Sunday News

It’s a knockout!

Intrigue is building as today marks the start of a series of fights between big punching heavyweigh­ts. By Tim Dahlberg.

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They are a flawed group at best, the heavyweigh­ts who will be vying for your attention — and money — over the next few months. Unpredicta­ble, too, although that just adds to the intrigue of a trio of fights that will either make boxing’s big men mustsee TV or relegate the division to the doldrums once again.

Deontay Wilder is awkward but dangerous, a string bean of a heavyweigh­t with a crushing right hand that can change everything in a fraction of a second. Luis Ortiz is a big puncher, too, although there are questions about both his stamina and age (40) going into this weekend’s rematch with Wilder that serves as an appetizer for what comes next.

That would be Anthony Joshua and Andy Ruiz Jr on December 7 in Saudi Arabia. Another piece of the heavyweigh­t crown will be at stake when the portly Ruiz tries to replicate his upset win over a British fighter who staked a claim as the best of the lot until Ruiz stopped him in June in New York.

And then there’s the wild card known as Tyson Fury, who can talk as well as he can box. Fury claims to be the lineal heavyweigh­t champion and can make his case to be even more than that if his scheduled February rematch with Wilder goes off as planned.

Three months, three different heavyweigh­t title fights. And, just maybe, some clarity in a division that excites boxing fans like no other.

Or maybe not because, after all, this is boxing. ‘‘This is what it’s all about in the heavyweigh­t division. The big boys,’’ Wilder said. ‘‘One fight, one night, one blow can end it all.’’

Wilder will look to land that blow when he meets Ortiz today in a pay-per-view fight that could help provide some clarity to the top of the heavyweigh­t division. Ortiz had Wilder hurt and nearly out in their fight last year before Wilder came back to stop him in the 10th round.

The rematch is just as unpredicta­ble, although Wilder is confident he will be the last man standing. If so, he already has agreed to meet Fury in another rematch in February of their wildly entertaini­ng first fight.

Big punchers taking big chances. It’s a formula guaranteed to please even the most cynical boxing fan.

‘‘I’m a knockout artist. That’s what I plan to do, to knock you out,’’ Wilder said. ‘‘That’s plain and simple.’’

Wilder has done that throughout his career, racking up 40 knockouts in a 41-0-1 record marred only by his draw with Fury. It’s a formula that has worked so well he will be making the 10th defence of his piece of the heavyweigh­t title when he meets Ortiz at the MGM Grand Garden arena.

For all the knockouts and title defenses, though, he’s not the unquestion­ed heavyweigh­t champion of the world. There are others who claim belts, although the upcoming series of three fights should bring some order to the top of the division.

Even as Wilder and Ortiz prepare to meet, Ruiz and Joshua are deep into training for their fight in Saudi Arabia. The location is a bizarre one for a heavyweigh­t title fight, but there’s no mistaking that whoever emerges victorious can make his own case as the best in the world.

Ruiz came out of nowhere to put himself in the mix, becoming the first fighter of Mexican heritage to win a heavyweigh­t title when he scored a shocking knockout of Joshua after being signed as a late replacemen­t. Ruiz, who carries a lot of his weight in the midsection, doesn’t look like a top heavyweigh­t but his fast hands and power combined to drop Joshua four times before the fight ended in the seventh round.

Fury, meanwhile, is coming off a bloody win against Sweden’s Otto Wallin and is eager to win a rematch of his own. He out-boxed Wilder in December last year for most of 12 rounds but was dropped twice

— the final time

 ??  ?? Above: Andy Ruiz Jr swings at Anthony Joshua during their heavyweigh­t title fight at Madison Square Garden, New York, in June. Tyson Fury, right.
Above: Andy Ruiz Jr swings at Anthony Joshua during their heavyweigh­t title fight at Madison Square Garden, New York, in June. Tyson Fury, right.
 ?? AP GETTY IMAGES ?? Deontay Wilder, left, and Luis Ortiz trade punches during their WBC bout in New York last year.
AP GETTY IMAGES Deontay Wilder, left, and Luis Ortiz trade punches during their WBC bout in New York last year.
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