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Oleksandr Usyk vs. Tyson Fury

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In May, Oleksandr Usyk completed his mission, defeating Tyson Fury by split decision to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the modern four-belt era. On Saturday in Saudi Arabia, Usyk will look for a repeat performance when he rematches Fury, this time with three world titles on the line.

Usyk was stripped of the IBF championship for moving ahead with his contractually obligated rematch with Fury, though the lack of one of the four world titles from the first meeting has done nothing to diminish the excitement or importance of this rematch.

The first meeting was the first time Fury had suffered defeat as a professional, having gone undefeated across 35 previous bouts that also saw him twice reign as world champion. Fury started that fight well, using his size and reach to keep the much smaller Usyk at range. Fury was so comfortable in the early rounds that he repeatedly danced and showboated, seemingly feeling he had the fight in hand.

Usyk was able to make the necessary adjustments as the fight wore on and not only started to successfully use his boxing skills, but also scored a knockdown in Round 9. A perfect left hook landed on Fury and the following flurry from Usyk sent Fury’s 6-foot-9 frame stumbling into the corner where it was ruled the ropes had held him up and thus counted as a knockdown.Oleksandr Usyk vs. Tyson Fury

The monumental rematch between Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury is just one day away – and everyone has an opinion.

Usyk eked out Fury via split decision in May and they are now due to run it back on Saturday night in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Follow Fury vs Usyk 2 LIVE HERE

En route to getting his hand raised, the Ukrainian had Fury in real trouble in the ninth stanza when he scored a dramatic standing eight-count.

Fury miraculously survived to see out the round and showed immense powers of recovery to finish strong down the home straight.

However, it wasn’t enough for him to get the nod.

In the end, the scorecards read 115-112 to Usyk, 114-113 to Fury, and 114-113 to Usyk with the knockdown proving to be decisive.Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk

Ahead of their rematch, Fury has promised not to leave the result in the hands of the judges and insists he will enter ‘destroy mode’ on the night.

“I’ve always been a bad man my whole life, and I’m still one today at nearly 40 years old, a few years off 40,” he said.

“I’m going to go in there with destroy mode. Last time, I went to box him, I was being cautious.

“Anybody can get caught as we have seen in a lot of these heavyweight fights. But this time I’m not going for a points decision. I’m going to knock that motherf***** out.”

Some believe Fury has what it takes to make the appropriate adjustments to topple Usyk while others think it will be repeat rather than revenge.

Here, takes a look at how several of the most prominent names in combat sports see the second bout going.

Lennox Lewis told Droeks on Boxing: “Well, I cannot go against Usyk. Oleksandr Usyk has proven himself time and time again, and he’s still undefeated.

“It really comes down to who boxes the best. Who’s smart in the ring. I didn’t think Tyson Fury was smart in the first fight.‘Pressure all night’ – Mike Tyson says Oleksandr Usyk will be hard for  Anthony Joshua to beat

“I think he played around a little bit too much and allowed Oleksandr Usyk to really pile up the points.

“Oleksandr Usyk is a difficult opponent. He moves all the time, he’s always throwing punches, he’s in great shape, and that’s hard to beat.”

“I want Fury to win, I think he’s capable of winning. I think he’s going to have to do something extraordinary, which we’ve seen him do before,”

Ricky Hatton is expecting another cagey encounter when Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury meet for a second time on December 21, live on DAZN .

The fight, set to be one of the biggest events of 2024, will see both men renew hostilities following a terrific battle back in May.

Then, Usyk overcame a tough start to rally brilliantly in the second half where he took over the fight and ended up undisputed ruler at heavyweight .

In round nine, Usyk demonstrated his brilliance as he hurt Fury with a huge left hand that had the then WBC champion on unsteady legs. Tyson Fury Oleksandr Usyk

Fury received a standing count from the referee before the bell intervened preventing Usyk from doing any more damage, but the Brit recovered well to hear the final bell.

This time around, Fury has promised a similar approach as he was happy with how most of the contest played out.

Hatton, a friend of Fury who has seen him work up close, is excited for the fight, and he’s given his verdict on how things could play out when the first bell goes later this month.

“It will be a very similar, close fight and is one of them that could go either way. If I was giving Tyson any advice, not that he needs it from me, his tactics could be a little bit better where he uses his size to his advantage,” said Hatton when speaking to ActionNetwork . Tyson Fury Oleksandr Usyk

“Oleksandr Usyk is a hell of a fighter, but he was letting him bully him all over the ring and you’d have thought Usyk was the man mountain, and Tyson was the little fella the way he was pushing him around the ring.

“If Tyson holds his feet a little bit better and hits him hard, leans on him a little more, certainly in the early rounds then I think that will make a difference.”

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