Jump to content

Derek Chisora vs. Tyson Fury II

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bad Blood
Date29 November 2014
VenueExCeL London, Newham, London, UK
Title(s) on the lineEuropean, WBO International and vacant British heavyweight titles
Tale of the tape
Boxer Derek Chisora Tyson Fury
Nickname "Del Boy" The Gypsy King
Hometown Finchley, London, UK Wythenshawe, Manchester, UK
Pre-fight record 20–4 (13 KOs) 22–0 (16 KOs)
Age 30 years, 11 months 26 years, 3 months
Height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm) 6 ft 9 in (206 cm)
Weight 241+12 lb (110 kg) 264 lb (120 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBO
No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight
IBF
No. 3 Ranked Heavyweight
WBC
No. 7 Ranked Heavyweight
TBRB
No. 8 Ranked Heavyweight
European and WBO International heavyweight champion
WBO
No. 4 Ranked Heavyweight
IBF
No. 5 Ranked Heavyweight
WBC
No. 11 Ranked Heavyweight
TBRB
No. 3 Ranked Heavyweight
Result
Fury wins via 10th-round RTD

Derek Chisora vs. Tyson Fury II, billed as The Fight for the Right and Bad Blood, was a professional boxing match contested between European and WBO International heavyweight champion, Derek Chisora, and Tyson Fury, with the vacant British heavyweight title also on the line. The fight was a WBO "eliminator", with the winner becoming the mandatory challenger for the WBO heavyweight title, held at the time by Wladimir Klitschko. The bout took place on 29 November 2014 at the ExCel, with Fury winning by corner retirement in the tenth round.

Background

[edit]

Chisora and Fury first fought in 2011, with Chisora defending his British and Commonwealth titles at Wembley Arena, both men went into the fight with a record of 14–0. Fury won by unanimous decision with scores of 117–112, 117–112, and 118–111.[1]

On 8 January 2014, it was announced that Chisora and Fury would fight in interim bouts on 15 February 2014, at the Copper Box Arena, setting up a potential rematch between the two in the summer. Following both their original opponents Andriy Rudenko and Gonzalo Omar Basile pulling out,[2] Chisora and Fury were scheduled to face replacement opponents Kevin Johnson and Joey Abell.[3][4] Chisora defeated Johnson, winning by unanimous decision, and Fury defeated Abell via 4th-round TKO.[5]

Chisora and Fury were due to meet for a second time on 26 July 2014, at the Manchester Arena.[6] On 21 July, Chisora was forced to pull out after sustaining a fractured hand in training. Chisora's sparring partner, Alexander Ustinov was lined up as Chisora's replacement.[7] Fury pulled out of the fight after his uncle and former trainer Hughie Fury was taken seriously ill.[8] Fury and Chisora rescheduled the rematch for 29 November 2014 at ExCeL.[9]

The fight

[edit]

From the opening bell, Chisora struggled with Fury's height, reach and movement. Unable to apply pressure and close the range, failing to land any significant punches, and due to Fury's unorthodox fighting style, ended up hitting him below the belt. Chisora was warned twice by referee Marcus McDonnell in the first round. In the second, Fury switched from orthodox and boxed out of a southpaw stance for the majority of the fight, momentarily reverting back to his traditional right-handed stance as the rounds progressed. Fury used his jab and fast punches to outbox Chisora, keeping on the outside, creating a distance with his longer reach, winning the rounds clearly until trainer Don Charles had seen enough and pulled Chisora out at the end of the tenth round.[10]

Aftermath

[edit]

Following Fury's win, in the post-fight interview, Fury said "Wladimir Klitschko, I'm coming for you, baby. I'm coming. No turning back now, no retreat, no surrender." Fury's uncle and trainer Peter Fury also confirmed Fury would fight once more before challenging Klitschko for the world title.[11] Christian Hammer was later announced as Fury's opponent and the fight took place on 28 February 2015 at the O2 Arena.[12] Fury won the fight via 8th round RTD. After the fight, Fury called out Klitschko again, stating he was ready for his world title shot next.[13]

