Daily Dispatch

Wilder knocks out Stiverne in first round

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an explosive performanc­e as he floored Stiverne twice in the opening round before finishing him off with a punishing right-left to the head as the defenceles­s Canadian was pinned against the ropes.

Stiverne then slumped to the canvas and stayed motionless for some time before being helped up and into a chair where he was examined by the ring doctor at the Barclays Centre arena in New York.

“I know I am the best. I just want to prove that I am the best,” said Wilder, who has 39 wins and 38 knockouts. “I got the heart of a lion. I am the king.”

Wilder was the heavy favourite going into this, the sixth defence of his heavyweigh­t title.

It was his second win over the 39year-old former champ Stiverne, who came into the rematch 6.8kgs heavier and having fought just once since losing the belt to Wilder in January 2015. Wilder won the first fight with a one-sided unanimous victory and the rematch was even easier.

On Saturday, he flattened Stiverne with 45 seconds left in the first round with a left followed by a straight right that landed flush on the face of the Haitian-born challenger. Just 20 seconds later, he sent Stiverne back to the canvas with a heavy right hand that landed like a club to the side of the head. By this time Wilder was having his way with Stiverne as he sealed the victory with a four-punch combinatio­n that sent Stiverne awkwardly back into the ropes as referee Arthur Mercante franticall­y tried to intervene and stop the onslaught.

The Canadian earned another crack at Wilder in September, taking the rematch on short notice after the scheduled challenger, Luis Ortiz, of Cuba, failed a doping test.

“So much frustratio­n. Man ... it just seems like my career has been crazy. So many guys ducking me and so many guys using PEDs [performanc­e enhancing drugs],” said Wilder, who was so confident that he would win again that he vowed to retire if he lost.

Stiverne blamed health issues for his failure to muster much resistance to Wilder’s onslaught in their first meeting but the beefy boxer’s biggest mistake the second time around appeared to be spending too much time around the buffet table.

Still, Wilder said he respected Stiverne’s willingnes­s to accept the challenge. “It took lot of courage to step in the ring with someone like me. He was a clean fighter and he did the best he could,” Wilder said.

Wilder hopes this win will land him a super fight with Anthony Joshua in a heavyweigh­t showdown the boxing world is dying to see.

Wilder issued a call for British star Joshua, who is the IBF and WBA heavyweigh­t champ, to step up to the plate. “I been waiting on that boy for a long time now. Listen mate. I know I am the best. Are up for the test? I want Joshua. Joshua come and see me baby,” Wilder said.

On the undercard, Kazakhstan’s Sergey Lipinets claimed the vacant IBF junior welterweig­ht title with a unanimous decision victory over Akihiro Kondo of Japan.

Lipinets improved to 13-0 with 10 KOs as he won on all three judges’ scorecards, 118-110, 117-111 and 117111. Kondo, the third-ranked challenger with a career record of 29-6-1 coming into the bout, was fighting for his first world title in his debut fight on American soil. — AFP

 ?? Pictures: GETTY IMAGES ?? ON ATTACK: Deontay Wilder, left, punches Bermane Stiverne, above left and middle, during their rematch for Wilder’s WBC heavyweigh­t title at the Barclays Centre, Brooklyn, New York on Saturday
Pictures: GETTY IMAGES ON ATTACK: Deontay Wilder, left, punches Bermane Stiverne, above left and middle, during their rematch for Wilder’s WBC heavyweigh­t title at the Barclays Centre, Brooklyn, New York on Saturday
 ??  ?? DOWN AND OUT: An overweight Bermane Stiverne on the canvas, above, after Deontay Wilder sealed victory with a devastatin­g four-punch combinatio­n
DOWN AND OUT: An overweight Bermane Stiverne on the canvas, above, after Deontay Wilder sealed victory with a devastatin­g four-punch combinatio­n
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