The Scotsman

America calling Whyte after triumph as promoter targets ‘colossal’ fight against Wilder

- By JOHN DEVINE

Dillian Whyte could fight in America next after he took revenge on Alexander Povetkin with a fourth-round stoppage in Gibraltar on Saturday.

It ensured the 32-year-old put his name back in the hat for a world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip shot, with the Brixton boxer once more the WBC mandatory challenger.

With Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury set for a twin-unificatio­n fight in 2021, Whyte's wait for a world title bout is expected to go on but he could return to action quickly this summer, according to Eddie Hearn.

Deontay Wilder, who has not been back in the ring since he lost to Fury last February, has long been mooted as a future opponent and the pair could come to blows if the Matchroom promoter gets his way.

Hearn said: "We called for the Deontay Wilder fight for a long, long time and he actually DM'D Dillian Whyte and told him he would never give him that fight. And now he got knocked out (by Fury) he is calling for the fight with Dillian Whyte, so, for me, that is a stadium fight, a colossal fight.

"That was a lot of pressure and I'd like to get him back out quickly in the summer and maybe go over to the States and have a big fight. The ultimate aim has always been for Dillian Whyte to challenge for the world heavyweigh­t title and everyone knows in boxing he is a handful for anyone in the division.

"It was about getting his career back on track, the world title ambitions back on track and coming back from that knockout wasn't easy."

In front of 500 fans at the Europa Point Sports Complex, Whyte was eager to make up for lost time after two delays since he lost to the Russian in shock fashion at Matchroom Boxing headquarte­rs in Brentwood last August.

One of those postponeme­nts was due to Povetkin contractin­g coronaviru­s in November and after Wembley was pencilled in to host the rematch, it was eventually switched to British overseas territory due to coronaviru­s regulation­s. The 41-year-old

veteran was rocked during the opening three minutes but managed to hold on and showed his trademark durability in bruising second and third rounds too.

Whyte eventually got the better of Povetkin in the fourth with a brutal knockout blow which saw the fight stopped to inflict only a third-ever defeat on the Russian after previous losses to Wladimir Klitschko and Joshua.

After taking his record to 28-0-2, the Londoner is relaxed about the future but eager to get his chance at a world heavyweigh­t title. "I am ready to go again if he wants it again. If he wants the rematch, I'll pay the right

money and we'll go again," Whyte said. "Eddie likes to put me in these hard fights. It is time to get me an easy fight, so I can make some dead money and not take so much risk. But I want the world title!"

Whyte grabbed a stool for rival Povetkin straight after the bout and may have to sit on the sidelines himself while Joshua and Fury battle twice later in 2021 as expected.

If that is the case, the 32-year-old could look to face another journeyman or get his chance in America against one of Wilder or potentiall­y Andy Ruiz Jr, while Oleksandr Usyk and Joe Joyce may also prove eventual opponents.

 ??  ?? 0 Dillian Whyte inflicted only the third-ever defeat on Russian Alexander Povetkin
0 Dillian Whyte inflicted only the third-ever defeat on Russian Alexander Povetkin

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