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What we want each time we sit down to watch a main-event prizefight is something historic, something violent, something unforgettable.

With stakes higher than any other bout of the past generation – the undisputed heavyweight title of the world – Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury delivered upon that promise in their first meeting, and that May 18 split-decision triumph by Usyk is BoxingScene’s Fight of the Year.

Fury v Usyk 2: Lennox Lewis backs Tyson Fury to win rematch if he is  'heavier' - BBC Sport

The value of that victory was seen again last week, when Ukraine’s Usyk 23-0 (14 KOs) topped the May triumph with a more convincing unanimous-decision (116-112 on all three scorecards) against the far heavier, taller and longer Fury.

Usyk, a 37-year-old former undisputed cruiserweight and Olympic heavyweight champion, has spent his career remaining in indefatigable shape while developing a master boxing mind that solved all of the best cruiserweights of his era, set up back-to-back victories over former champion Anthony Joshua and broke the spirit of young lion Daniel DuBois, the new IBF heavyweight champion.

Anthony Joshua versus Tyson Fury now looks likely for 2025.

The battle of Britain has eluded fans for many years and is now undoubtedly past its best before date, however it will still be a mega-fight that can fill a stadium.

Why it could happen now is because both men are out of the title picture and looking for big fights before retirement. Joshua lost twice to Oleksandr Usyk before going on a run of four wins to get a shot at Daniel Dubois’ IBF world title. He was knocked out in five. Fury has recently suffered the same fate against Usyk, failing to beat the Ukrainian over 24 rounds.

Fury aims more digs at Joshua - Punch Newspapers

It is now widely agreed that the match-up is the best out there for both men. How it plays out is anybody’s guess, but there are some shared opponents who can provide good insight.

Swedish southpaw Otto Wallin took Fury the distance back in 2019, inflicting a near-fight ending cut on the Brit before losing on the scorecards. After a run of six victories, he faced Joshua but was stopped inside five rounds.

Tyson Fury’s rematch with Oleksandr Usyk is today, as the Briton aims to claim the unified heavyweight titles – seven months after suffering his first professional loss, Tyson Fury’s rematch with Oleksandr Usyk is today, as the Briton aims to claim the unified heavyweight titles – seven months after suffering his first professional loss, against the Ukrainian.

In May, Usyk won a split decision against Fury to become the division’s first undisputed champion in 24 years. Now, the pair return to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where Usyk defends the gold against the “Gypsy King” – minus the IBF belt, which he vacated in spring.

Oleksandr Usyk Vs. Tyson Fury 2: Date, Time And How To Watch

Fury fought impressively in May, leading the fight after the midway stage, but a phenomenal rally from Usyk secured victory, keeping the former cruiserweight king unbeaten. Usyk, 37, even came close to stopping Fury, 36, in round nine, and will take great confidence from that in the rematch.

The pre-fight press conference brought a ridiculous, 12-minute face-off between Fury and Usyk, who both refused to back down. There was a much shorter face-off at Friday’s weigh-in, after both boxers tipped the scales at career-heaviest weights, and there is now a dispute over Fury’s beard after Usky’s camp flagged it as a potential concern.

Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury go enta ring togeda again on 21 December for Saudi Arabia.

Di rival heavyweights bin fight six months ago for Riyadh, Usyk beat Fury wit split decision.

Dat night bin dey historic for Usyk wey become di modern era first four-belt heavyweight champion and dem go do am again.

Fury out for revenge in boxing rematch against Usyk: preview, fight time |  Boxing News | Al Jazeera

Di big question na weda Fury go fit revenge im only loss or Usyk incredible, stainless career go continue?

Evritin you need sabi about di WBA, WBO and WBC heavyweight world title fight dey inside dis tori.

Tyson is a legend of the boxing game – becoming the youngest ever heavyweight champion in 1986 at the age of 20.

Following that Iron Mike won a spectacular six heavyweight championships throughout his career before hanging up his gloves in 2005.

But some 19 years later and a number of boxing fans are convinced he could still get the better of most modern fighters

After watching him throw some sharp punches and dart around the ring, one fan wrote on social media: “Mike Tyson could still beat [Deontay] Wilder.”

Tyson Fury was named after Mike Tyson - now legend is training Francis  Ngannou - Mirror Online

While a second added: “This guy would collect every belt in the world and hold it for a decade plus.”

A third chimed in, writing: “He floors Tyson Fury in the 6th round.”

And a fourth claimed: “No doubt Mike could be the heavyweight champ right now.”

Tyson did come out of retirement back in 2020 for an exhibition against fellow legend Roy Jones Jr.