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Lennox Lewis feels Wladimir Klitschko would beat Anthony Joshua if he had Manny Steward

Wladimir Klitschko's trainer Emanuel Steward died in 2012
Image: Wladimir Klitschko's trainer Emanuel Steward died in 2012

Lennox Lewis believes Wladimir Klitschko would beat Anthony Joshua if his trainer Manny Steward was still alive.

Lewis is also convinced the 40-year-old would not have lost to Tyson Fury with Steward in his corner, and that Klitschko's biggest challenge in preparing for his April 29 Sky Sports Box Office fight with Joshua comes in shifting his focus from Fury.

Steward was widely considered the greatest trainer in boxing history at the point of his death, from complications following surgery for the stomach condition diverticulosis, at the age of 68 in October 2012.

In addition to overseeing the finest years of the careers of greats like Lewis and Tommy Hearns, he is also credited with rebuilding Klitschko's in 2004 after he was knocked out twice in 13 months.

Steward was influential in the appointment of fellow American Johnathon Banks as his successor as Klitschko's trainer, but it was under Banks the Ukrainian unexpectedly lost his first fight in 11 years, to Fury in 2015.

Anthony Joshua and Wladimir Klitschko pose during a press conference at Wembley Stadium
Image: Anthony Joshua and Wladimir Klitschko go head to head at Wembley Stadium on April 29

In April at Wembley Stadium he could be fighting to rescue his career against the highly-promising Joshua, but Lewis' familiarity with Steward's abilities have led him to believe the trainer's presence could have made everything so different.

"If Manny was still here, Klitschko would still be the champion, and he would be a better fighter," Lewis, 51, said. "I would have made him the favourite to beat Joshua if Manny Steward was here.

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"It's a big loss, because he needed Emanuel, and it's really hard to replace Emanuel. In essence he's training himself, and he can't train himself because Manny set out a number of different things you could do in different situations. I know them all. I know he has that experience level.

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Adam Smith previews the fight between Anthony Joshua and Wladimir Klitschko as both boxers get ready to begin their training camps

"Who has more experience (out of Klitschko and the 34-year-old Banks)? Who can tell who what to do? It really depends if Klitschko's listening to Banks. In his last fight when he lost, he wasn't listening, but Banks was telling him the right things.

"It's the respect aspect too; if he has respect for that trainer. The fact he's keeping him around shows me he has respect for him, and he may feel he didn't listen last time, and may listen this time."

Watch Anthony Joshua vs Wladimir Klitschko from Wembley Stadium, live on Sky Sports Box Office on Saturday, April 29.

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