LOS ANGELES ā Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder will probably meet in a rematch before either ź¦of them faces Anthony Joshua in a ring. Fury-Wilder II might be the preferred choice after the unsatisfying ending to their fightš Saturday night at the Staples Center.
Wilder scored two knockdowns and thought he won. Fury, meanwhile, thought he piled up enough points to claim the decision. But after 12 rugged rounšds, the judges ruled it a split draw. Alejandro Rochin of Mexico had it 115-111 for Wilder, while Robert Tapper of Canada saw it 114-110 for Fury. Phil Edwards scored it a 113-113 draw, as did The Post.
āI think with the two knockdowns I definitely won the fight,ā Wildš¦er said. āWe poured our hearts out tonight. Weāre bošth warriors. But with those two drops, I think I won the fight.ā
Fury saw it differently.
āWeāre on away soil,ā he said. āI got knocked down twice, but I still believe I won that ā±fight.ā
Wilder (40-0-1, 39 KOs) retains the WBC belt, while Fury (27ź¦¬-0-1, 19 KOs) can still call himself the lineal heavyweight champion. It was a buzzkill ending to what had been an entertaining fight in which Fury used constant movement and sharp punching to win rounds, while Wilder waited patiently to land the big punch.
Wilder, making his eighth title defense, managed to drop Fury with a left hook in the ninth round and looked like he had Fury finished in the 12th with a thunderous left-right combination that dropped the challenger flat on his back. But Fury just beat the count anš¦d survived the round as a crowd of 17,698 roared its approval.
The winner was projected to face Joshua, the WBA, IBF and WBO title-holder, for the undisputed championship. But Wilder and Fury mšay stage a rematch first.
āI would love for it to be my next fight,ā Wilder said of the rematch. āWhy not? Letās give the fans what they want to see. It was a great fight, so letās do it again. It doesnāź¦t matter to ź§me where we do it.ā
Fury was trying to complete a rapid comeback from drug and alcohol addiction that derailed hisš career after winning a unanimous decision in 2015 to dethrone Wladimir Klitschko for the WBA, WBO and IBF heavyweight titles. Mental health issues added to Furyās demise to the point he contemplated suicide. He vacated his titles and spent 2 Ā½ years out of the ring before getting sober. After two tune-up fights, he agreed to challenge Wilder in America for the only belt Fury didnāt win off Klitschko, the WBC belt.
āI wanāt to win the WBC belt and finish my collection,ā Fury had said before the bout.
It figured to be a match-š ·up of Wilderās poš¬wer versus Furyās ability to use his foot movement to avoid and frustrate Wilder.
āAs long as Iām focused for the full duratį£ion of the fight, I donāt see him landingź¦« any punches at all,ā Fury said.
The opening rounds were to Furyās liking. Wilder struggled to land a punch as Furyās coā±nstant movement kept the champion off balance.
Wilder looked like he wanted to attack Furyās body early then went hš¦©ead hunting in the middle rounds without much success. Fury would try to steal rounds with late flurriāes and then raising his hands in triumph as the bell sounded.
It wāasnāt until the ninth rą± ound that Wilder landed a heavy blow. A hard overhand right to the side of Furyās head dropped the Englishman for the first time in the fight. He got up and withstood Wilderās assault to try to end the fight. By the end of the round, they were going toe-to-toe as Fury regained his wits.
As the fight entered the final round, neither fighter could be certain he was winniš ng. Fury opened with a hard right, but Wilder flushed him with aš devastating right-left combination that put Fury down. He got up just before referee Jack Reiss counted to 10.
It was a matter of whether Fury could hang on to the final bell. Halfway throughź¦¬ the round, Fury began to fight back, swinging and holding until the controversial end.