Deontay Wilder consigned the British heavyweight Derek Chisora to defeat in his final bout but only after an exhilarating fight-of-the-year contender at a raucous O2 Arena. In the 50th bout of Chisora’s eventful professional career, Del Boy showed remarkable powers of recovery to come back from a punishing eighth round and take the former WBC champion the distance in south-east London.
After the American showed early on the power that once made him one of the most formidable punchers in heavyweight history, Chisora’s farewell threatened to turned into a nightmare during a one-sided start.
However, Chisora rallied back in sensational fashion in a thrilling fourth and, after he got up off the canvas in round eight, the 42-year-old made it through to earn a hero’s reception before, during and after the last three-minute round of his journey in the professional ranks.
It was not enough to seal Chisora one last victory after the judges scored the bout 115-111, 112-115 and 115-113 in favour of Wilder to earn the Bronze Bomber a split-decision triumph, which may put his name back in the mix for the biggest fights in the division.

Chisora lived up to his man-of-the-people tag by riding on the London Underground to O2 Arena and he was soon greeted by “little brother” Anthony Joshua, who made a surprise first public outing since he was involved in a car crash in December which killed two of his close friends.
The sound of the first bell signalled the start of a slugfest and Chisora immediately stalked Wilder, but got caught by an uppercut and the duo almost fell over the ropes after another coming together.
Round two followed a similar script, with Chisora going after Wilder and being caught by a slick combination in a corner before a stumble by the British boxer was waved away.
Price beats Pineiro to retain titles
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Lauren Price survived the toughest test of her professional career to retain her three welterweight world titles with a unanimous points victory over Stephanie Pineiro. Price held on to her WBA, WBC and IBF belts by comfortable margins of 98-92, 98-92, 99-91 on the three judges’ scorecards, but the 31-year-old was a bloody mess by the end of the 10-round contest in Cardiff.
The unbeaten Welsh fighter suffered a nasty mouth injury with blood dripping heavily from it from the fifth round, Price claiming at the end of the contest that her lip was cut by a clash of heads.
Price, back on Welsh soil for the first time since winning her maiden world title against Jessica McCaskill in May 2024, dug deep in her biggest examination to keep her belts. Four-weight world champion Claressa Shields was ringside with the American in talks to meet Price either later this year or in early 2027. PA Media
Photograph: Nick Potts/PA
On his farewell fight, Chisora survived to the bell but another big swing and miss allowed Wilder to wear down his rival some more. Chisora remonstrated with the referee, Mark Bates, at the end of the third before the tables turned when a Wilder slip was followed by a huge right hook flush on the face of the American to spark an enormous roar around the O2 Arena.
Another occurred when Chisora launched a massive right in the fourth to wobble Wilder, who was grateful for respite on his stall.
A messy round five had an exhausted Chisora on the canvas twice, but neither were knockdowns and he then had more success with a right over the top. Wilder regained a semblance of control in the sixth after Chisora dipped his head into trouble before both boxers went tumbling after another grapple in a low-key seventh.

However, a sensational eighth caught fire with Chisora on the verge of being stopped after Wilder finally sent him down, but Del Boy beat the count and showed incredible resolve to go from back-pedalling to remarkably forcing Wilder on to the ropes. Wilder was also deducted a point as the Rocky theme tune fittingly echoed around the arena.
An even ninth was backed up by Wilder trying and failing to line up his rival in a round 10 which ended with a Chisora looping right landing. Chisora was again almost through the ropes midway through round 11 before Wilder was down, but neither counted as knockdowns.
Despite the whole crowd being on their feet during the last three minutes of Chisora’s career, no stoppage was delivered before the British fans’ favourite was serenaded one last time.

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