Is Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua still happening? As of December 12, the fight is officially on for December 19 at the Kaseya Center in Miami, live on Netflix. But former champion Bermane Stiverne claims it’s off due to Paul’s sparring injuries. The evidence? Paul himself admitted his broken nose worsened in camp after work with Frank Sanchez, and he’s still carrying a black eye from Lawrence Okolie. Netflix dropped a new trailer. Sportsbooks haven’t pulled the lines. But in boxing, smoke usually means fire. My prediction: the fight happens, and Joshua stops Paul inside four rounds.
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Jake Paul’s $30 Million Payday Exposes Boxing’s Broken System

The Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua fight is either happening on December 19 in Miami, or it’s falling apart behind closed doors while everyone pretends everything’s fine. As of today, the fight is still officially scheduled for the Kaseya Center, live on Netflix. But former heavyweight champion Bermane Stiverne claims he heard it’s off, alleging Paul suffered an orbital injury during sparring. Paul calls the rumors “ridiculous” — but the photos of his bruised eye and crooked nose tell their own story.

Here’s what we know: the fight is still officially scheduled for the Kaseya Center, live on Netflix. Here’s what’s fueling the rumors: former heavyweight champion Bermane Stiverne claims he heard the fight was off, alleging Paul suffered an orbital injury during sparring with Lawrence Okolie. Photos showing Paul with a bruised eye and what observers claim is a displaced nose haven’t helped quiet the speculation.

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Paul has called the cancellation rumors “ridiculous.” Netflix dropped a new trailer on December 10. Sportsbooks haven’t pulled the betting lines. But in boxing, smoke usually means fire — even when everyone’s denying it.

The Injury Evidence We Can Actually See

That’s the thing about these rumors — they’re not coming from nowhere. Paul appeared on The Pat McAfee Show and openly admitted his broken nose has worsened during camp.

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“It’s getting more crooked, brother,” Paul told McAfee. “I’m not gonna lie: sparring the heavyweights, my nose has moved a couple of millimetres this camp. A guy by the name of Frank Sanchez definitely cracked it a bit.”

Paul also acknowledged still having a black eye from sparring with Okolie. So, the visual evidence Stiverne referenced? Paul basically confirmed it himself before the cancellation rumors even started.

The question isn’t whether Paul took damage in camp — he did. The question is whether that damage is severe enough to derail a fight worth tens of millions of dollars. And in boxing, financial incentives usually win that argument.

Why This Fight Matters — If It Happens

Let’s establish why the stakes are so high. Paul is 12-1 as a pro boxer, with wins over former middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr and heavyweight legend Mike Tyson — though Tyson was 58 when Paul outpointed him in November 2024. The influencer, now 28, faces an altogether different test against Joshua, 36.

Come on — whatever you think of Joshua’s recent form, the man has legitimate heavyweight credentials. He held world titles. He knocked out Wladimir Klitschko. He sold out Wembley Stadium. None of Paul’s previous opponents could claim anything close to that resume.

The bout is scheduled as a professional heavyweight contest for eight three-minute rounds. Knockouts are allowed, with each man wearing standard 10oz gloves. Joshua will be limited to 245lb on fight day.

For Paul, this represents the first genuine test of his boxing career. After years of carefully curated opposition — opponents with a combined .203 winning percentage, a 58-year-old Tyson — he’s finally facing someone who has operated at the highest level of the sport.

What Paul’s Camp Is Saying About Preparation

Despite the injury concerns, Paul’s team is projecting confidence. His coaches claim the sparring has been more demanding than the actual fight will be.

“We brought in world-champion heavyweight sparring partners, guys who are 270lb, 250lb,” Paul said. My coaches tell me the sparring I’m doing right now is gonna be harder than the actual fight night. They don’t lie to me.”

Paul’s prediction? A knockout in the fifth or sixth round after he figures out Joshua’s pacing and style.

“I don’t think he can knock me out, because he’s not gonna be able to line up his shots properly,” Paul said. “I see what it is, and I think it’ll end in the fifth or sixth round.”

Bold call against a former unified champion — assuming we get there.

The Boxing Politics Nobody’s Talking About

Here’s where this gets complicated. If this fight does get cancelled, it won’t just be about Paul’s injuries. It’ll be about the entire promotional ecosystem that made this matchup possible.

Netflix paid massive money for exclusive streaming rights. The Kaseya Center is booked. Advertising has been sold. Undercard fighters have training camps funded around this date. The financial pressure to make this fight happen — regardless of whether both fighters are 100% — is enormous.

What do you expect? Boxing has always prioritized the show over fighter safety when enough money is on the line. That’s not cynicism; that’s decades of documented history.

Joshua is coming off a stoppage loss to Daniel Dubois in September 2024. His chin has looked questionable in recent fights. If Paul is compromised going in, does that make this a more competitive fight or a more dangerous one? The answer depends entirely on who you ask.

My Prediction — Fight Happens, Joshua Wins

Here’s where I’m going to make a call: this fight happens as scheduled, and Joshua stops Paul inside four rounds.

The financial incentives are too massive for a cancellation. Paul’s injuries, while real, aren’t career-threatening. And both camps have too much invested to walk away over a crooked nose and a black eye.

As for the outcome? Paul has shown more commitment to actual boxing training than anyone expected. He’s putting in legitimate work. But there’s a massive difference between outpointing a 58-year-old Tyson and surviving against a former unified heavyweight champion who still carries genuine stopping power.

Joshua’s chin might be suspect, but his power isn’t. Paul has never faced anyone who hits like AJ hits. Sparring partners aren’t trying to end your career. Joshua will be.

Where I Might Be Wrong

Maybe Joshua’s confidence is shot after the Dubois loss. Maybe Paul’s movement and conditioning give him advantages that traditional heavyweights can’t match. Maybe I’m underestimating how much legitimate improvement Paul has made — and maybe those sparring injuries are evidence of growth, not vulnerability.

But I’ve covered this sport long enough to know that levels exist in boxing. December 19 will tell us whether Paul can survive at Joshua’s level — or whether the critics were right all along.

What Happens If It’s Cancelled

If the fight does fall apart, expect the blame game to be brutal. Paul’s critics will claim he was looking for an exit. Joshua’s team will demand their money. Netflix will scramble to fill programming. And boxing will have another black eye to match Paul’s.

The sport’s credibility with casual fans — the audience Paul supposedly brings — takes a hit every time a major event collapses. And for all the criticism of Paul’s opposition selection, at least those fights actually happened.

As we’ve been covering at Ringside Report, boxing’s long-term health depends on delivering what it promises. Right now, it’s promising Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua on December 19. One week out, we’re still waiting to see if that promise holds.

That’s boxing in 2025. The only guarantee is uncertainty.

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