Shortly after the victory, Wilder fist-bumped Joshua while telling him to “let’s do it” before following it up saying “he’s scared” as he walked away.
Sunday’s defeat made it Wilder’s fourth defeat in five fights.
“My approach was victory by any means,” Joshua told DAZN’s Chris Mannix after the fight.
“Tyson ‘Gipsy King’ Fury or Deontay Wilder,” Joshua replied when asked who he would be fight next in a post-fight interview on Saturday.
The former heavyweight champion got his first victory a year after he was consecutively beaten by Tyson Fury.
Other trending topics were the World Teachers’ Day and the one year memorial of the 2020 #EndSARS protests.
An eleventh round KO saw Fury see off Wilder’s challenge and retaining his WBC title.
The costume designers said the red represents war, while the black represents a funeral.
Saturday’s fight was scheduled for July 24 before Fury’s positive COVID-19 test forced a postponement.
A victory for Joshua on Saturday could see him fight against Fury in the near future.
