Vancouver Sun

Wilder standing by pledge to unify heavyweigh­t titles

- BARRY WILNER

NEW YORK Deontay Wilder is steamed. And drained. And very, very eager.

All of those descriptio­ns are delivered by the WBC heavyweigh­t champion himself as he prepares to fight Bermane Stiverne on Saturday night at Barclays Center.

Wilder is 38-0 with 37 knockouts. The only opponent who went the distance with him is Stiverne, whom Wilder outpointed for the belt in 2015. Since, Wilder has stopped five others in defence of the title, but the fact that Stiverne was standing at the end of their previous bout has the champ “steamed.”

Stiverne has claimed many times he was not at peak health for that fight, and Wilder shakes his head in disgust.

“Stiverne was the only man to survive the ‘Alabama Slammer’ and avoid a knockout,” the 32-year-old native of Tuscaloosa says. “When I knock him out, then nobody will be able to say they made it through against me. He was nothing but a lot of lumps and excuses after the first fight.”

Stiverne, naturally, disagrees. “He already gave me his best,” says Stiverne (25-2-1, 20 KOs), who turned 39 on Wednesday and hasn’t fought in two years. He is stepping in for Luis Ortiz, who was disqualifi­ed by the sanctionin­g body when he had a positive drug test.

“I had nothing last fight. But now I’m a very dangerous man. Everyone here knows what time it is. Deontay Wilder has been trying to duck me. He’s been giving a lot of excuses about my career. He should be happy if I’ve been inactive. He should be jumping in the air. Everyone knows that means he’s scared.”

Rather than scared, Wilder sounds weary. He notes the entire promotion of this fight has been on his shoulders. He’s criss-crossed the country drumming up interest, and he’s ready to finish his business for 2017 and get on with unificatio­n next year.

“I’ve promised I will unify the heavyweigh­t titles and I will,” he says. “Those others, (Anthony) Joshua, have other plans. I don’t think he has the motivation to unify. If that is his plan, then sign the deal. That’s all it takes to make it happen. Next fight, we’ll make it happen. But he doesn’t want to fight me, period.”

England’s Joshua just stopped journeyman Carlos Takam in 10 not particular­ly impressive rounds to keep his WBA and IBF belts. The other heavyweigh­t champ, Joseph Parker of New Zealand, owns the WBO crown. Wilder says boxing fans are confused about so many champions and he is doing a service to the sport by unifying.

Should Wilder handle Stiverne in the Showtime main event Saturday night, he won’t be satisfied if it isn’t by knockout.

“This will be an electrifyi­ng fight,” Wilder says.

“That belt isn’t going anywhere. I will unify the division. I will be the undefeated, undisputed heavyweigh­t champion of the world.”

The undercard features Shawn Porter, who faces Adrian Granados in a welterweig­ht matchup. Porter probably has the best resume of anyone on the card, and previous fights at Barclays against Keith Thurman, Devon Alexander and Andre Berto make the former world champ a solid draw.

 ?? ABBIE PARR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Deontay Wilder, left, and Bermane Stiverne stare each other down during the official weigh-in for Saturday’s fight.
ABBIE PARR/GETTY IMAGES Deontay Wilder, left, and Bermane Stiverne stare each other down during the official weigh-in for Saturday’s fight.

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