Oleksandr Usyk becomes undisputed champ in epic battle with Tyson Fury. Rematch in October?

Oleksandr Usyk became the first undisputed heavyweight champion in an epic battle with Tyson Fury on Saturday. Is a rematch on tap?

Tyson Fury was bigger. Oleksandr Usyk was better. And, as the latter implied beforehand, skill generally trumps everything else.

Usyk overcame some shaky early rounds to score a dramatic knockdown in Round 9 and go on to defeat Fury by a split decision Saturday at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, becoming the first undisputed heavyweight champion in a quarter century

One judge scored it for Fury, 114-113, but the other two had Usyk winning, 115-112 and 114-113, in a rousing fight that couldn’t have been much closer.

Afterward, Fury, who insisted he deserved the nod, made it clear that he plans to exercise a rematch clause in the fighters’ contract. And Usyk, although clearly exhausted, confirmed that he has no objections to a second fight.

“It’s a great time, it’s a great day,” Usyk said when asked for his reaction after he had his hand raised.

Lennox Lewis became the last undisputed heavyweight champion when he outpointed Evander Holyfield in 1999, after which the titles became perpetually splintered. That’s one reason the fight on Saturday so important, even historic.

And Fury and Usyk certainly earned the right to fight for boxing’s biggest honor, as both had never lost and enjoyed success at the highest level of the sport.

Their performances lived up to the moment.

Fury (34-1-1, 24 KOs) started to take control of the fight around the third round, when he found a grove fighting behind his jab and landing power punches — many to the body — with surprising consistency given Usyk’s ability.

The Ukrainian didn’t get much down from that time to around the sixth round but he never stopped coming forward, evidence of a fighting spirit that would soon pay dividends.

Usyk (22-0, 14 KOs) had a strong Round 8 but then unloaded on Fury the following round, when he landed a left that buckled Fury’s knees and hurt him badly. Usyk, almost 40 pounds lighter than Fury, followed with a brutal barrage that had Fury staggering around the ring.

That might’ve been justification for referee Mark Nelson to stop the fight at any moment. Instead, Nelson gave Usyk a knockdown in the final seconds of the round, which kept Fury in the fight.

Fury, known for his recuperative powers, somehow regained his bearings in Round 10 but by that time Usyk was rolling, outworking Fury and landing more clean punches to earn the close decision.

The knockdown appears to have been the difference in the scoring. Had Fury lost the round 10-9 instead of 10-8, the two 114-113 scores would’ve been 114-114, meaning the fight would’ve ended in a draw.

Fury thought he did enough to win in spite of the knockdown.

“I believe I wont that fight, Alexander,” he said directly to his opponent afterward. “I believe you won a few of [the rounds] but I won the majority of them. What can you do? It was one of those [bad] decisions in boxing.

“We both put on a good fight, the best we could do. His county at war. So people were siding with the country at war. But make no mistake, I won that fight, in my opinion And I’ll be back. I have a rematch clause.”

That fact was a significant theme in the post-fight interviews.

Frank Warren, Fury’s co-promoter, confirmed that the contact contained a rematch clause. And Fury reiterated his desire to do it again when asked if he wants an immediate rematch.

“Yeah for sure,” he said. “We’ll go back, have a little rest up, spend time with our families, and we’ll get it back in October. Like I said, I think I won the fight.

“But I’m not going to cry and make excuses. It was a good fight.”

Usyk was then asked whether he’s willing to meet Fury again in the fall.

“Yes, of course,” he said. “If he wants it, I’m ready for a rematch.”

It sounds as if nothing is settled at the top of the heavyweight division.

Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: LIVE round-by-round updates, results, full coverage

Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: LIVE round-by-round updates, results, full coverage.

Oleksandr Usyk defeated Tyson Fury by a split decision to win the undisputed heavyweight championship Saturday at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

One judge had Fury winning, 114-113, but the other two scored it for Usyk, 115-112 and 114-113.

The difference was a standing knockdown, the result of a huge left hand and follow-up flurry, in Round 9 which was a 10-8 round for Usyk.

You can read a full report here.

ROUND 12

Good, competitive final round, as both men had good moments. Usyk probably took the round, though. He dictated the pace, was the busier fighter and landed more eye-catching punches. That’s what he did in the second half of the fight, which could be enough to have his hand raised.

