Anthony Joshua delivers savage KO of Francis Ngannou to pave the way for huge all-Brit heavyweight clash vs Tyson Fury

ANTHONY JOSHUA obliterated Francis Ngannou in two sensational rounds to cement his place back in the heavyweight world title race.

The same man who took Tyson Fury the 10-round distance on his boxing debut in October – and dropped the WBC Gypsy King- never laid a glove on our 34-year-old superstar.

GettyAnthony Joshua knocked out Francis Ngannou in round two[/caption]

ReutersNgannou was down three times[/caption]

ReutersNgannou was left out for the count[/caption]

AJ was punch-perfect, calm and measured while also being ruthless and savage.

Ngannou leaped up off the Riyadh canvas twice initially but he needed an age to recover from the final blow that almost took his swede-like head clean off.

Before the anthems and introductions – around 3:30am local time, with the British boxing press starting to worry about catching their Saturday flights home – AJ dropped to his knees in his red corner and prayed.

Then the London 2012 legend prowled around the ring while ‘Predator’ Ngannou stood dead still in his blue portion of the Riyadh arena.

AJ got right on his textbook jab from the off, prodding at the 37-year-old’s giant torso and head.

The Cameroon giant threw lead left hooks – which he told us he knew had caused AJ problems throughout his amateur and pro career.

And then suddenly AJ detonated an excellent right hand that smashed Ngannou down to the canvas and almost out for the count.

The boxing novice seemed finished but he showed huge heart – to match his muscles – to climb back up and survive the remaining 45 seconds, that must have felt like a lifetime.

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And Ngannou was floored again in the second by a violent right-hand-left-hook but bravely beat the count for a second time.

But he bounced up off the canvas too quick and AJ knocked him into a different dimension with a sickening shot that folded his giant leg in half and forced the referee to wave the one-sided demolition off – without even wasting his breath on a count.

For a fight that was all about pitting kings of MMA and boxing against each other, the front row was pure football royalty.

Brit boxers David Haye, Amir Khan, Derek Chisora and Conor Benn earned VIP seats by working on the various broadcast, but they were the subs bench

The best seats in the house – flanking new saudi boxing fantasy fixer Turki Alalshikh – went to both Ronaldo legends of Brazil and Portugal, Jose Mourinho and Francisco Totti.

The Saudi Riyals splashing around to make these short-notice, high-risk-higher-reward superfights is mind-boggling – and it goes beyond bankrolling special guests.

AJ’s walkout – for a former bricklayer who says he only does the razzamatazz for the paying fans – was more Siegfried and Roy than bricks and mortar.

Not bad for a man who said in the build-up: “It’s not how you walk in, it’s how you walk out. 

“That’s my opinion. But at the same time, I do know it’s not for me, it’s for the crowd. I only do it for the crowd. 

“I’ve walked in with no music before. It is a job. You want to get in there and do your job at the end of the day.”

And he clocked off early – without evening doing a six minute shift – smashing the MMA man back into his rightful place.

And he can now wait patiently to see how Fury and Oleksandr Usyk – the man who snatched the WBA, IBF and WBO world titles off of him in two painful points losses – pans out on May 18.

Because Joshua – on the back of this showing and the October annihilation of Otto Wallin – is now back to brilliant and brutal best.

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