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Andy Ruiz balloons to 283 pounds for rematch; Anthony Joshua slims to 237

One day after the trainer for Andy Ruiz Jr. said his fighter would again be 268 pounds for his defense against Anthony Joshua, the unified heavyweight titleholder was nowhere close at Friday's weigh-in -- tipping the scales at a staggering 283.7 pounds.

No heavyweight has ever entered a title defense heavier except for 7-footer Nikolay Valuev, who was at least 310.75 pounds for each of the defenses he made over two title reigns in the 2000s.

Granted he was wearing a shirt and sombrero on the scale, but it was the heaviest that Ruiz (33-1, 22 KOs), 30, of Imperial, California, has weighed in at during his 10-year career since he was in the mid-290s for his first two professional fights.

"They made us wait until 4:30, almost 5 p.m. here. I already had ate breakfast, lunch and dinner. I had on a sombrero and all my clothes," Ruiz said after the weigh-in, which took place outdoors at the fight hotel in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, a little more than 24 hours before he and Joshua meet in an immediate rematch in one of the year's biggest fights. "A lot of people are saying that I came overweight or this and that. We had to wait so long. I probably put on like 10 pounds just eating and drinking normally today."

Ruiz, who is generously listed at 6-foot-2, is the underdog for Saturday's fight. He became the first fighter of Mexican descent to win a heavyweight world title when he knocked out Joshua in the seventh round to take his three world title belts in a massive upset June 1 in New York.

"We were lighter during camp, but then I thought being the same weight or heavier would be an advantage," Ruiz said. "We did so many 12 rounds of sparring, so the conditioning is still there."

Meanwhile, the 6-6 Joshua (22-1, 21 KOs) weighed in at a rock-solid 237.8 pounds. The 30-year-old from England, who is always in fine condition, has trimmed down from the first fight (247.75) but was still ripped.

It is the lightest Joshua has weighed since he was 236.5 for a fight in 2014.

"It could be good; it could be bad," Ruiz said of Joshua's weight. "He could lose his pop since he's lighter. But since I am bigger now, I can move him around more and hopefully have some extra pop on my punches."

Prior to his upset win in June, few had given Ruiz a chance because of his heavy physique compared with the muscled Joshua. Ruiz weighed 268 pounds for that bout, which he had taken on a month's notice.

Throughout the buildup to the rematch, Ruiz and his trainer, Manny Robles, have been peppered with questions about how heavy Ruiz would be this time around. Robles wanted him to come in weighing in the 250s since they had a three-month training camp to prepare, but he eventually relented and said as late as a media teleconference with American reporters on Thursday that Ruiz likely would be 268 pounds once again.

He was nowhere close.

The rematch will take place on Saturday (DAZN, noon ET, main event at approximately 3:45 p.m. ET) on the outskirts of Riyadh in Diriyah at a temporary 15,000-seat open-air stadium constructed over the past six weeks specifically for the first heavyweight world title fight to take place in the Middle East.

In other fights on the main card:

  • Russian heavyweight Alexander Povetkin (35-2, 24 KOs), a 2004 Olympic gold medalist, weighed 229.3 pounds and 2012 U.S. Olympian Michael Hunter (18-1, 12 KOs), of Las Vegas, weighed 226.8 pounds for their world title elimination bout.

  • British heavyweight contender Dillian Whyte (26-1, 18 KOs), allowed to fight despite a recent failed drug test that has not been fully addressed, was a flabby and career-heavy 271 pounds. His opponent, former world title challenger Mariusz Wach (35-5, 19 KOs), of Poland, weighed 270 pounds.

  • Fast-rising heavyweight prospect Filip Hrgovic (9-0, 7 KOs), a 2016 Olympic bronze medalist from Croatia, weighed 241 pounds, and former two-time world title challenger Eric Molina (27-5, 19 KOs), of Raymondville, Texas, was 248 pounds.