Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk

Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk, billed as Ring of Fire, was a heavyweight professional boxing match contested between WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury and unified WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO, and The Ring heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship. It was scheduled to take place on 17 February 2024 at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, then postponed due to a facial injury sustained by Fury in training. It was rescheduled the next day and took place on 18 May 2024 at the same venue. Usyk won by split decision.[1]

Ring of Fire
Promotional poster of the event for DAZN
Date18 May 2024
VenueKingdom Arena, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Title(s) on the lineWBA (Super), WBC, IBF, WBO, IBO, and The Ring heavyweight titles
Tale of the tape
BoxerTyson FuryOleksandr Usyk
NicknameThe Gypsy KingThe Cat
HometownManchester, EnglandSimferopol, Crimea, Ukraine
Pre-fight record34–0–1 (24 KO)21–0 (14 KO)
Age3537
Height6 ft 9 in (206 cm)6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight262 lb (119 kg)223+12 lb (101 kg)
StyleOrthodoxSouthpaw
RecognitionWBC heavyweight championWBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO, and The Ring heavyweight champion
The Ring No. 3 ranked pound for pound fighter
2-division world champion
Result
Usyk wins via 12-round split decision (115–112, 113–114, 114–113)

Background and buildup

The fight crowned the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis in 2000, as well as the first in the four-belt era. In addition to the four sanctioned belts, special commemorative belts were made specifically for the fight on 18 May 2024. Queensbury Promotions made a special edition belt for the undisputed heavyweight. Then, the WBC also made the Fury-Usyk belt, which was blessed by Pope Francis, the head of the Roman Catholic Church.[2][3]

On 25 October 2023, Fury and Usyk took to social media to announce that they had signed for a bout, with a date of 23 December being reported but not officially announced. It was also reported that Anthony Joshua vs Deontay Wilder would serve as the co-feature.[4][5] On 28 October, after Fury defeated former UFC Heavyweight Champion Francis Ngannou, he demanded that the bout with Usyk must be postponed because of injuries he sustained in the fight, despite Usyk stating that they were contracted for 23 December 2023.[6] On 29 October, it was announced that the bout would take place in early 2024.[7]

On 16 November, the bout was officially announced to take place on 17 February 2024 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, with a launch press conference in London.[8] The fight was officially postponed on 2 February 2024, with the idea of rescheduling for 2024 once a doctor could determine the recovery time for a cut sustained by Tyson Fury in training. Fury's promoter Queensberry Promotions confirmed the injury.[9] The whole card was rescheduled for 18 May 2024; the decision was made quickly by the event's organizer in Saudi Arabia, Turki Alalshikh.[10]

The total purse for the fight was reported to be worth around $150 million (£116 million), with Fury being entitled to 70% of the purse, or approximately £81.2 million.[11][12]

Fight

Fury was described by BBC Sport as showboating during the first round, during which Usyk landed a left hook.[13] The three judges all agreed that the first round was 10–9 in favour of Usyk.[14] In the second and third round, Usyk was moving forward, while Fury was moving backwards, in a somewhat even bout.[14] Fury established momentum in the fourth round, with multiple uppercuts.[15][16] In the fifth round, Fury started moving forward and focused on punches to Usyk's body.[14] In the sixth round, Fury uppercutted Usyk's body and nose.[16] In the seventh round, Fury started dominant, but Usyk began to throw better punches to the head.[14] The three judges all agreed that the fifth, sixth, and seventh rounds were 10–9 in Fury's favour.[14]

In the eighth round, Usyk landed a right punch that caused for Fury to touch his nose, then another Usyk right punch hurt Fury's right eye; Fury bled from the face at the end of the round, and this seemed to affect him in the next round.[14] In the ninth round, Usyk landed an unanswered series of 14 punches, including several overhand lefts, during which and after Fury was wobbling and stumbling around into the ring ropes, which held him up.[17][18] At this point, BBC Sport described Fury as being "seemingly out of his feet", while The Guardian reported that Fury's "eyes glazed", the "referee could have stopped the fight", and that "Fury has been down in the past but we've never seen him hurt this badly!"[14][17][18] Referee Mark Nelson registered this as a knockdown of Fury (the ninth of Fury's career), and gave Fury a standing eight count, after which the round ended.[19][20] Fury was "saved by the bell" in the ninth round, concurred Yahoo! Sports and the Associated Press.[21][22] In the tenth round, Usyk did not rush his advantage, which allowed Fury to recover, but Usyk did continue to land occasional overhand lefts.[14] The three judges all agreed that the eighth, ninth, and tenth rounds were 10–9, 10–8, and 10–9 respectively, in favour of Usyk.[14]

In the eleventh round, Usyk continued to land left hands, but Fury showed some recovery to fight back.[14][16] In the twelfth and final round, Fury came back with some right punches, and the judges recorded that he won it unanimously 10–9.[14] The fight went down to the judges' scorecards, with Usyk defeating Fury by split decision, with judge Manuel Oliver Palermo scoring it 115–112 for Usyk, judge Craig Metcalfe scoring it 114–113 for Fury, and judge Mike Fitzgerald scoring it 114–113 for Usyk.[23]

