The Hindu (Madurai)

‘Lean wolf ’ Usyk joins boxing’s pantheon, his legacy undisputed

The Ukrainian defeated Tyson Fury to become the Usyk looks set to go down as one of the greats. rst man to simultaneo­usly hold every heavyweigh­t title in the four-belt era. And having dominated the amateur, the cruiserwei­ght and the top division, the unde

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When Oleksandr Usyk defeated Tyson Fury by split decision in Riyadh last weekend, knocking down his hulking opponent in the ninth round and eventually earning a narrow win on two scorecards, the Ukrainian boxer created history.

By adding Fury’s WBC title to his own WBA, IBF and WBO belts, Usyk became the world’s †rst undisputed heavyweigh­t boxing champion in more than two decades. The 37-year-old’s feat, moreover, is unpreceden­ted in boxing’s four-belt era — Lennox Lewis was the last man to unify the heavyweigh­t titles, defeating Evander Holy†eld in 1999, but there were three belts at the time.

Undeniable at every level

After winning a back-and-forth matchup between two previously unbeaten champions from a strong era of heavyweigh­t boxing, Usyk looks set to go down as one of the greats. He has now dominated the amateur, the cruiserwei­ght and the top division, winning every title of note.

Usyk put together an outstandin­g amateur record, winning European and world titles and Olympic gold in 2012. After turning pro, he uni†ed the cruiserwei­ght belts in 15 †ghts before moving up to heavyweigh­t, where he took three belts from Anthony Joshua in 2021, advancing a career that has always been on the rise. Last weekend, it reached its peak.

The 6’3” Usyk had to overcome a major size disadvanta­ge against the 6’9” Fury, but it was something he was con†dent he could achieve. As he told Ring magazine, “To win this, I don’t need to be heavy, I need to be fast, and quick. You never see a fat wolf in the forest.”

Usyk certainly had the look of a lean wolf, as he gradually took charge of his bout against Fury. He repeatedly got inside his taller opponent’s defences to land body shots. The typically šamboyant Fury taunted his ever-advancing opponent and showboated, guard down.

Fury picked up his attack from the third round, working his size advantage and his unpredicta­ble movement to throw right hands behind his sharp jab. Fury appeared to hurt Usyk with body shots right at the belt, and he rocked Usyk twice in the sixth with vicious uppercuts.

Another late surge

But Usyk surged in the †nal rounds, just as the Olympic gold medallist has done so often in his career. He tagged Fury with two clean lefts in the seventh and landed a punishing hook that dazed the ‘Gypsy King’ in the eighth. By the next round, his barrage had Fury in serious trouble and the wobbling, bleeding Mancunian took a standing count before being saved by the bell.

Fury struggled to mount a consistent attack after nearly getting stopped, and the knockdown turned out to be the decisive factor in the decision. Two judges favoured Usyk, 115-112 and 114113, while the third gave it to Fury, 114-113. According to CompuBox statistics, Usyk landed 41% of his 407 punches, while Fury landed just 31.7% of his 496 punches. Usyk both threw (260 to 210) and landed (122 to 95) more power punches.

The win improved Usyk’s record to 22-0 and helped him join the likes of Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis, Floyd Patterson, Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier and Mike Tyson as an undisputed heavyweigh­t champion. He is also now the lineal heavyweigh­t champion by beating Fury, who beat Wladimir Klitschko to earn that distinctio­n in 2015. Usyk can now legitimate­ly claim to be the best of his era and has a case to be considered among the greatest boxers in history.

In addition to what he has achieved, Usyk also ticks all the boxes that the truly elite †ghters tick. His heart and skill are enormous — a high-quality technician with a strong chin, the Ukrainian is clinical in the ring. Tales of his training are legendary, including 10-kilometre swims, four minuteplus breath-holds, juggling, and catching six coins at once to demonstrat­e his rešexes.

Usyk has had to overcome enormous adversity on his route to undisputed status. The 37-yearold, who briešy served as a soldier in the Ukrainian army after the Russian invasion of February 2022, spoke of the victory as a “great moment for me, for my family, for my country”.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky led the tributes to Usyk. “The Ukrainians hit hard! And in the end, all our opponents will be defeated,” Zelensky said on Telegram.

Premature end?

Usyk’s reign as undisputed heavyweigh­t world champion may last only weeks, however. Many expect the IBF to take back its belt due to the Ukrainian’s rematch clause with Fury, leaving Usyk with the WBA, WBC and WBO titles.

The IBF’s long-time mandatory challenger is unbeaten Croatian Filip Hrgovic, who is scheduled to †ght Britain’s Daniel Dubois on June 1 in Riyadh. That bout could become an IBF title †ght if the US-based body follows past form. It stripped Fury in December 2015, 10 days after the Briton took that title along with the WBA, WBO and IBO belts from Ukrainian Wladimir Klitschko. Then, as now, there was a rematch clause that ruled out a title †ght with the IBF’s then-mandatory challenger Vyacheslav Glazkov. Fury said he would discuss the potential Usyk rematch, loosely scheduled for October, with his wife and children. “I’ll have a holiday, go home, put it to the wife and kids, I’ll see what I want to do,” he said. “I’m 36 in a few months. I’ve been boxing since I’ve been a child so it is what it is. Where does it all end? A hundred †ghts and brain damage, in a wheelchair? I’m not sure.

“But the one thing is, all the time I’m still loving the game — and I was having fun in there, I was really enjoying myself — then I’ll continue to do it,” said Fury. Usyk said he was expecting the rematch to go ahead — but its value will diminish considerab­ly because the undisputed status will not be in play, another damaging consequenc­e of the territoria­l squabbles that have beset boxing for the past quartercen­tury.

But however the future pans out, Usyk knows that he will forever be remembered as the †rst undisputed champion of the fourbelt era. Boxing fans just hope they don’t need to wait another 25 years for the next.

It’s a big win not only for me, it’s a big win for my country. Nine months I worked. I missed the birth of my daughter, I missed all my family holidays … Now I’m happy

OLEKSANDR USYK

I’ll have a holiday, go home, put it [the rematch option] to the wife and kids. I’m 36 in a few months. I’ve been boxing since I’ve been a child. Where does it all end? A hundred ghts and brain damage, in a wheelchair? I’m not sure

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