The New Zealand Herald

Clash begins bid to find best of the beasts

- Tim Dahlberg

Who’s the best, we’ll all find out when we all fight each other. Tyson Fury

Just how well Deontay Wilder’s heavyweigh­t title defence on Sunday against Tyson Fury in Los Angeles will do at the box office is a question mark.

For all the power in his right hand, Wilder is still trying to build his brand and Fury is largely an enigma in the US.

What it means for boxing’s most prestigiou­s division, though, is easy to quantify.

The winner gets a glittering championsh­ip belt, of course, that signifies he is the baddest man on the planet — at least in the parts of the planet that currently recognise Wilder as the reigning heavyweigh­t champion. And that’s still a big deal because even though the heavyweigh­t division hasn’t been good in recent times, it’s brimming with talent right now.

But the real prize will likely come sometime next year, assuming common sense prevails as it often doesn’t in boxing. That means a fight matching the Wilder-Fury winner with Anthony Joshua, the British puncher who holds the other parts of the title, in a payper-view fight that would do massive numbers.

The best fighting the best, like the heavyweigh­ts of another era used to do all the time. And no better way to start it off then with an intriguing showdown at Staples Centre between two undefeated fighters who both have their eye on a bigger prize.

“The most important thing is that we all fight each other and give the boxing fans of our era something to talk about,” Fury said. “It would be a crying shame to not fight each other and all get in the mix. Who’s the best, we’ll all find out when we all fight each other.”

Wilder will be defending the WBC version of the title he holds against Fury in a fight no one was really talking about until it was made. That includes Wilder, who has campaigned hard for a unificatio­n fight with Joshua, even offering him a US$50 million ($72.8m) purse at one point to try to get it done.

But Joshua has his own timetable, and with the fan base of an entire country behind him in England, he has the luxury of picking and choosing just who he fights and when. So, when he ignored Wilder, the American went looking elsewhere — and found a willing dance partner in Fury, who stakes a claim of his own to the heavyweigh­t title after beating Wladimir Klitschko in 2015.

“I feel whoever wins this can call themselves the best heavyweigh­t champion in the world,” Wilder said. “Let’s face it, we don’t have to keep going over this over and over again about Anthony Joshua. They had their opportunit­y, they had their chance.”

Indeed, there should be no reason to talk much about Joshua this week. Wilder and Fury deserve to be centre stage, if for nothing else than because both are willing to fight each other.

There’s also a lot to like about the fight itself, even if most boxing fans decide to save their money for the holidays rather than lay out US$74.95 for the pay-per-view.

Wilder is a legitimate heavyweigh­t champion, a 6-foot-7 (2m) former Olympic medallist who hasn’t lost in 40 fights and possesses freaky power in his right hand. He won’t win any points for a boxing style that can be charitably described as awkward, but he has knocked out all but one of his opponents — including Luis Ortiz, the powerful former Cuban he flattened his last time out in March.

Fury, meanwhile, is even bigger at 6-foot-9 (2.05m), boxes like a middleweig­ht, and has won all 27 of his fights. But he stepped away from the ring after beating Klitschko for the title and ballooned to nearly 181kg while binging on beer and cocaine.

Oddsmakers make Wilder the 9-5 favourite. By the time they’re finished with 12 rounds or less the heavyweigh­t picture should be in clearer focus and the winner should have a clear path to Joshua. In the meantime, boxing fans will have to be content seeing just two who might just be the best.

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