Statistics

PunchesFuryUsyk
JabsLanded6248
Thrown286147
Percentage22%33%
PowerLanded95122
Thrown210260
Percentage45%47%
TotalLanded157170
Thrown496407
Percentage32%42%
Source: Boxing Scene, CompuBox[24]

Card

Weight classvsMethodRoundTimeNotes
Main Card (PPV)
HeavyweightOleksandr Usyk (c)def.Tyson Fury (c)SD12Note 1
CruiserweightJai Opetaia (c)def.Mairis BriedisUD12Note 2
Super FeatherweightAnthony Cacace (c)def.Joe Cordina (c)TKO8 (12)0:39Note 3
HeavyweightAgit Kabayeldef.Frank SanchezKO7 (12)2:29
HeavyweightMoses Itaumadef.Ilja MezencevTKO2 (10)0:50
LightweightMark Chamberlaindef.Joshua Oluwaseum WahabTKO1 (12)2:42
CruiserweightRobin Sirwan Safardef.Sergey KovalevUD10
CruiserweightDavid Nyikadef.Michael SeitzTKO4 (10)2:45
Light-HeavyweightDaniel Lupindef.Octavio PudivitrKO1 (10)1:47
FeatherweightIsaac Lowedef.Hasibullah AhmadiPTS10

^Note 1 For WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, WBO, IBO, and The Ring heavyweight titles
^Note 2 For The Ring and vacant IBF cruiserweight titles
^Note 3 For IBF and IBO super-featherweight titles

Main event official scorecard

Middle East Professional Boxing Commission
Official score card
Title: WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, WBO, IBO, and The Ring heavyweight titles Referee: Mark Nelson Supervisor: Jose Mohan
Date: 18 May 2024Venue: Kingdom Arena, Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaPromoter:
Furyvs.UsykFuryvs.UsykFuryvs.Usyk
RSTSRdTSRSRSTSRdTSRSRSTSRdTSRS
9110 9110 9110
101921991019219991822010
928329109283291010283299
937439101038438910384389
104754891048547910485389
105765791058656910586569
106776691068765910687659
976876109778751097787510
884986108859851088598510
993109610994109510994109510
910211106101010411104991031110510
101121211591011412113910113121149
FINAL SCORE112115FINAL SCORE FINAL SCORE114113FINAL SCORE FINAL SCORE113114FINAL SCORE
LostWonWonLostLostWon
Judge: Manuel Oliver PalermoJudge: Craig MetcalfeJudge: Mike Fitzgerald
Suspensions: nonePoint deductions: noneDecision: Usyk won via split decision

Source: Yahoo! Sports[25]

Aftermath

Usyk broke down in tears in the ring after his victory was announced and dedicated it to his family, his team, and the people of Ukraine.[26] After the fight, Fury commented: "I believe he won a few of the rounds but I won the majority of them … His country's at war, so people are siding with the country at war, but make no mistake, I won that fight … I'll be back. I've got a rematch clause."[22] Fury raised the possibility of a rematch "in October", and eventually declared: "Happy New Year!"[27] Usyk responded to Fury, stating, "If he wants, I'm ready for a rematch."[28] Usyk suffered a suspected broken jaw from the bout and went to the hospital after his press conference.[29]

In its next update of the rankings, The Ring returned Usyk to the No.1 spot in the pound-for-pound rankings, which he had previously lost to Terence Crawford on 29 July.[30]

Reactions

Along with Usyk's team, a few commentators, like TNT Sports' David Haye,[31] felt Usyk was robbed by the referee of a win by technical knockout in the ninth round.[32] Usyk's win made him the first new undisputed heavyweight champion in 24 years. Lennox Lewis held the title for five months after he defeated Evander Holyfield in November 1999.[33] In a post-match analysis, analysts wrote that Usyk's hall of fame case is "beyond cemented" and that he is an all-time great after his win.[34][35] Two-division undisputed champion Terence Crawford, ESPN's top-ranked pound for pound boxer, declared Usyk a candidate for the No. 1 position.[36] The tentatively scheduled rematch is set for 12 October 2024.[37]

Main event unofficial scorecards

AgencyWriter(s)ScorecardWinnerReference
1The GuardianBryan Graham116–111Usyk[38]
2The Sporting NewsDom Farrell114–113Usyk[39]
3Indy SportAlex Pattle and Jack Rathborn115–112Usyk[40]
4ESPNMike Coppinger115–112Usyk[41]
5Bad Left HookPatrick L. Stumberg116–111Usyk[42]
6Fight FreaksDan Rafael115–112Usyk[43]
Total: Usyk 6, Fury 0

Broadcasters

DAZN PPV covered the fight globally. Viewers in Middle East and North Africa countries could watch the event via Webook. In UK and Ireland, the fight was aired live on both PPV's Sky and TNT Sports Box Office channels. In Ukraine, the fight was streamed live on MEGOGO. In the US, the fight was streamed live via ESPN+ PPV.[44]

References