Fury defeated Klitschko on 28 November, by unanimous decision to capture the unified WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO and The Ring titles.[14] Fury's upset victory ended Klitschko's reign of nearly 10 years, the second longest in heavyweight history.[15]

Fight card

[edit]
Weight Class vs. Method Round Time Notes
Heavyweight Tyson Fury def. Derek Chisora (c) RTD 10/12 3:00 Note 1
Middleweight Billy Joe Saunders (c) def. Chris Eubank Jr. SD 12/12 Note 2
Welterweight Frankie Gavin (c) def. Bradley Skeete UD 12/12 Note 3
Super-featherweight Liam Walsh (c) def. Gary Sykes (c) UD 12/12 Note 4
Super-middleweight Frank Buglioni def. Andrew Robinson UD 10/10 Note 5
Super-bantamweight Lewis Pettitt (c) def. Santiago Allione UD 10/10 Note 6
Super-featherweight Mitchell Smith def. Zoltan Kovacs UD 10/10 Note 7
Welterweight Ahmet Patterson def. Sullivan Mason PTS 8/8
Heavyweight Eddie Chambers def. Dorian Darch TKO 3/8 2:20
Super-featherweight Romeo Romaeo def. Ismail Anwar PTS 6/6
Light-middleweight Georgie Kean def. Kevin McCauley PTS 4/4
Welterweight Macaulay McGowan def. Fonz Alexander PTS 4/4
Cruiserweight Steve Collins Jr def. Mareks Kovalevskis PTS 4/4

^Note 1 For European, WBO International and vacant British heavyweight titles
^Note 2 For British, Commonwealth, and European middleweight titles
^Note 3 For British and vacant Commonwealth welterweight titles
^Note 4 For British and Commonwealth super-featherweight titles
^Note 5 For vacant WBO European super-middleweight title
^Note 6 For WBA Inter-Continental super-bantamweight title
^Note 7 For vacant WBO European super-featherweight title

Broadcasting

[edit]
Country Broadcaster
Cable/Pay TV
 United Kingdom BoxNation
 United States ESPN

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Heavyweight Tyson Fury beats Dereck Chisora on points". BBC Sport. 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2017-03-24.
  2. ^ "Dereck Chisora: Andriy Rudenko pulls out of fight with injury". BBC Sport. 2014-01-16. Retrieved 2022-06-12.
  3. ^ "Dereck Chisora will take on American Kevin Johnson in east London next month". Sky Sports. Retrieved 2017-09-03.
  4. ^ "Tyson Fury Now Faces Joey Abell, Replacing Ill Basile – Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  5. ^ "Dereck Chisora beats Kevin Johnson in unanimous decision after Tyson Fury defeats Joey Abell following slow start". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  6. ^ "Dereck Chisora v Tyson Fury rematch announced for 26 July". The Guardian. 2014-03-17. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
  7. ^ "Tyson Fury to take on Alexander Ustinov after Dereck Chisora withdrawal", Sky Sports, 23 July 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2014
  8. ^ "Tyson Fury pulls out of Alexander Ustinov fight after uncle taken ill", The Guardian, 26 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014
  9. ^ "Tyson Fury to face Dereck Chisora in London rematch". BBC Sport. 15 September 2014. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  10. ^ Dirs, Ben. "Tyson Fury beats Dereck Chisora in world title eliminator". BBC Sport. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  11. ^ "Fury dominates Chisora to earn world title shot". ESPN.com. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  12. ^ "Undefeated heavyweight Tyson Fury returns to the ring against Christian Hammer in the New Year". Sky Sports. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  13. ^ Observer staff (28 February 2015). "Tyson Fury demands Wladimir Klitschko after beating Christian Hammer". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 December 2016.
  14. ^ Dirs, Ben (2015) "Tyson Fury beats Wladimir Klitschko to become world champion", BBC, 29 November 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2015
  15. ^ "Tyson Fury beats Wladimir Klitschko for heavyweight championship - Stats & Info- ESPN". Espn.go.com. Retrieved 2015-11-29.
Preceded by Derek Chisora's bouts
29 November 2014
Succeeded by
vs. Beka Lobjanidze
Preceded by Tyson Fury's bouts
29 November 2014
Succeeded by