Connect with us
DAPA Banner

Sports

Tyson Fury believes Usyk will lose title by avoiding fight with undefeated heavyweight

Published

on

Oleksandr Usyk, the WBC, WBA and IBF heavyweight world champion, will soon have mandatory challengers piling up.

The 39-year-old southpaw secured undisputed status for a second time last year when he knocked out Daniel Dubois at Wembley Stadium. The four-belt reign was short-lived, however, as he soon dropped the WBO belt rather than face interim champion Fabio Wardley.

Tyson Fury, who has fought and lost to Usyk twice and is currently shouting for a trilogy, believes a similar scenario will play out with WBC interim titeholder and mandatory challenger Agit Kabayel.

Advertisement

Speaking to IFL TV, Fury said his believes his old foe is not only in the sport for big money bouts.

“If Usyk fights Kabayel, who cares? I don’t care. No one cares. It doesn’t sell, no one is interested. It is what it is. Kabayel deserves his shot at Usyk but I don’t think Usyk is going to give it to him because it doesn’t sell, there’s no real money there.”

If that was to be the case, the Ukrainian would be required to drop the WBC belt. President Mauricio Sulaiman has made it quite clear that, following a voluntary defence, the champion must give Kabayel his shot.

Despite Fury’s views, which many fans and analysts may be in agreement with, Team Usyk has stated that the Kabayel fight is indeed an option, particularly after seeing his star power in Germany.

Kabayel stopped Damian Knyba inside three rounds at a sold out Rudolf Weber-Arena in Oberhausen last month, and is likely to have another fight on home soil in May. Having an international star is something Queensberry Promotions will lean into and continue to develop, perhaps going a ways to convincing Usyk – who last fought in Germany in 2017, beating Marco Huck to retain his WBO cruiserweight belt – the fight is big enough to make.

Advertisement

In the meantime, the unified champion moves closer to his next fight, with the frontrunner being kickboxer Rico Verhoeven.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Sports

Derek Chisora sums up Deontay Wilder’s chances against Usyk after facing both

Published

on

This past weekend in London, Deontay Wilder handed Derek Chisora the 14th defeat of his career.

Following an entertaining and chaotic twelve rounds, Wilder took the win on the cards via split decision, with two knockdowns proving decisive. It was a necessary victory for the former champion, who says he is keen on returning to the top level in an attempt to win back a world title.

Asked at the post-fight press conference how he believes Wilder will fare if he does go on and face the division’s best, with a specific mention of unified champion Oleksandr Usyk, Chisora said:

Advertisement

“He’ll do well. He’s got power. Wilder’s got power for the first three rounds, then after he fades, but he’s always got that power. I’m not gonna take that away from him.”

Usyk had been pursuing Wilder earlier this year as part of his plan to face every top name of his generation. Negotiations reportedly moved too slowly for the American, however, who instead signed to face Chisora. With the victory, he makes a case to remain on the Ukrainian’s hit list, though is battling against the likes of Fabio Wardley, Daniel Dubois, Tyson Fury and Agit Kabayel.

In the meantime, Usyk – who beat Chisora by unanimous decision back in 2020 – will face kickboxing star Rico Verhoeven on May 23. Controversially, he has been permitted to put his WBC world title on the line for the fight, much to the dismay of the top contenders given Verhoeven has had just one professional boxing bout. It is unclear what the WBA and IBF intend to do.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

The Undertaker took 76-year-old veteran’s idea to WWE, he claims

Published

on

The Undertaker is considered one of the greatest WWE Superstars of all time, known for his legendary on-screen character, backstage leadership and company loyalty. One veteran recently claimed that one of The Phenom’s ideas was originally his during their time together from the territories.

During The Deadman’s time in WWE, he was known for being the judge, jury and executioner of Wrestler’s Court. There have been a ton of stories about stars going through the kangaroo court system, but it wasn’t an original idea of the Hall of Famer.

Speaking on his Story Time podcast, Dutch Mantell, more famously known as Zeb Colter in WWE, revealed that he started Wrestler’s Court during his time in the local Memphis wrestling scene.

Advertisement

“(Wrestler’s Court) was all instituted because of The Undertaker. And it was instituted by Undertaker is because we started it in the in the car back in the Memphis days. Because Mark has been on trial several times, all convicted I might add, because I was the judge,” Mantell said.

youtube-cover

Some of the superstars who were put through Wrestler’s Court over the years include Muhammad Hassan, The Miz, Teddy Long, Goldberg, Edge, Christian and more.

But since The Undertaker has retired, the kangaroo court system is no longer practice inside the WWE locker room.


AJ Styles feared one of the spots against The Undertaker at WrestleMania 36

The Undertaker’s retirement match happened at WrestleMania 36. It was a Boneyard Match against AJ Styles, which was a cinematic match that was widely praised by fans and critics.

Speaking on his Phenomenally Retro podcast with Tony Giles, Styles revealed that he was scared to take the bump from atop the barn because he wasn’t sure where to land.

Advertisement

“I remember us being on top of the… I guess it was the barn or whatever… and I was thinking to myself, I can’t see where to land, just literally throwing me off the top of this building and I’m going through another little shed,” Styles said. [H/T SEScoops]

Fast forward six years later, The Deadman surprised Styles by announcing that he’ll be inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2026.