I know what he’s about.

“He hit me with clean shots and I was laughing at him. I was like: ‘What the hell?’

“The whole crowd was laughing at me. I was embarrassed. I wasn’t hurt at all.”

His manager Mike Borao chimed in: “We are all in limbo. Joshua may take a bigger fight [against Fury]. If the title is vacated then Charles would fight Pulev for it. Or if Pulev gets injured then Charles is next in line because the mandatory would still be due. There’s a chance, not a huge one, that Charles could fight for the IBF title.”

Would Martin come back to London?

“I don’t want to do that,” Martin replied. “Joshua can meet us on some different ground, know what I mean? He got destroyed when he came out of his place.

“Praise him all you want but as soon as he left his comfort zone? He got messed up.

“He can’t weather a storm. He just drops.

“He hasn’t proved himself. He wanted to get all the American fans, be the next Mike Tyson, but it didn’t happen.”

Martin was surprised Joshua lost his US debut to Andy Ruiz Jr: “I didn’t expect it but I saw something. He didn’t look like the guy I saw in the UK walking around with his chest out. He looked susceptible. He looked vulnerable. He didn’t have that flicker in his eye. He was just going through the motions, his confidence was deflated for some reason. Who knows why.

“But boxers know facial expressions. And he didn’t look confident at all.”

Martin watched closely as his old rival reclaimed the IBF, WBA and WBO titles but saw a different Joshua inside the ring: “I ain’t taking nothin’ from him but, since you asked, I’ll tell you – I think he’s scared. He’s scared. He’s scared to get hit. He don’t like it. He ain’t comfortable with it. When somebody punches back, he ain’t comfortable.”

Why should anybody believe that a Joshua vs Martin rematch would be different from the first one?

“If you believed that Joshua could [recover], then you should believe that I can. We’re in the same boat.”

Sourse: skysports.com

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