Fury beats Wilder in thrilling Vegas fighton October 10, 2021 at 5:33 am

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Tyson Fury delivers 11th-round stoppage to beat Deontay Wilder and retain his WBC heavyweight title in a thrilling trilogy fight in Las Vegas.

Fury v Wilder

Twenty months since Fury dethroned the American, the 33-year-old had to show all his resolve and resilience to extend his undefeated professional record to 32 fights after twice being floored in the fourth round.

Fury sent his opponent sprawling in an explosive third, only to see Wilder recover and the Briton found himself on the end of the Bronze Bomber’s huge right hand twice in quick succession.

Wilder was hanging on by the end of the seventh but was still in a gruelling fight come the 10th, when Fury knocked him down once more, before delivering the final blow in the 11th to bring this particular chapter of heavyweight boxing to a close.

“I was down a couple of times, I was hurt, Wilder is a strong puncher,” said Fury.

“It was a great fight. I will not make any excuses, Wilder is a top fighter, he gave me a run for my money. I always say I am the best fighter in the world and he is the second best.

“Don’t ever doubt me. When the chips are down I can always deliver.”

Tyson Fury

Fury shows he is never beaten

This might not have been the fight Fury wanted but, after a controversial draw in their first meeting in 2018 and seventh-round stoppage from Fury last time out, it again delivered the blockbuster battle the Las Vegas crowd was craving.

Tensions had been simmering throughout fight week and only continued to bubble as Wilder’s delayed entrance left the arena waiting, before the lights finally went down and the American, who listed his elaborate and heavy ring-walk outfit as one of the excuses for his loss to Fury last year, emerged in a more understated fur-lined gown.

But what’s a few minutes when this classic tussle was more than a year in the making?

Fury, dressed as a Roman centurion, followed to a backdrop of AC/DC as both fighters stepped inside the ropes for the first time since their explosive meeting at the MGM Grand in February 2020.

That was pre-pandemic and the Morecambe-based boxer was buoyed by the thousands of UK fans who had flooded to Las Vegas to support their charge, but travel restrictions meant there was never going to be the boisterous following for the British hopeful this time.

But the local support could not help but be wowed by Fury once more as he again proved that, despite finding himself on the canvas, you can never write this man off.

Wilder came out looking to dictate from the opening bell with a series of jabs to the body as Fury took his time to size up a remodelled opponent, one new trainer Malik Scott says has more in his tool box than previously shown.

Wilder’s new regime came amid question marks around Fury’s own preparation – the original summer fight date was scrapped when he contracted Covid-19 and quickly rescheduled for October and Fury then had to rush home to the UK to be with wife Paris for the birth of their sixth child, Athena.

The American had also closed the gap in terms of weight, and despite Fury coming in 39lbs more than his opponent both were the heaviest of their professional careers at 19st 11lbs to Wilder’s 17st.

But it was Fury who then began to dominate after Wilder’s brisk opening exchange and a huge left-right combination sent the Alabaman to the ground.

The 35-year-old survived the count and, rejuvenated by the bell, felled Fury with a mammoth right of his own and followed with another to send the champion tumbling once more in the same round as the anticipation of an upset grew.

Fury, though, rose from there on and a determined Wilder was hanging on for several rounds before the champion finally landed a right that ended the fight after 11 enthralling rounds.

Tyson Fury v Deontay Wilder

‘I am the greatest heavyweight champion of my era’

Fury has passed every challenge thrown his way but to become the first undisputed heavyweight world champion since Lennox Lewis in 2000 he will need to take the titles held by Oleksandr Usyk.

The Ukrainian looks set to face Anthony Joshua in a rematch first to see if the Briton can win back his WBF, IBF and WBO crowns, but in Fury’s mind there is no doubt as to who is the greatest heavyweight of this enticing era.

“I have proved time and again that I can never be written off,” he added. “I didn’t have my best performance but I pulled it out of the bag when it needed to be done.

“He did keep getting up but it was that final right hand to the side of the head that finished him.

“I wasn’t hurt. You get hit, you wake up on the floor. I got up and was very conscious the whole time. I was one punch away from knocking him out in the whole fight.

“I am the greatest heavyweight champion of my era, without a doubt. Number one. If you play with fire long enough you will get burned.”

A tale of five knock downs…

Tyson Fury knocks down Deontay Wilder
Deontay Wilder knocks down Tyson Fury
Deontay Wilder knocks down Tyson Fury
Tyson Fury knocks down Deontay Wilder for a second time
Tyson Fury knocks out Deontay Wilder
- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

Rangers play national anthem before Napoli game; no silence in Poland for Celticon September 14, 2022 at 7:01 pm

Rangers play the national anthem and hold a minute's silence before their Champions League tie with Napoli to mark the death of Queen Elizabeth.Rangers...

Australia v England: Eddie Jones says rugby needs to find a ‘better balance’on July 15, 2022 at 9:32 am

England coach Eddie Jones has "had enough" of stop-start rugby and says the sport needs "a better balance".England coach Eddie Jones has "had enough"...

Southampton: Talks with former Leeds United manager Jesse Marsch break downon February 15, 2023 at 3:07 pm

Southampton's talks with former Leeds United manager Jesse Marsch break down over the club's contract proposal.Southampton's talks with former Leeds United manager Jesse Marsch...

Evergrande: Crisis-hit Chinese property giant ordered to liquidateon January 29, 2024 at 4:00 am

The Hong Kong order may matter little in the mainland, where most of the property giant's assets are held.Image source, Getty ImagesBy Mariko OiBusiness...

El Shafee Elsheikh: Guilty verdict for Islamic State ‘Beatle’ jihadiston April 14, 2022 at 5:41 pm

El Shafee Elsheikh is the highest profile IS fighter - and lone 'Beatle' - to stand trial in the US.Image source, Bill HennessyA US...