ROUND 11

Competitive round but Usyk is landing the cleaner shots. He might’ve won the fight in the past several rounds. One more round.

ROUND 10

Usyk probably won the round but he also might’ve blown a big opportunity by not attacking Fury aggressively after hurting him so badly in the previous round. Fury seems to have recovered and was actually competitive in that round.

ROUND 9

Wow! Huge left from Usyk in the final seconds hurt Fury badly. And he followed with a barrage of follow-up power shots, which resulted in a knockdown while Fury was still on his feet. It’s unbelievable that Fury never actually went down.

ROUND 8

Usyk is definitely back in the fight. He outworked Fury that round, including the biggest punches of the round. Now Fury seems to be a little off kilter, which is remarkable given his domination of the previous rounds. Usyk is special.

ROUND 7

Fury took his foot off the gas that round, which opened the door for Usyk to get some good work done. The Ukrainian is still attacking. And he landed a few eye-catching shots, which got Fury’s attention and gave Usyk some confidence. Fury landed a few hard shots himself.

ROUND 6

All Fury, who is in complete control. He is landing almost at will against a brilliant boxer, connecting on a number of bombs to both the head and body. Usyk can’t figure out how to get out of the way or land his own shots. Usyk looks lost.

ROUND 5

Big round for Fury. He absolutely pounded Usyk to the body, which seemed to take something out of him. He wasn’t quite as aggressive, wasn’t quite as confident. Fury is working beautiful behind his jab. Has he taken control of the fight?

ROUND 4

Good back and forth action, as both men are having their good moments. However, it seems clear that Fury is landing the hardest punches. He certainly got Usyk’s attention a few times. Fury is clowning a lot but he’s also doing good work.

ROUND 3

Another competitive round. Usyk continues to take the fight to Fury but he really isn’t getting much done. Meanwhile, Fury continues to jab and he landed the biggest shot of the round, a right hand in the final 30 seconds. Is Fury finding his groove?

ROUND 2

Good, competitive round. Usyk started well, landing a hard left seconds after the bell. And he was the aggressor most of the round. Fury continued to jab, however/ And he landed some accurate power shots in the final minute.

ROUND 1

The opening round was a jab fest, with both men targeting mostly the body. Neither man threw many power shots, although Usyk landing a wide left. That was essentially a feel-out round.

***

Jai Opetaia of Australia survived a late rally to defeat Mairis Briedis by a one-sided decision and reclaim his IBF cruiserweight title in a rematch of their June 2022 fight, which Opetaia won by decision to win his belt originally.

The official scores were 117-111, 116-112 and 116-112.

For nine-plus rounds Opetaia (25-0, 19 KOs) methodically outboxed and outworked his rival, who hadn’t fought since their first meeting. Briedis (28-3, 20 KOs) was resilient — taking everything the champ threw at him — but he couldn’t keep pace with his talented 28-year-old opponent and took many punishing blows.

However, the tide turned in Round 10 .Briedis stunned Opetaia with a perfect right uppercut in that frame and continued to take the fight to Opetaia in the final two words, breaking Opetaia’s nose and landing a number of eye-catching shots.

The problem for Briedis was that he had given away too many rounds to catch Opetaia on the cards.

Opetaia was forced to vacate his title in December when he fought Ellis Zorro instead of Briedis, who was his mandatory challenger at that time.

***

Anthony Cacace of Northern Ireland knocked out Joe Cordina of Wales in the eighth round to take Cordina’s 1BF 130-pound title, the first of the Irishman’s career. The official time of the stoppage was :39.

Cacace (22-1, 8 KOs) pounded Cordina (17-1, 9 KOs) most of the fight. However, the turning point came in Round 3. Cacace rocked Cordina with left hook after referee Bob Williams instructed the boxers to stop fighting, which was a controversial moment. The Irishman connected on another hook moments later and then used a right uppercut followed by a another right to put Cordina down and hurt him.

Cacace dominated after that, landing big shots almost at will. He finally ended matters when he connected on a hard right and followed with a flurry of blows, which convinced Williams to stop the fight.

Cacace, 35, has won seven consecutive fights since Martin Ward outpointd him in 2017.

Cordina was making the third defense of the title he won by stopping Kenichi Ogawa in the second round in June 2022.

***

Agit Kabayel of Germany stopped fellow contender Frank Sanchez of Cuba in the seventh round of a scheduled 12-round heavyweight fight. The official time of the stoppage was 2:33.

