The Day

Wilder and Fury battle to a draw

- By GREG BEACHAM AP Sports Writer

Los Angeles — Tyson Fury dominated long stretches of his heavyweigh­t title bout against Deontay Wilder with shifty technique and graceful defense.

He still ended up flat on the canvas in the 12th round, his eyes rolling backward while Wilder celebrated above him.

Fury somehow gathered his wits, rose and made it to the final bell. That's when both hulking men heard a verdict that didn't satisfy them, but nearly guaranteed a rematch of this exciting showdown.

Wilder and Fury fought to a split draw Saturday night, with Wilder retaining his WBC heavyweigh­t title after knocking down his British challenger twice.

"One hundred percent we'll do the rematch," Fury said. "We are two great champions. Me and this man are the two best heavyweigh­ts on the planet."

Wilder (40-0-1) floored Fury (27-0-1) in the ninth and final rounds, yet Fury clearly outboxed Wilder for large portions of their meeting.

Fury appeared to be on his way to a decision victory when he came out for the final round — and a minute later, he looked totally finished when Wilder put him on his back with a right-left combinatio­n. Yet Fury rose, summoning strength at the critical moment of his comeback from a 2 ½-year ring absence amid bouts of drug abuse and depression.

While Wilder kept his belt, Fury remained the unofficial lineal champion of the heavyweigh­t division by virtue of his victory over Wladimir Klitschko in November 2015.

Judge Robert Tapper scored the fight 114-112 for Fury, while Alejandro Rochin favored Wilder 115-111. Judge Phil Edwards and The Associated Press scored it a 113-113 draw, with Wilder's knockdowns compensati­ng for Fury's superior technique.

"We gave each other all we've got," Wilder said. "We're the best in the world. The respect was mutual."

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