Dramatic Trilogy ends with Tyson Fury as Boxing's Undisputed Heavyweight King

Tyson Fury out landed Wilder by a margin of 150 to 72, according to CompuBox. He also held a 36 to 9 edge in jabs.

Tyson Fury remains undefeated, Image credit: Twitter
By Amruth Kalidas | Oct 10, 2021 | 3 Min Read follow icon Follow Us

In the most grueling test of his unbeaten career, Tyson Fury rose from the canvas twice in a disastrous Round 4 to win one of the most thrilling heavyweight title bouts in boxing history.

In the third and final bout of their memorable trilogy, Fury shook off the early damage to drop Deontay Wilder twice before finishing him via violent knockout punch in Round 11 to defend his WBC and lineal titles inside T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

“I AM MADE OF IRON AND STEEL” – TYSON FURY

Fury (31-0-1, 22 KOs), who led on all three scorecards (95-91, 94-92, 95-92) at the time of the stoppage, was forced to overcome an almost inhumane amount of resiliency shown by Wilder (42-2-1, 41 KOs) in the first fight for both since Fury’s TKO win in their 2020 rematch.

“Like the great John Wayne said, I’m made of pig, iron and steel, baby!” Fury said. “I took some big shots but my lord and savior helped me up and kept me going. It was a great fight tonight and it’s worthy of any trilogy in the history of the sport.”

Wilder, 35, rebounded from being dropped in Round 3 to surge ahead the following round with clean right hands and an aggressive style focussing oo the body. But Fury used his nearly 40-pound weight advantage, along with two inches in both height and reach, to slowly wear Wilder down by smartly holding and leaning on him against the ropes.

The more Fury closed the distance and prevented Wilder from extending his long arms to produce power, the more success he had by mauling on the inside and making things constantly difficult for referee Russell Mora to separate the two.

Suddenly, a fatigued Wilder looked endlessly on the verge of being stopped. His incredible will to keep fighting somehow kept him on his feet and Wilder flurried at key times just enough to keep Fury honest.

Mora asked the ringside physician to examine Wilder before Round 9. Then, in Round 10, Fury dropped the 6-foot-7 for the second time when he caught him off balanced with a short right hand.

WILDER DIDN’T WANT TO RESPECT FURY AFTER THE BOUT!

A big right hand early in Round 11 shook Wilder against the ropes. A two-punch combo followed, finishing with a short and brutal right hand that sent Wilder down for the third time and appeared to briefly knock him out cold.

Mora jumped in at 1:10 to stop the fight without a count just as Wilder began to stir and attempt to rise once more.

“October 9, 2021, will go down in history as a great fight,” Fury said. “Don’t ever doubt me. When the chips are down, I can always deliver.”

Fury out landed Wilder by a margin of 150 to 72, according to CompuBox. He also held a 36 to 9 edge in jabs.

After the fight, a weary Wilder sat in his corner on the stool with blood flowing from his left ear. Fury attempted to congratulate his wounded foe following a typically combative promotional build that saw the promoter refuse to allow them to face off during fight week.

“Deontay Wilder is so tough but he has no love for me because I beat him three times,” Fury said. “I am a sportsman, I went over to show love and respect but he didn’t want to give it back.”

Both fighters said before the bout that the third fight would be the last in their rivalry. Fury settled for a disputed draw in their 2018 first meeting before scoring consecutive knockouts.