Kabayel (25-0, 17 KOs) put Sanchez (24-1, 17 KOs) down twice in the final round, both times the result of body shots.

Sanchez fought with a brace on his right knee.

***

Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk are scheduled to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship on DAZN Pay-Per-View Saturday at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Fury (34-0-1, 24 KOs) owns the WBC belt while Usyk (21-0, 14 KOs) is the IBF, WBA and WBO champ.

Fury on Friday weighed in at 262 pounds, his lightest since he came in at 254½ for his fight against Otto Wallin in 2019. Usyk weighed a career-high 223½.

Also on the card:

  • Jai Opetaia vs. Mairis Breidis, cuiserweights (for vacant IBF title)
  • Joe Cordina vs. Anthony Cacace junior lightweights (for Cordina’s IBF title)
  • Sergey Kovalev vs. Robin Safar, cruiserweights
  • Agit Kabayel vs. Frank Sanchez, heavyweights
  • Mark Chamberlain vs. Joshua Wahab, lightweights

The featured portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT. (main event later in the show).

Boxing Junkie will post round-by-round analysis of the main event and results of the featured bouts, as well as a brief summary, immediately after the fights end. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage – detailed fight stories, analysis and more – will follow on separate posts the night of the card and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

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Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: This fight is ‘something very, very significant’

Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: This fight is “something very, very significant.”

We don’t know whether we’re going to see an entertaining fight when Tyson Fury fights Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (DAZN Pay-Per-View).

We don’t know which Fury will show up, the one who has been dominating over the past decade or the one who fell flat against Francis Ngannou in his most recent bout. And we don’t know whether the skillful Usyk can compensate for his size disadvantage against his 6-foot-9 opponent.

The one thing we DO know? This is big.

An undisputed heavyweight champion will be crowned for the first time – barring unforeseen circumstances since Lennox Lewis defeated fellow Hall of Famer Evander Holyfield in 1999, a quarter century ago. The winner could be considered the best of his era.

And Fury and Usyk certainly have earned the right to fight for boxing’s biggest prize, as neither man has lost a single fight. Usyk’s record is perfect (21-0, 14 KOs). Fury (34-0-1, 24 KOs) has one draw.

Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter and boxing institution, has been around for many big matchups. He knows one when he sees one.

“In boxing, there’s a saying that the most important division is the heavyweight division,” he said at the final news conference Thursday. “When we have the opportunity to have an undisputed heavyweight champion crowned, as we will Saturday night, it is something very, very significant.

“The last fighter to be crowned the undisputed champion is sitting out in the audience. It happened 25 years ago. Lennox Lewis became the undisputed heavyweight champion. Saturday night will be a very, very important night for boxing because not only will we be crowning the undisputed heavyweight champion, but the two participants in the fight have never, ever lost a fight. Now, how rare is that?”

Fury almost lost in his last fight, a split decision over the MMA star-turned-boxer on Oct. 28. He had to get up from a third-round knockdown to have his hand raised, which set up the opportunity against Usyk.

He clearly understands the magnitude of the event. And he made it clear that he’s better prepared for this challenge than the one in October.

“I’m on top of the world, baby!” he said earlier in the week. “Who wouldn’t be enjoying it? I’m in the great Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This is the main event. It is the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world.”

He added on Thursday: “I’m ready. I’ve got nothing to say apart from I’m ready for a good fight. And if it’s tough or easy, either way, I’ll be ready.”

Usyk, a gifted technician from Ukraine, is trying to become undisputed champion in a second division. The 2012 Olympic champion ruled the 200-pound weight class from 2016 to 2019 before moving up to heavyweight, at which he’s 5-0.

He outpointed Anthony Joshua to win three of the four major titles in December 2021 and then defeated Joshua again 11 months later.

He didn’t have much to say at the news conference Thursday but captured the moment with one comment: “Let’s make history.”

