05/18/24 08:42:00
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05/18 20:40 CDT Usyk beats Fury by split decision to become the first
undisputed heavyweight champion in 24 years
Usyk beats Fury by split decision to become the first undisputed heavyweight
champion in 24 years
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) --- Oleksandr Usyk has been shorter, lighter and
older than all of his opponents since he moved up to the heavyweight division.
Usyk's heart and skill are enormous, and he overcame a major size disadvantage
against Tyson Fury to become the world's first undisputed heavyweight boxing
champion in 24 years.
Usyk defeated Fury by split decision on Sunday, knocking down his hulking
opponent in the ninth round and eventually earning a narrow win on two
scorecards. The 37-year-old Ukrainian is the first heavyweight to hold every
major title belt since Lennox Lewis.
Usyk (22-0) added Fury's WBC title to his own WBA, IBF and WBO belts with a
spectacular late-round rally in a back-and-forth matchup between two previously
unbeaten champions from a strong era of heavyweight boxing. Two judges favored
Usyk, 115-112 and 114-113, while the third gave it to Fury, 114-113.
"It's a great time. It's a great day," said Usyk, who is 6 inches shorter than
Fury and weighed in 30 pounds lighter this week.
Usyk started quickly, but then had to survive while the confident, charismatic
Fury dominated the middle rounds. Usyk surged in the final rounds, just as the
Olympic gold medalist has done so many times in his career, taking control with
a dominant eighth and nearly stopping Fury in the ninth.
Usyk hurt the 6-foot-9 Fury (34-1-1) with a left hand and eventually sent him
sprawling into a corner in the final seconds of the round, getting credit for a
knockdown right before Fury was saved by the bell. Fury struggled to mount a
consistent attack after nearly getting stopped, and the knockdown turned out to
be the decisive factor in the decision.
"Thank you so much to my team," Usyk said while fighting back tears in the
ring. "It's a big opportunity for me, for my family, for my country. Slava
Ukraini!"
Fury kissed Usyk on the head after the final bell, and Usyk hugged Fury several
moments after the decision was read. Fury also said he wants the rematch in
October.
"I believe I won that fight," Fury said. "I believe he won a few of the rounds,
but I won the majority of them, and I believe it was one of those
what-can-you-do, one of them ... decisions in boxing. We both put on a good
fight, best we can do.
"You know, his country is at war, so people are siding with a country at war.
But make no mistake, I won that fight, in my opinion, and I'll be back. I've
got a rematch clause."
Usyk is the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis held the
honor for five months in 1999 and 2000. He is also now the lineal heavyweight
champion by beating Fury, who beat Wladimir Klitschko to earn that distinction
in 2015.
After moving up from cruiserweight, Usyk upset Anthony Joshua to win three
title belts in 2021. He kept them through a rematch and another defense while
angling for the ultimate payday of a fight against Fury in Saudi Arabia.
Usyk landed 41% of his 407 punches, while Fury landed just 31.7% of his 496
punches, according to CompuBox statistics. Usyk both threw (260 to 210) and
landed (122 to 95) more power punches.
Usyk has now joined the elite club of fighters who held every major world
championship belt at heavyweight --- and he is the first to do it in the
four-belt era, which began in 2007. The list of undisputed champions includes
Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis, Floyd Patterson, Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier and Mike
Tyson.
The most recent undisputed heavyweight champ was Lewis, who beat Evander
Holyfield in late 1999 and enjoyed a five-month reign. He soon lost a title
because of the territorial squabbles that have beset boxing for the past
quarter-century and routinely prevented the biggest fights from happening.
Fury and Usyk both asked for this matchup, and they finally got together in the
ring largely because of the involvement of Saudi Arabia, which made the
financial rewards simply too great for the fighters' typically recalcitrant
promoters and the sanctioning bodies to reject. Fury will reportedly make more
than $100 million for the bout.
To reach the lucrative Western pay-per-view audience, the bout didn't begin
until 1:45 a.m. on Sunday morning at Kingdom Arena.
Usyk was aggressive from the opening bell, repeatedly getting inside his taller
opponent's defenses to land body shots. Fury was his usual carefree self, even
putting both arms on the ropes in a corner and pretending to dodge punches when
Usyk advanced.
But Fury picked up his attack from the third round, working his size advantage
and his typically unpredictable movement to throw right hands behind his sharp
jab. Fury appeared to hurt Usyk with body shots right at the belt, and he
rocked Usyk twice in the sixth with vicious uppercuts.
Usyk rallied, bloodying Fury's nose and face with a left hand. Usyk then
punished Fury in the ninth, hitting him with another concussive left before
battering the British star around the ring. Fury sagged into a corner while
barely staying on his feet with about 10 seconds left in the round.
Referee Mark Nelson could have stopped the fight, but he ordered Usyk away for
a standing count interrupted by the bell.
On the undercard at Kingdom Arena, Australia's Jai Opetaia retained his IBF
cruiserweight title with a clear unanimous decision over Mairis Briedis.
Ireland's Anthony Cacace also claimed the IBF super featherweight title when he
stopped Joe Cordina in the eighth round.
Earlier, 41-year-old former light heavyweight champion Sergey Kovalev returned
to the ring for only the second time since 2019 with a decision loss to
Sweden's Robin Sirwan Safar.
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This story has been updated to correct the IBO belt to the WBO belt.
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AP boxing: https://apnews.com/boxing
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