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Tim Tszyu reacts to his split decision loss to Sebastian Fundora

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Tim Tszyu reacts to his split decision loss to Sebastian Fundora

Tim Tszyu appeared at the post-fight press conference following his weekend split decision loss to Sebastian Fundora and asked the media questions about the fight and the cut he suffered, which obviously had an adverse impact on his abilities. Check out what Tszyu had to say about his reaction to what happened.

Tszyu on the fight against Fundora

“I would say it was a good war. I started well. Fundora is a clumsy opponent, very lofty and slender, with powerful jabs. I feel like I actually isolated his punches when I was able to feel him. I think the cut obviously played a role. I didn’t see anything, there was a lot of blood, but there are no excuses, the better team won today.

“I want to come back, do it again and fight against the best. I had a week’s notice, but yes, it is what it is.

Enabled if he wants a rematch with Fundora

“Of course he does, he has my belt now. But I’m going to rest for two weeks and then go back to the gym. I want to fight the best, I want mega fights to happen… I still believe I’m at the top of the tree.

About the cut he received at the beginning of the fight

“I remember I just put my head down and felt a fountain of blood coming out of it. I thought to myself, “This can’t be good.”

In “Stitch”, Duran said that the cut he received was the worst that could happen to him in boxing, and that he felt tired from all the blood loss

“The vision just disappeared. I literally couldn’t see anything, I had to rub my eyes constantly. Physically I still felt fine, just struggling with blurry vision. This isn’t a perfect solution, especially for Fundora.

About whether he ever considered stopping a fight because of a cut

“NO. I took Fundora a week in advance, I am who I am. I’m a fighter and that’s what I do. A little blood never killed anyone, let’s just say that.”

He commented that adequate measures were not taken in his corner to stop the excessive bleeding

“No comment.”

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Analysis

UNDISPUTED! Oleksandr Usyk defeats Tyson Fury and becomes the heavyweight king

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UNDISPUTED! Oleksandr Usyk defeats Tyson Fury and becomes the heavyweight king

Usyk (22-0, 14 KO) defeated Fury (34-1-1, 24 KO) in the eighth round, which ultimately decided the result. The knockdown was incredible and came at the end of a wild onslaught of pristine shots from Usyk, with Fury wobbling around the ring.

Bet on Navarrete vs Berinchyk and more boxing at DraftKings Sportsbook!

Referee Mark Nelson could have stopped any other fight in this situation, and he could have done so in this case as well, but the overall impression is that he realized how crucial the fight was and gave Fury a chance to recover. Fury went down, but it was slow in the round and time ran out when he got back up.

However, Usyk maintained pretty good control from there, not because Fury didn’t recover very well, but he regained the momentum – which Fury had taken over in some of the early and middle rounds – and simply didn’t let up.

We will probably see a rematch because that was in the contract, regardless of the outcome of this fight. When we see it is another matter, if so, no have to will obviously happen, they can’t force Fury to fight Usyk again, but Fury sounded like he was willing to do it, feeling like he won the fight.

On the undercard

  • Jai Opetaia defeated Mairis Briedis to regain the IBF cruiserweight title – which was stripped of it on a technicality – by unanimous decision. This fight between Opetaia (25-0, 19 KO) and Briedis (28-3, 20 KO) will certainly not make anyone forget their meeting in 2022, a brutal affair and a candidate for fight of the year. It was much more measured, especially for the 39-year-old Briedis, who hasn’t fought at all since. Briedis made a good effort towards the end, trying to steal the victory in stimulating fashion, but too little, too slow.
  • Anthony Cacace won the IBF super featherweight title with an upset victory over Joe Cordina after an eighth-round stoppage. This victory will be at least a little controversial, and referee Bob Williams will face some real criticism. Cacace (22-1, 8 KO) caught Cordina with a punch on a third-round stoppage, from which Cordina apparently never fully recovered. Cordina (17-1, 9 KO) went down later in the same round, and although he had a solid fourth, he never returned to the fight after the third. Apart from the half-time strike, Williams makes a pretty pointed change overall.
  • Agit Kabayel continued to emerge as a grave heavyweight contender, dominating Frank Sanchez en route to a seventh-round knockout in a WBC heavyweight eliminator. Sanchez (24-1, 17 KO) definitely looked like he had something wrong with his knee, to be completely sincere, but Kabayel (25-0, 17 KO) just took him apart, keeping the pressure high, attacking the body and finishing him off Cuban. The post-fight interview with Kabayel was once again a delight as the man is completely uninterested in the usual boxing nonsense and bullshit, he shows up, fights and is ecstatic to do well and win.
More results
  • Moses Itauma TKO-2 Ilja Mezencev (0:50)
  • Mark Chamberlain via TKO-1 Joshua Wahab
  • Robin Safar UD-10 Sergei Kovalev
  • David Nyika TKO-4 Michael Seitz

