Derrick James has admitted he was ‘laughing’ at Anthony Joshua’s performance against Oleksandr Usyk in August, when “AJ” fell to a second straight defeat by the Ukrainian.
Joshua lost the unified world heavyweight titles to Usyk via decision in 2021, and the Briton was again beaten by the southpaw on points last summer. For the first fight, Joshua was training under his longtime coach Rob McCracken; for the latter, the 33-year-old worked with Robert Garcia.
Joshua is now preparing to return against Jermaine Franklin on 1 April, and the two-time former champion is training under James in Texas.
“When I saw him in the Usyk [rematch], I thought, ‘What the heck is he doing?’ I’m laughing,” the American said on The DAZN Boxing Show.
When asked whether he thinks he could have coached Joshua to victory in either fight against Usyk, James added: “Yeah, because I train two left-hand fighters.”
“I really took this job because I feel like I can help him,” he continued. “Everybody feels like they can help him, it’s all about strategies.
“The initial things that you work on are things that are not even physical – you can’t even see it. It’s things that are really small, and you build from there. When you work on one thing in particular, everything blossoms behind that.
“[It’s about] spending time together, listening to him talk, and then filling those spaces that need to be filled.”
James, 51, also coaches world champions and compatriots Errol Spence Jr and Jermell Charlo.
Spence Jr has been training alongside Joshua, said James, who added: “They’re good, they talk. Errol asks him a couple of questions. When Errol is hitting the bag, working out, AJ is watching him. It’s like a mutual respect.
“That’s what most guys need to get to the next level or get that thing back that they had before. Even with Errol, he sees [Joshua] doing some things, and they both work off each other.”
Click here to subscribe to The Independent’s Sport YouTube channel for all the latest sports videos.