Weekend Herald

Wilder frustrated at failure to deliver

- Boxing Brian Mahoney

Deontay Wilder fired his right hand out from his body, demonstrat­ing the way he should have punched Tyson Fury.

He was frustrated with the referee. Disappoint­ed in Floyd Mayweather jnr. Angry with Showtime’s scorer. Mostly, Wilder was mad at himself. Five days later, the WBC heavyweigh­t champion was still bothered by the way he fought in his draw with Fury on Sunday in Los Angeles.

“Fury was everything I expected him to be. It’s not what Fury did, it’s what I didn’t do,” Wilder said yesterday. “You’ve seen the best of Fury, you didn’t see the best of me. I wanted to end the show with a devastatin­g knockout and I got too excited.”

Wilder (40-0-1) watched the full fight for the first time yesterday and was still amazed Fury got up from a powerful combinatio­n that had him flat on his back in the 12th round but believed Fury (27-0-1) benefited from a break from referee Jack Reiss.

“Look at him! Niiiiine,” Wilder said, imitating what he felt was a dramatical­ly long count from Reiss to allow Fury to get up and finish.

Still, Wilder believed the knockdown, his second of the fight, had clinched victory. He said he didn’t regret not trying harder to finish Fury because he thought the win was secured.

“If it was close, that knockdown, I feel like it put me on top,” Wilder said.

Only one of the judges agreed, with one scoring the bout for Fury and another having it 113-113. That was much closer than Showtime scorer Steve Farhood, who gave only one of the first eight rounds to Wilder on his card that fans watching the fight could see after each round.

“Someone has got to explain to me why this is supposedly a Tyson Fury round,” promoter Lou DiBella said after watching the end of one of those early rounds.

Mayweather was even harsher to the champion, giving him none of the first five rounds when he was interviewe­d in the arena between rounds. Wilder said he had no relationsh­ip with Mayweather but implied the retired former champion was insecure any time there was too much attention on another American fighter.

Wilder agreed it was a close, tough fight to score, but only because he allowed it to be. Headlining a pay-perview for the first time on perhaps the biggest night in years for American heavyweigh­t boxing, Wilder wanted to deliver something spectacula­r and the moment got to him.

“I abandoned the whole game plan,” Wilder said. “That was a mistake on my behalf. I just wanted to get in there and knock him out. I wanted to end the show in a devastatin­g way. That was the whole thing going through my mind. I couldn’t clear it out of my mind for some reason.”

The mistakes could provide a learning experience for a rematch Wilder insists will happen. He said he will try to gain a significan­t amount of weight, with a goal of 110kg after he came in at 95kg on Sunday. He’s open to fighting Fury anywhere, even in Britain, though his preference­s would be Las Vegas or Barclays Center in New York. Wilder couldn’t take out Fury the first time but figures he at least did enough damage to soften him up for the second.

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