The Niagara Falls Review

Bellew eyes perfect farewell

Highly regarded Ukrainian Usyk is climbing the ranks and eyes a move to heavyweigh­t

- STEVE DOUGLAS

In Oleksandr Usyk, boxing has a rising, unbeaten star ready to further shake up a revitalize­d heavyweigh­t division.

The Ukrainian fighter just has one last job to finish off at cruiserwei­ght level.

Usyk makes the first defence of his four cruiserwei­ght (max. 200 pounds) titles when he takes on Tony Bellew of England in Manchester on Saturday.

It will be Usyk’s 16th profession­al fight, and likely his last in a division he unified in July.

The 31-year-old Usyk is planning to make the step up to heavyweigh­t — the division in which he won Olympic gold at the 2012 London Games — and there’s already talk of a fight against Anthony Joshua, the IBF, WBO and WBA titleholde­r.

This all sounds familiar to Bellew.

Last year, Bellew climbed up from cruiserwei­ght to heavyweigh­t to fight David Haye, another boxer who intended to use Bellew as a way to get a lucrative fight with Joshua.

Bellew upset the odds by knocking out Haye in the 11th round and then, in a rematch in May, stopped the former heavyweigh­t champion in the fifth round.

The 35-year-old Liverpool native has already been world cruiserwei­ght champion and has a 30-2-1 record.

The fight against Usyk is set to be his last before retirement.

“One more night to survive through,” Bellew said, “and then I go on to live the dream life with my family.”

It could be the biggest night of his boxing career — and possibly the toughest.

Usyk, a southpaw, has risen virtually untouched through the profession­al ranks since leaving his amateur days behind him after the London Olympics.

Eleven of his 15 wins have come inside the distance.

As an amateur, he was also a world and European champion.

“The only chance I have is a puncher’s chance

“I cannot outbox this man,” Bellew said.

“He is a formidable opponent. He has everything any boxer could possibly want and he is a horrible southpaw.

“But I’ve shown what I can do at heavyweigh­t and, believe you me, I will show even more what I can do at cruiserwei­ght.

“I am faster, sharper and possibly even stronger at cruiserwei­ght. As good as he is, as great as he is, he is meeting someone with something inside him.”

Given Bellew’s improved standing in recent years and the fact the fight is being held in Britain, Usyk’s profile is set to be bigger than ever if he wins.

“Tony is my best opponent ever, definitely,” he said Thursday.

Usyk was born in Crimea and has said he was forced to leave the peninsula after Russia annexed it from Ukraine in 2014.

He became undisputed cruiserwei­ght champion after fighting three times in 10 months in the World Boxing Super Series, in which he beat Marco Huck, the then-WBC champion Mairis Briedis, and most recently Murat Gassiev in July.

What stood out, in particular, during those wins was his remarkable footwork and movement that the aging Bellew could struggle with.

Comparing the two fighters, Bellew — the underdog — appears to have one major advantage: Experience.

And potentiall­y another. “Tony’s left hook is the equalizer,” the now-retired Haye said in the buildup.

“If Tony can land that left hook to the head, that left hook to the body, he can really get a foothold in this fight and turn the tide.”

 ?? NATHAN STIRK GETTY IMAGES ?? Oleksandr Usyk, left, of Ukraine and Tony Bellew of England face off at a press conference at the Radisson Blu Edwardian Hotel in September in Manchester, England. The two will fight Saturday in the cruiserwei­ght division. Bellew says he will retire after the fight.
NATHAN STIRK GETTY IMAGES Oleksandr Usyk, left, of Ukraine and Tony Bellew of England face off at a press conference at the Radisson Blu Edwardian Hotel in September in Manchester, England. The two will fight Saturday in the cruiserwei­ght division. Bellew says he will retire after the fight.

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