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Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: Date, time, how to watch, background

Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk are scheduled to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship on pay-per-view Saturday in Saudi Arabia. TYSON FURY (34-0-1, 24 KOs) VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (21-0, 14 KOs) Date : Saturday, May 18 Time : 12 p.m. ET / 9 …

Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk are scheduled to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship on pay-per-view Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

TYSON FURY (34-0-1, 24 KOs)
VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (21-0, 14 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, May 18
  • Time: 12 p.m. ET / 9 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Kingdom Arena, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
  • TV/Stream: DAZN Pay-Per-View
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • At stake: Usyk’s IBF, WBA, WBO and Fury’s WBC titles
  • Boxing Junkie Pound-for-pound: Usyk No. 3, Fury No. 9
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): *****
  • Also on the card: Jai Opetaia vs. Mairis Breidis, cuiserweights (for vacant IBF title); Joe Cordina vs. Anthony Cacace junior lightweights (for Cordina’s IBF title); Sergey Kovalev vs. Robin Safar, cruiserweights; Agit Kabayel vs. Frank Sanchez, heavyweights; Mark Chamberlain vs. Joshua Wahab, lightweights
  • Background: The time is finally at hand. Talk of a Fury-Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship started the moment Usyk defeated Anthony Joshua the first of two times in September 2021. The fight was originally scheduled for Feb. 17 but it was pushed back after Fury suffered a cut during sparring. Fury is coming off arguably the worst performance of his career, a split decision over Francis Ngannou in the MMA star’s boxing debut. Fury battled back from a knockdown in the third round but was fortunate to have his hand raised. He was thought by many to be ill-prepared for the fight, a mistake he will not have made leading up to the fight on Saturday. The 35-year-old from England seems to be in excellent physical condition. Usyk also didn’t give his best effort in his most recent fight, against Daniel Dubois in August. The 37-year-old former 200-pound champion went down from a body shot that was controversially deemed a low blow in the fifth round, which gave him extra time to recover. He rebounded to stop Dubois in the ninth to retain his titles.
  • Prediction: Fury UD

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Emanuel Navarrete vs. Denys Berinchyk: Date, time, how to watch, background

Emanuel Navarrete vs. Denys Berinchyk: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Emanuel Navarrete and Denys Berinchyk will fight for the vacant WBO 135-pound title Saturday night at Pechanga Arena in San Diego.

EMANUEL NAVARRETE (38-1-1, 31 KOs)
VS.  DENYS BERINCHYK (18-0, 9 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, May 18
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Pechanga Arena, San Diego
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: Vacant WBO title
  • Boxing Junkie Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Navarrete 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Giovani Santillan vs. Brian Norman Jr., welterweights
  • Background: Navarrete is a former 122-pound titleholder who was given the opportunity to fight for the vacant WBO title even though he’s making his debut at the weight and is coming off a majority draw with Robson Conceicao at 130 in November. Navarrete delivered arguably his best performance in his previous fight, a one-sided decision over former champ Oscar Valdez last August. The 29-year-old is a durable boxer whose forte is volume punching. Berinchyk, a 36-year-old Ukrainian, will be fighting for a major title for the first time. The 2012 Olympic silver medalist earned his shot at the belt by easily outpointing Anthony Yigit on the Oleksandr Usyk-Daniel Dubois card last August.
  • Prediction: Navarrete SD

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Watch it: Tyson Fury’s father headbutts member of Oleksandr Usyk’s team

Watch it: Tyson Fury’s father headbutted member of Oleksandr Usyk’s team when he two sides came together on Monday.

 

The blood has already started flowing.

John Fury, the father of Tyson Fury, headbutted a member of Oleksandr Usyk’s team after an exchange of words five days before the heavyweights are set to meet for the undisputed championship Saturday in Saudi Arabia on  DAZN Pay-Per-View.

The clash of heads, with Stanislav Stepchuk, caused on a cut on the elder Fury’s forehead.

He apologized afterward in an interview with Seconds Out.

“Sincere apologies to everybody involved to be honest with you,” Fury said on video. “It’s just the way we are. Emotions and tensions are running high. He was a very disrespectful fella, wasn’t he?

“If you come close in a fighting man’s space, you’re gonna cop for something, aren’t you? People don’t understand we are the real deal as fighters.

“What matters to me is respect for my son and he wasn’t showing any of it. He mentioned my son and that was it, so he had to have it.”

Stepchuk told Seconds Out that he did nothing to deserve being butted.

Fury and Usyk will fight for all four major titles Saturday at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh.

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Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: 5 burning questions (and answers)

Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk: 5 burning questions (and answers) going into their pay-per-view fight Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

Boxing will have an undisputed heavyweight champion on Saturday.

That’s when beltholders Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk will fight for all four major titles at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on DAZN Pay-Per-View.

