Francis Ngannou states that he was ‘deceived’ into arriving at the venue for his fight against Anthony Joshua way ahead of schedule, believing the timing affected his final preparations for the start of the fight.
In only his second professional boxing match, the former UFC heavyweight champion faced two-time world champion Joshua in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia earlier this month.
While he took Tyson Fury the distance last October, Ngannou was defeated by Joshua, who floored him with a powerful shot in the opening round.
The Cameroonian was knocked down two more times in the second round with the fight stopped after the third explosive shot from Joshua.
The main event did not start until around 12am at night – 3am local time – with Ngannou explaining he had been instructed to arrive at the Kingdom Arena at a certain time while Joshua arrived much later.
The MMA star revealed that the long wait caused him to be ‘falling asleep’ backstage as he waited to make his ringwalk.
‘I remember being in the locker [room] trying to warm up, and bro, it wasn’t going well. I was falling asleep. I’m sweating, but I was falling asleep,’ he told Instagram live.
‘But I’m sure that’s how some people that I have fought and have beaten have been before .. no blame on anybody, the blame here is all on me.
‘It is the game unfortunately. We all knew it [the knockout] could happen. I wasn’t seeing it happen like that, but I always knew it could happen. At least, I was always prepared for that.’
Ngannou also explained to the MMA Hour the timing of his arrival and the wait until the opening bell was ‘a trick to get you tired’, something he feel may have affected his performance.
‘Listen, I think we both fight at 3am,” Ngannou told The MMA Hour. “It’s not like I fought at 3am and he fought at like midnight or something. We both fought at 3am.
‘What I think, something that’s happened is that they get me to the arena very early. Like my pickup time was 10.30pm to go to the arena. And then when we get to the arena, they tell us that we are scheduled around 1.45am.
‘They come to the locker room around 1 and Joshua [was just arriving around 1]. I’m like, “OK, we are fighting at the same time, how come I have a pickup time?” We received a schedule, an email, and then for some reason I was there at least one hour before.
‘But for the fight, at least two hours beforehand. They do this kind of trick to get you tired. I was like cool. I didn’t know how it was, how important that was, until the fight day that I have to get there two hours before.’