The watchable London fighter has little more than a puncher’s chance on Saturday but at least this contest feels authentic
For all the many gifts of Daniel Dubois, a world heavyweight contender this weekend, and a hugely likable pure sporting talent, it is hard not to find yourself circling back to the press-ups. As first trailed in a fascinating 2019 interview with Donald McRae in these pages, the teenage Dubois would regularly settle down and do between three and five hours of press-ups.
Really: five. No water, no food, just press-ups. It seems useful to put that in a real-world context. If, for example, Dubois were to start doing press-ups in your living room as you left for a half day at school – bus ride, registration, lessons, morning break, sandwich lunch – he would still be there doing press-ups as you opened the front door again.