Los Angeles Times

Wilder is no match for Fury

Tyson Fury, right, dominates with a seventh-round TKO in rematch.

- By Norm Frauenheim

LAS VEGAS — Tyson Fury came into the ring to “Crazy,” Patsy Cline’s country classic.

It’s an old song. But for seven rounds Saturday night, it was a modern hit. It said it all.

Crazy happened in Fury’s stunning seventh-round stoppage of Deontay Wilder in a heavyweigh­t rematch before a sold-out crowd of 15,816 at the MGM Grand. Fury delivered the domination of Wilder that he promised, knocking him down twice, in the third round and again in the fifth, in handing the World Boxing Council champion his first loss.

Fury (30-0-1, 21 knockouts), who weighed in more than 40 pounds heavier than Wilder (42-1-1), was in charge from the outset. In the third, Fury moved forward, throwing big shots that narrowly missed just as Wilder ducked. It was a dangerous game. It was risky. But the risk paid off. Fury floored Wilder with glancing left and right shots off the back of his head. The crowd, predominan­tly Fury fans from his native England, roared.

In the fifth, Wilder was down again, this time from a left to the body. Fury was having his way, making Wilder look more like an amateur than a defending champion. Fury fans didn’t have to sing “God Save the Queen.” It looked as if nothing could save Wilder.

In the sixth, blood began pouring from Wilder’s left

LAS VEGAS — Tyson Fury entered the ring Saturday night on a throne with a crown on his head and walked out of it with the WBC heavyweigh­t championsh­ip belt around his waist.

Fury dominated Deontay Wilder in the highly anticipate­d rematch of the undefeated heavyweigh­ts and forced Wilder’s corner to throw in the towel in the seventh round. Fury took almost every minute of every round, knocked down Wilder twice and landed 58 punches to 18 by Wilder.

“The king has returned,” Fury said in the ring after his victory before leading the sold-out crowd of 15,816 at the MGM Grand in a singing of Don McLean’s “American Pie.”

Fury’s win caps one of the great comeback stories in sports history as Fury battled mental and drug problems five years ago and saw his weight balloon to nearly 400 pounds after he defeated Wladimir Klitschko to become the lineal heavyweigh­t champion.

Before Wilder and Fury made their entrances, Lennox Lewis, Evander Holyfield and Mike Tyson were introduced to a starstudde­d crowd that included Magic Johnson, Jerry West, Jon Gruden and Michael J. Fox.

It was a reminder of a time when the heavyweigh­t champion was a household name in this country and when heavyweigh­t championsh­ip fights rivaled the biggest championsh­ip games in other sports.

After a two-decade hiatus, heavyweigh­t boxing returned to center stage and basked in the national spotlight it used to enjoy.

Not since Tyson, Holyfield and Lewis were facing each other has a heavyweigh­t championsh­ip fight garnered the amount of mainstream and national attention as Saturday’s fight between Wilder and Fury.

It was impossible to turn on the television last week and not see the fight being talked about on ESPN or Fox Sports, co-produders of the bout.

Not only did the fight feel big but it delivered on the hype. From the fighters’ grand entrances to each round, the fight lived up to the billing and probably will lead to a third fight in September or October with a mega-fight against Anthony Joshua, the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO heavyweigh­t champion, in the near future.

Saturday’s fight broke the record for a heavyweigh­t gate in Las Vegas, according to Top Rank president Todd duBoef, with the previous record being the second fight between Lewis and Holyfield in 1999 that drew nearly $17 million at Thomas & Mack Center. That record probably will be broken later this year when Wilder and Fury become boxing’s next great trilogy.

“Deontay Wilder came here tonight and he manned up and he really did show the heart of a champion,” Fury said. “I hit him with a clean right that dropped him and he got back up. He is a warrior. He will be back. He will be champion again, but I will say, the king has returned to the top of the throne!”

It’s appropriat­e that the Lakers will face the Boston Celtics on Sunday before Monday’s memorial at Staples Center for Kobe Bryant.

There was no team Bryant relished playing and beating more than the Celtics.

My favorite memory of Bryant playing the Celtics came Jan. 31, 2010 in Boston when the Lakers came back from an 11-point deficit in the fourth quarter to beat the Celtics, 90-89, on a gamewinnin­g shot by Bryant over Ray Allen.

The highlight, however, came after the game. As Bryant got out of the shower in the visiting locker room, he was mockingly humming Boson’s unofficial anthem, “I’m Shipping Up to Boston” by Dropkick Murphys, over and over again.

When the Celtics routed the Lakers in Game 6 of the 2008 NBA Finals in Boston, Bryant remembered hearing that song constantly so he would play it in the offseason to remember how he felt that night.

“I listened to that song every single day because it just reminded me of that feeling,” Bryant said. “I’m listening to Dropkick Murphys all the time just because I want to remember that feeling.”

Bryant would win his fifth and final title that year when the Lakers defeated the Celtics in Game 7 at Staples Center. It was perhaps the high-water mark of his 20year career.

“If I lost that championsh­ip, I’d be miserable,” Bryant said. “I’d be absolutely miserable.”

The stage for Monday’s memorial for Bryant will be 24-by-24 feet in honor of the number Bryant wore for the last half of his career and will be placed in the center of the Staples Center floor with seats surroundin­g it. The guest list will not only include current and former Lakers, but several players Bryant mentored.

Oregon guard Sabrina Ionescu, who was one of Gianna Bryant’s favorite players, is scheduled to speak before flying up to take on Stanford that night. The Golden State Warriors and Sacramento Kings are scheduled to face each other Tuesday, but many players on the Kings, including coach Luke Walton, who played with Bryant, are scheduled to be at the memorial. Golden State’s Steph Curry is expected to attend. The Memphis Grizzlies play the Clippers on Monday night at Staples Center after the memorial and several players from both teams are scheduled to attend as well.

 ?? EPA ?? Etienne Laurent
EPA Etienne Laurent
 ?? Isaac Brekken Associated Press ?? DEONTAY WILDER was knocked down twice in his rematch against Tyson Fury, in rounds three and five.
Isaac Brekken Associated Press DEONTAY WILDER was knocked down twice in his rematch against Tyson Fury, in rounds three and five.
 ?? Al Bello Getty Images ?? TYSON FURY PUTS Deontay Wilder on the canvas during the third round at Las Vegas. Wilder also went down in the fifth round, and the fight, Wilder’s 11th heavyweigh­t title defense, was stopped in the seventh.
Al Bello Getty Images TYSON FURY PUTS Deontay Wilder on the canvas during the third round at Las Vegas. Wilder also went down in the fifth round, and the fight, Wilder’s 11th heavyweigh­t title defense, was stopped in the seventh.
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