The fight was scheduled for Feb. 17 but it was pushed back after Fury suffered a cut during sparring. However, the fighters are now ready to roll.

Of course, fans and pundits have many questions going into the most important heavyweight fight in a generation. Here are five of them, complete with answers.

 

Which Fury will show up?

A better version. Fury embarrassed himself and the sport – with some help from Francis Ngannou – the last time we saw him in the ring, on Oct. 28 in Saudi Arabia. What should’ve been an easy victory over an aging MMA star making his boxing debut turned into a near disaster, with Fury hitting the canvas in the third round and having to rally to win a split decision. If that Fury shows up on Saturday, Oleksandr Usyk will school him and become undisputed champion in a walkover. We won’t see that version of “The Gypsy King,” however. Fury evidently was ill-prepared for the Ngannou fight because he expected little resistance from his upstart opponent, who gave a spirited effort. I believe Fury will be as prepared as he can possibly be for the challenge he’ll face in the Middle East, as he has looked remarkably fit in the months leading up to the fight. Of course, we’ll see whether that’s good enough to take down one of the best technicians in the world. But he’ll be ready.

 

Was Usyk’s performance against Daniel Dubois a red flag?

Possibly. Those who believe that Usyk is vulnerable to body shots can point to his unusual fight against Dubois on Aug. 26 as evidence. The champion went down hard from a right to the belt line that referee Luis Pabon erroneously ruled a low blow, which gave Usyk undeserved time to recover and go on to stop Dubois in the ninth round. Of course, Usyk might’ve been able to get to his feet and continue fighting if he had to gotten to his feet within 10 seconds. And the victory is now in the books. A legitimate question arose, however: Are blows to the body the great Ukrainian’s weakness? Will his big, strong, talented opponent emphasize body work in light of what happened in the Dubois fight? If Fury does so and he can land his punches in the right spots, we’ll see whether Usyk is indeed vulnerable to that area.

 

Will the size difference be a significant factor?

Absolutely. A good big man beats a good little man, as the adage goes. And that would seem to apply to this fight. Usyk probably has somewhat better technical skills than Fury but the Englishman isn’t far behind, meaning he’d be competitive if they were the same size. And they’re anything but. Fury is 6-foot-9 and probably will be 260-plus pounds when he steps into the ring on Saturday. Usyk is 6-3 and weighed around 221 for his last three fights, the result of bulking up following his days as the 200-pound champion. He’s about as big as he can get and still have the ability to move effectively, which leaves him at a significant disadvantage. His supporters will point to his victories over Anthony Joshua as evidence that he can handle a big opponent, which makes sense. However, Joshua (6-6, 250-plus) isn’t quite as big as Fury. Plus, the second fight seemed to be more taxing for Usyk physically than the fi. Usyk has a big mountain to climb.

 

How significant is this matchup?

Huge. First, barring unforeseen circumstances, boxing will have its first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis in the early 2000s. Also, the fact they are the two best heavyweights of the post-Klitschko era and unbeaten adds to the importance of the matchup. It’s not Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier I – it’s unlikely that any fight will approach the magnitude of that historic bout – but it doesn’t get bigger than Fury-Usyk by today’s standards. And it seems likely that the fight on Saturday will be only the first installment in what could be a two- or three-part series, perhaps akin to the unforgettable meetings between the undersized Evander Holyfield (another former cruiserweight champ) and Riddick Bowe in 1990s. Yes, this is a significant moment in boxing.

 

Who’s going to win?

Fury. I hesitated to type those four letters. I keep thinking about his miserable performance against Ngannou, who entered their fight with next to no boxing experience and almost won. Observers were justified in asking whether the 35-year-old titleholder had begun to decline after more than 15 years as a professional boxer. Perhaps he has. However, I’m going with my gut here. I hadn’t seen signs of slippage in previous fights. I’m convinced that Fury believed he could beat Ngannou just by showing up, which is no way to approach any fight. I think he’s ready physically and mentally for the challenge he’ll face on Saturday. Usyk, a truly gifted boxer, will give his rival some problems but Fury’s combination of ability, size and superior physical strength will be more than enough for the Mancunian to wear Usyk down and pull away in the later rounds to win a clear decision or score a late knockout. Fury UD.

