Deontay Wilder v Tyson Fury 2 22.02.2020

LAS VEGAS – In a night that redefined heavyweight dominance, Tyson Fury steamrolled Deontay Wilder in their highly anticipated rematch, delivering a punishing seventh-round TKO and seizing the WBC, The Ring, and lineal heavyweight titles.

The MGM Grand Garden Arena bore witness to a masterclass in aggression and control as Fury flipped the script from their controversial 2018 draw. Billed aptly as “Unfinished Business,” this clash erased all doubt—Fury wasn’t just back, he was back with thunder.

Right from the opening bell, the British titan marched forward, asserting his size and power. Gone was the elusive boxer from their first encounter. In his place stood a brawler with bad intentions and surgical precision. Fury stalked Wilder from the start, cutting the ring, leaning on him in clinches, and hammering the American with piston-like jabs and heavy hands.

The tide turned irrevocably in the third round when a thunderous right hand from Fury caught Wilder high on the head. The Bronze Bomber staggered to his feet, blood trickling from his ear—an ominous sign of what was to come. Wilder, known for his one-punch knockout power, had no answer as Fury kept up the assault.

Fury dropped Wilder again in the fifth with a ripping shot to the body and followed it up with relentless pressure. Even a point deduction for holding couldn’t slow Fury’s charge. By round six, Wilder—bloody, battered, and unsteady—could barely raise his gloves. The end was near.

Midway through the seventh, after another brutal barrage left Wilder sagging in the corner, his corner waved the white flag. A right call—Wilder’s face told the story: broken, bruised, and shocked.

The judges had Fury ahead by wide margins on all cards, and rightly so. He outlander Wilder 82 to 34 in total punches and dominated in every statistical and visual measure.

For Fury, it was not just a win—it was a coronation. The self-proclaimed “Gypsy King” reclaimed his throne in unforgettable fashion, overcoming personal demons and professional doubters alike.

With 850,000 pay-per-view buys and worldwide acclaim, Fury’s performance is now etched into boxing lore. The heavyweight division has a new sheriff—and his name is Tyson Fury.