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Analysis

Fury vs Usyk: live results, RBR updates, how to watch

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Fury vs Usyk: live results, RBR updates, how to watch

Results

  • Oleksandr Usyk SD-12 Tyson Fury (113-114, 114-113, 115-112)
  • Jai Opetaia UD-12 Mairis Briedis (116-112, 116-112, 117-111)
  • Anthony Cacace TKO-8 Joe Cordina (0:39)
  • Agit Kabayel KO-7 Frank Sanchez (2:33)
  • Moses Itauma TKO-2 Ilja Mezencev (0:50)
  • Mark Chamberlain TKO-1 Joshua Wahab (2:42)
  • Robin Safar UD-10 Sergei Kovalev (95-94, 97-92, 99-90)
  • David Nyika TKO-4 Michael Seitz (2:45)

Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk are finally fighting! Both heavyweights will meet today in a 12-round main event in Riyad for the undisputed world heavyweight championship.

Fury brings the WBC title to the fight, while Usyk holds the WBA, IBF and WBO belts. The winner will become the first man to become the undisputed heavyweight champion in the four-belt era.

Patrick Stumberg will be participating in subsequent rounds of calls in the stream below, starting at noon EST, and we’ll be bringing you full highlights, results and more as the show goes on. Join us and experience one of the most significant days in boxing this year!

Bet on Fury vs. Usyk and more boxing at DraftKings Sportsbook!

Full card (AMAZING PPV / ESPN + PPV / PPV.comnoon EST)

  • Tyson Fury (34-0-1, 24 KOs) vs Oleksandr Usyk (21-0, 14 KOs)heavyweight, 12 rounds, for the undisputed championship (Fury’s WBC title and Usyk’s WBA, IBF and WBO titles)
  • Jai Opetaia (24-0, 19 KOs) against Mairis Briedis (28-2, 20 KOs)rematch, cruiserweight, 12 rounds, for the vacant IBF title
  • Joe Cordina (17-0, 9 KOs) vs. Anthony Cacace (21-1, 7 KOs)super featherweight, 12 rounds, for Cordina’s IBF title
  • Frank Sanchez (24-0, 17 KOs) vs. Agit Kabayel (24-0, 16 KOs)heavyweight, 12 rounds
  • Moses Itauma (8-0, 6 KOs) vs. Ilya Mezencev (25-3, 21 KOs)heavyweight, 10 rounds
  • Mark Chamberlain (15-0, 11 KOs) vs. Joshua Wahab (23-1, 16 KOs)lightweight, 12 rounds
  • Sergei Kovalev (35-4-1, 29 KOs) vs. Robin Safar (16-0, 12 KOs)cruiserweight, 10 rounds
  • David Nyika (8-0, 7 KOs) vs. Michael Seitz (12-0, 10 KOs)cruiserweight, 10 rounds

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Analysis

Ryan Garcia wants to end Errol Spence’s career

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Ryan Garcia wants to end Errol Spence's career

Ryan Garcia traveled to Saudi Arabia for this weekend’s undisputed heavyweight clash between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk. During a conversation with DAZN, Garcia discusses the shadowy cloud hanging over his victory over Devin Haney, his desire to fight Errol Spence again, and his predictions for a heavyweight fight. Check it out!

Garcia on how he feels about all the controversy surrounding his victory over Devin Haney

“I’m doing great. I’m elated. Justice will prevail, so I don’t worry about anything. God supports me.

“After May 22 there should of course be a result for the B sample, but I don’t think it will come out neat because obviously if they found it in A, why wouldn’t they find it in B? I think it’s all bullshit if we know it. I mean, no one takes steroids the day before and the day after a fight. You’d really have to be stupid.

On insisting on fighting Errol Spence

“I need this. I’m going to cut his head off… You know, Terence Crawford did a good job, but I’m going to finish the job as if he had no intention of boxing anymore after fighting me.

“From the bottom of my heart, I want to meet him as my coach.”

About his predictions for the Fury vs Usyk match

“It will be a 12-round decision, it will be a very close fight, but I think Fury is just too good and I love Fury. Fury has this energy, he looks great. Usyk, a hell of a fighter, but no. Fury is that man, I think he’s the greatest heavyweight of all time.

“I love Muhammad Ali, but I think Tyson Fury is the greatest heavyweight of all time. But shout out to Muhammad Ali.”

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