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Fight Week: Tyson Fury, Oleksandr Usyk will finally fight for undisputed championship

FIGHT WEEK An undisputed heavyweight champion will finally be crowned when Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk meet on pay-per-view Saturday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. TYSON FURY (34-0-1, 24 KOs) VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (21-0, 14 KOs) Either Tyson Fury (left) or …

FIGHT WEEK

An undisputed heavyweight champion will finally be crowned when Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk meet on pay-per-view Saturday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

TYSON FURY (34-0-1, 24 KOs)
VS. OLEKSANDR USYK (21-0, 14 KOs)

Either Tyson Fury (left) or Oleksandr Usyk will be undisputed heavyweight champion on Saturday barring unforeseen circumstances.  Alex Pantling / Getty Images
  • Date: Saturday, May 18
  • Time: 12 p.m. ET / 9 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Kingdom Arena, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
  • TV/Stream: DAZN Pay-Per-View
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • At stake: Usyk’s IBF, WBA, WBO and Fury’s WBC titles
  • Boxing Junkie Pound-for-pound: Usyk No. 3, Fury No. 9
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): *****
  • Also on the card: Jai Opetaia vs. Mairis Breidis, cuiserweights (for vacant IBF title); Joe Cordina vs. Anthony Cacace junior lightweights (for Cordina’s IBF title); Sergey Kovalev vs. Robin Safar, cruiserweights; Agit Kabayel vs. Frank Sanchez, heavyweights; Mark Chamberlain vs. Joshua Wahab, lightweights
  • Background: The time is finally at hand. Talk of a Fury-Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship started the moment Usyk defeated Anthony Joshua the first of two times in September 2021. The fight was originally scheduled for Feb. 17 but it was pushed back after Fury suffered a cut during sparring. Fury is coming off arguably the worst performance of his career, a split decision over Francis Ngannou in the MMA star’s boxing debut. Fury battled back from a knockdown in the third round but was fortunate to have his hand raised. He was thought by many to be ill-prepared for the fight, a mistake he will not have made leading up to the fight on Saturday. The 35-year-old from England seems to be in excellent physical condition. Usyk also didn’t give his best effort in his most recent fight, against Daniel Dubois in August. The 37-year-old former 200-pound champion went down from a body shot that was controversially deemed a low blow in the fifth round, which gave him extra time to recover. He rebounded to stop Dubois in the ninth to retain his titles.
  • Prediction: Fury UD

 

EMANUEL NAVARRETE (38-1-1, 31 KOs)
VS.  DENYS BERINCHYK (18-0, 9 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, May 18
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Pechanga Arena, San Diego
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: Vacant WBO title
  • Boxing Junkie Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Navarrete 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Giovani Santillan vs. Brian Norman Jr., welterweights
  • Background: Navarrete is a former 122-pound titleholder who was given the opportunity to fight the vacant WBO title even though he’s making his debut at the weight and is coming off a majority draw with Robson Conceicao at 130 in November. Navarrete delivered arguably his best performance in his previous fight, a one-sided decision over former champ Oscar Valdez last August. The 29-year-old is a durable boxer whose forte is volume punching. Berinchyk, a 36-year-old Ukrainian, will be fighting for a major title for the first time. The 2012 Olympic silver medalist earned his shot at the belt by easily outpointing Anthony Yigit on the Usyk-Dubois card.
  • Prediction: Navarrete SD

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Weekend Review: Vasiliy Lomachenko reminded us of how special he is

Weekend Review: Vasiliy Lomachenko reminded us of how special he is on Saturday in Australia.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Vasiliy Lomachenko

I don’t know whether Lomachenko can beat 135-pound rivals Shakur Stevenson and Gervonta Davis, two rising young stars. Stevenson mirrors the Ukrainian in terms of pure skill but he’s younger by a decade. And Davis is a more-complete fighter, with both technical ability and one-punch knockout power.

I won’t put anything past Lomachenko, however. He’s still brilliant at 36.

That was obvious on Saturday night in Perth, Australia, where he staged a clinic that embarrassed former champion George Kambosos Jr.. Lomachenko easily outboxed the Aussie for 10-plus rounds, wore him down and finally knocked him out in the 11th to become a world titleholder for the first time in three-plus years.

CompuBox statistics are never definitive but they reflected what happened in the ring on Saturday. Two numbers stand out. Kambosos landed 10.8% of his punches (40 of 371), evidence of Lomachenko’s remarkable defensive ability. And the winner connected on 50% of his power shots (105 of 21), an indication of his precision punching.

