Jake Paul is officially out of the shallow end.
On December 19 at the Kaseya Center, Paul steps into the ring against Anthony Joshua, a two-time heavyweight champion with 28 career wins and 25 knockouts. The fight is set for 8 p.m. ET and represents the clearest line yet between Paul’s carefully built boxing résumé and the sport’s elite.
Jake Paul was not taking this face off with Anthony Joshua serious 😭 pic.twitter.com/zAugLBcdfR
— Happy Punch (@HappyPunch) December 18, 2025
Paul, 28, enters at 11–1, with victories over several former MMA fighters and a decision win over Tommy Fury — still the most credible name on his record. Joshua, now 36, brings real championship experience, size, and power that Paul has never faced. Oddsmakers reflect that gap, listing Joshua as a heavy favorite.
The buildup has been louder than expected.
Joshua, typically measured in public, escalated things by saying he would “kill” Paul if necessary inside the ring — a remark that drew attention but stopped short of changing the reality of the matchup. Paul fired back by saying he wants Joshua at full strength, framing the fight as a legitimate test rather than a novelty.
There has also been skepticism around the legitimacy of the bout. Deontay Wilder suggested the fight could be scripted, a claim Paul dismissed outright. At the press conference, Paul leaned into his usual showmanship, referencing “Boston Tea Party 2.0,” a comment that appeared to confuse Joshua more than provoke him.
Jake Paul said he’s sending Deontay Wilder a lawsuit for claiming the Anthony Joshua fight is scripted 😬
“Deontay Wilder’s been hit a lot by Tyson Fury so he’s clearly not the smartest guy.” pic.twitter.com/aDjrQdiuGn
— Happy Punch (@HappyPunch) December 17, 2025
Jake Paul had Anthony Joshua so confused 🤣
“What’s a Boston tea party?” pic.twitter.com/Sqjzb4qFxi
— Happy Punch (@HappyPunch) December 18, 2025
Strip away the noise, and the stakes are simple.
For Paul, this is the moment his boxing experiment either gains credibility or hits a hard ceiling. Facing a full-sized heavyweight with championship pedigree removes any remaining safety net. For Joshua, the risk is reputational. A dominant win is expected. Anything less invites criticism.
This fight isn’t about belts or rankings. It’s about whether crossover boxing can continue pushing upward — and whether established champions can shut the door when it matters.


