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Joshua vs Klitschko: Anthony Joshua facing Mount Everest when he meets me, claims Wladimir Klitschko

Wladimir Klitschko
Image: Wladimir Klitschko has claimed he is the boxing equivalent of Mount Everest

Wladimir Klitschko has warned Anthony Joshua he will be facing Mount Everest when they fight at Wembley Stadium on April 29.

The 41-year-old is bidding to win Joshua's IBF heavyweight title and the WBA belt last held by Tyson Fury in front of what is expected to be a post-war record crowd of 90,000 for a boxing event in the United Kingdom.

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Klitschko took to Twitter to mock Joshua's claims on Tuesday that he "needs to be a billionaire", and the former WBO, WBA, IBF and IBO champion has now aimed a further dig in the Brit's direction.

Klitschko represents the biggest challenge in 27-year-old Joshua's career to date, in which he has so far fought 18 times, with 18 knockouts.

By contrast Klitschko's only defeat in 11 years came against Joshua's compatriot Fury, a vastly different fighter. The Ukrainian dismissed suggestions he is in decline, comparing his exceptional longevity with the world's highest peak, and the scale of the task Joshua has to overcome.

"Please excuse me and this may sound arrogant, but for example, a parallel: Mount Everest, the highest mountain in the world," Klitschko said.

Britain's Anthony Joshua (L) poses with Ukraine's Wladimir Klitschko
Image: Anthony Joshua and Klitschko will fight at Wembley on April 29

"It's there. It's been there for a long time and will be there for a long time. You can climb it during a certain period of time: during two weeks in April I believe.

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"You can get to the top and say 'I conquered Everest'. Then you've got to run down because it's going to take you down if you miss the time.

"After you're down, a lot of people died there. Some made it, not many, but some made it back. But Mount Everest is still there. Is Mount Everest defeated? It's still there and it's going to take another life this April.

"It's just the track of history. It was 27 years ago when I started [fighting as a professional] and I am still here. I have guys who have conquered me in certain periods of time out of the 68 fights.

"Four of them have made it out of a 21-year professional career. The rest didn't. Most didn't and the most amazing thing is I'm still here: they're not."

Ukrainian IBF and WBO world champion Wladimir Klitschko (L) and British WBA champion David Haye fight during their heavyweight title boxing match in the no
Image: Klitschko dispatched David Haye in 2011 but lost to Tyson Fury in November 2015

Klitschko also revealed the time he realised Joshua was no ordinary fighter.

In 2014 Joshua visited his training camp to help Klitschko prepare for his defeat of Kubrat Pulev, and the then-champion noticed the extent to which the young fighter tried to learn.

"He impressed me with his attitude," Klitschko added. "He was very raw. I have to say the truth, but he was the Olympic champion, he carried himself well.

"He was in the background and learning. Sometimes you need to be quiet and just watch. He was observing everything.

Anthony Joshua of Great Britain celebrates after defeating Dominic Breazeale of The USA during their IBF World Heavyweight Cham
Image: Joshua holds the IBF world title after beating American Charles Martin in April 2016

"It is unusual. I had Olympic champions in my camp and former world champions. The attitude is totally different. I liked AJ's attitude. He was not trying to impress anybody.

"He backed off, he was sitting on the side, not talking too much. He was watching, learning, asking questions. He was very polite. He was different than others at this stage of experience and achievements in sport."

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