The Press

Wilder wins to set up Fury rematch

-

Deontay Wilder landed a vicious right hand to stop Luis Ortiz in the seventh round in Las Vegas to retain his heavyweigh­t title and set up a lucrative rematch with Tyson Fury in February.

Wilder’s punch came out of nowhere in a fight he had done little in up until that time. It landed flush on the face of Ortiz, who crumpled to the canvas and was unable to get up at the count of 10.

The sudden ending came after a lacklustre first six rounds in which Wilder did little. But the devastatin­g power that has gotten him knockouts in all but two of his fights came through again.

‘‘I finally found my measuremen­t and I took the shot,’’ Wilder said. ‘‘I had to play around with him. I had to calculate certain moves.’’

The fight was a rematch of a bout last year when Wilder stopped Ortiz on the 10th round. It set up a February 23 fight against Fury that has already been signed.

Wilder began to pick up the pace in the seventh round, then caught Ortiz with the right hand that brought the fight to an end at 2:51 of the round.

Ortiz (31-2) didn’t protest the ending, but said he thought he beat the count. ‘‘I was up at seven, I wanted to continue,’’ he said.

Wilder (42-0-1, 41 knockouts) displayed the massive power that has made him a force in the heavyweigh­t division, but won no style points in winning the fight. He did little until the big punch that ended the fight, wary of the power Ortiz showed when he hurt him in their first fight last March.

Wilder’s win helped clarify the top of the heavyweigh­t division, which will be sorted out further when Anthony Joshua and Andy Ruiz Jr meet December 7 in their title rematch in Saudi Arabia.

 ?? AP ?? Deontay Wilder knocks Luis Ortiz to the canvas during their WBC heavyweigh­t title fight in Las Vegas yesterday.
AP Deontay Wilder knocks Luis Ortiz to the canvas during their WBC heavyweigh­t title fight in Las Vegas yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand