Scottish Daily Mail

BEWARE THE AXEMAN!

Wilder’s been chopping huge logs to prepare for final Fury fight...

- by JEFF POWELL Boxing Correspond­ent in Las Vegas

LOVE is patience. Love is kind. I’m gonna whoop his behind.’ Deontay Wilder finally emerged from his 20-month retreat into virtual silence and moody introspect­ion following his demolition by Tyson Fury in poetic mood.

Not all of it romantic. When he spoke of ‘the four-letter words which sustain us in our camp’, he mentioned hate as well as love.

‘Hate’ for Fury (right) who took his world heavyweigh­t title. ‘Love’ for everyone in the world who loves him.

Of the Gypsy King who dethroned him in seven brutal rounds in their first rematch, Wilder said: ‘He’s the only opponent I’ve ever hated. I have to control that, not get over-excited, be calm within the storm. But I want to beat him up for a few rounds before I knock him out.’

Although he refrained from repeating the wild accusation­s of cheating which were among his excuses for the only defeat of his career, those suspicions are presumably the fuel for this angst.

Fury himself puts it down to ‘me living in his head all this time rent free’.

But then boxers do tend to obsess about their immediate rival before fights as big as this trilogy match in the T-Mobile Arena tomorrow night. And if they are religious, as Wilder and Fury both are, they turn to God.

The Bronze Bomber says: ‘The love has kept our team going throughout the long time of waiting. God doesn’t make mistakes. He makes things (like the solitary defeat) happen for a reason. Now the time has come for me to reintroduc­e myself to the world.’

He adds: ‘I needed the recovery time to be with my family, to work with my trainer (Malik Scott) on all the things he does to bring out the very best in me. We’ve left no stone unturned.’

Not many trees, either, as it happens. Much of the time in training at his gym on the wooded outskirts of his home town Tuscaloosa in Alabama was spent chopping huge logs with a large axe.

‘I’ve gone through all this because Saturday will be a defining moment in my career,’ he continues. ‘I’m going to close the book on Fury. No fourth fight. I’m going to put the finishing touch to one of the great heavyweigh­t trilogies. And by coming back from adversity I will add even more to my legacy.’

He also denies that he will be solely reliant on one of the mightiest punches in ring history. That right hand has KO’d every opponent other than Fury, who also felt its strength when he was flattened in the last round of their first fight but miraculous­ly got up.

Wilder says: ‘everyone knows about my power. It never diminishes from the first to 12th round. So I’m a very dangerous fighter throughout the fight. But Malik has been bringing out things in my boxing which I’ve never really had to show before because I knock everybody out.’ Wilder is also fighting for recognitio­n in America, which has been less than overwhelmi­ng despite his KO ratio of more than 90 per cent.

‘That is what this moment is all about,’ he says.

‘I know I will get the respect and recognitio­n at the end of my career. Or sadly when I die, which will probably be when I’m 150! But I want it right now.

‘I don’t want to follow the same old trend in which people always get to appreciati­ng great fighters at the end or when they die. That needs to change because it takes a lot to get into that ring.

‘You should respect them now, those that step their legs over that rope and throw these hands.

‘That’s why when I get into the ring, I always try to do something great for the fans. Give them the excitement of knockouts. I have always had love and support from people all around the world. So when I tell my fans I love them, I mean it. And I won’t let them down this Saturday night.’

That involves regaining the WBC world title from Fury and then going on to fight Oleksandr Usyk, the Ukrainian conqueror of Anthony Joshua, for the undisputed world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip.

‘I like this man,’ Wilder adds. ‘He’s honourable. I believe he is going to beat Joshua again, more easily, in their rematch.

‘I like that he’s tipping me to knock out Fury. I believe him when he says he wants to get on with fighting me as soon as possible, because he knows he’s getting older.

‘And I won’t be able to retire until I achieve what I always say: one champion, one face, one name.’

● Fury vs Wilder is live on BT Sport Box Office late tomorrow night.

 ?? ?? Angry: Wilder is aiming to avenge his brutal loss to Fury
PICTURE: KEVIN QUIGLEY
Angry: Wilder is aiming to avenge his brutal loss to Fury PICTURE: KEVIN QUIGLEY
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