And while he isn’t known for his power, his punches were heavy enough to break down and bloody Kambosos after the loser went down from a left to the body.

We should be measured in our praise because of Kambosos’ limitations. He’s a tough, fiery fighter but his skill set is lacking. We saw that in back-to-back-decision losses to Devin Haney. And we saw it again against Lomachenko.

That being said Kambosos, who once defeated the man who toppled Lomachenko — Teofimo Lopez — to become unified 135-pound, was highly ranked. And Lomachenko made him look like an amateur.

Lomachenko admitted going into the fight that he’s beginning to feel his age, particularly in terms of the recovery process. For that reason I hope a faces either Stevenson of Davis in his next fight, when he’ll have a realistic chance of winning.

He certainly deserves it. The two-time Olympic champion has packed a lot into his 21-fight professional career, demonstrating a sublime skill set – perhaps most notably his footwork – against top competition beginning in his first few fights.

Let’s enjoy him while we still can.

 

RABBIT PUNCHES

Kambosos (21-3, 10 KOs) apparently is a one-hit wonder. The 30-year-old from Sydney stunned the boxing world by upsetting a less-than-healthy Lopez by a split decision in 2021 but has struggled since, losing the two fights to Haney, eking out a victory over journeyman Maxi Hughes and then falling well short against Lomachenko. His plight demonstrates that grit can take a fighter only so far. … Everyone makes mistakes but ring announcer Dan Hennessey made a doozie in Perth, initially getting the result wrong after the Cherneka Johnson-Nina Hughes 118-pound title fight. Hennessey first announced that Hughes had won a decision to retain her title only to realize he got it wrong. He then called the fighters back to the center of the ring and declared that Johnson was the winner and the new champion, leaving Hughes feeling cheated and onlookers shaking their heads. The guy had one job to do and he failed miserably. ESPN analyst Tim Bradley spoke for everyone watching when he said, “Get this dude up out of here.”

[lawrence-related id=41828]

Vasiliy Lomachenko outclasses, stops George Kambosos Jr. in 11 to become beltholder again

Vasiliy Lomachenko outclassed George Kambosos Jr. before stopping him in the 11th round to become a beltholder again.

Vasiliy Lomachenko still has it at 36.

The Ukrainian boxing wizard, who hadn’t worn a major belt for more than three years, capped a dominating performance by stopping George Kambosos Jr. in the 11th round to capture the vacant IBF 135-pound title Saturday night (U.S. time) in Perth, Australia, the loser’s home country.

The official time of the stoppages was 2:49.

Lomachenko (18-3, 11 KOs) is a pound-for-pounder and three-division titleholder but the last time he could call himself a champion was 2020, the year he was upset by Teofimo Lopez and lost his lightweight titles.

He won three consecutive fights after that to earn a shot at champion Devin Haney only to lose a disputed decision in May of last year.

The oddsmakers were convinced he would finally regain a belt against the former champ Kambosos at RAC Arena, making him about a 5½-1 favorite. And they were right.

Lomachenko outclassed his tough, but overmatched opponent, picking Kambosos apart with quick, accurate shots from every conceivable angle and taking almost nothing in return.

Kambosos landed punches here and there — including some hard body shots — but he couldn’t connect enough to be competitive.

Lomachenko seemed to be on his way to a unanimous decision victory when he suddenly ended the fight in the penultimate round. The key blow was a left to the gut, which forced a worn down and bloodied Kambosos to take a knee.

He followed with a flurry of unanswered punches, which was enough to convince Kambosos’ father to throw in the towel and the referee to stop the one-sided fight.

The CompuBox stats reflected Lomachenko’s dominance. He landed 175 of 480 punches overall (36.5%), Kambosos only 40 of 371 (10.8%). The winner was even more impressive in the power punch department, connecting on 105 of 210 (50%). Kambosos was 36 of 189 (19%).

In other words, Lomachenko couldn’t have been much more effective even though he was fighting a former unified champ.

He can now set his sights on one of his talented fellow beltholders, Shakur Stevenson (WBC) or Gervonta Davis (WBA), both of whom are far superior to Kambosos.

Promoter Bob Arum, who handles Lomachenko, said before the fight on Saturday that he would try to match him and Stevenson later this year. And Davis called out Lomachenko on social media during the fight.