Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Wilder defeats Ortiz with one-punch KO in seventh round of title bout

WBC heavyweigh­t champ retains title with one-punch KO

- By Sam Gordon Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @BySamGordo­n on Twitter.

Undefeated heavyweigh­t champion Deontay Wilder was right.

He doesn’t need to be perfect for 12 rounds. Far from it, actually. And he was rather imperfect for the first six rounds Saturday night during his WBC heavyweigh­t title fight at the MGM Grand Garden against Luis Ortiz, who attacked Wilder with flurries and combinatio­ns. Round after round after round.

But Wilder doesn’t need perfection. He only needs one second.

He only needs one punch. The most powerful punch in boxing today.

Wilder continued his reign atop the heavyweigh­t division by connecting with a flush, straight right 2:51 into the seventh round before an announced crowd of more than 10,000.

He has successful­ly defended his title 10 times since winning it from Bermane Stiverne in January 2015 at the MGM Grand Garden and is the longest reigning champion within the division. A rematch with lineal heavyweigh­t champion Tyson Fury looms in February in Las Vegas now that Wilder has disposed of the formidable Ortiz.

“I had to play around with him. I had to calculate certain moves,” Wilder said. “I had to go in and out, and finally I found my measuremen­t. I saw the shot and took it. My intellect is very high in the ring, and no one gives me credit for that. I think I buzzed him with a left hook earlier in the round, and I took it from there.”

Wilder (42-0-1, 41 knockouts) is indeed eager for a rematch with Fury, whom he fought to a dramatic draw in December 2018. Fury is the only man to recover from Wilder’s vaunted right hand. He’s the only opponent Wilder hasn’t beaten.

But the 34-year-old from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, is certainly up for the task after yet another spectacula­r knockout.

He bided his time against Ortiz (31-2, 26 KOs), allowing the 40-year-old Cuban southpaw to control the pace and tempo with right jabs and left hooks to the face and body. He waited while Ortiz maintained his aggression to capture a decisive edge on all three scorecards.

And Wilder pounced the second he saw Ortiz’s vulnerabil­ity — first with a left hook and then with the almighty straight right.

“This is boxing. I said that one of us was going to get knocked out and it wasn’t going to go 12 rounds,” said Ortiz, whom Wilder knocked out in the 10th round of their first fight in March 2018. “I was clear headed when I hit the canvas. When I heard the referee say seven, I was trying to get up, but I guess the count went a little quicker than I thought.”

Wilder touted his power all week and proudly insisted that he’s the best boxer in the heavyweigh­t division. But Fury is still unbeaten, and fellow juggernaut­s Andy Ruiz Jr. and Anthony Joshua are fighting their rematch Dec. 7 for the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO heavyweigh­t titles Ruiz won in June.

The night, though, belonged to Wilder. And he’s eager to prove the rest of the division does, too, by fighting Fury. By fighting Ruiz or Joshua.

By beating anybody and everybody.

“I want unificatio­n. I want one champion, one face and one heavyweigh­t champion — Deontay Wilder,” he said proudly to a chorus of cheers. “The heavyweigh­t

division is too small, there should be one champion, and it’s Deontay Wilder.”

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco ?? Deontay Wilder, right, knocks out Luis Ortiz with a right hand during the seventh round of their WBC heavyweigh­t title fight Saturday at the MGM Grand Garden. Wilder plans to fight Tyson Fury in February in a rematch of their 2018 draw.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco Deontay Wilder, right, knocks out Luis Ortiz with a right hand during the seventh round of their WBC heavyweigh­t title fight Saturday at the MGM Grand Garden. Wilder plans to fight Tyson Fury in February in a rematch of their 2018 draw.

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