Chisora believes he will KO Fury, leaving Deontay Wilder emotional
Via Charles Brun: Derek Chisora believes he has what it takes to beat WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury by knockout on December 3 at Tottenham Hot Spurs Stadium in London.
When looking at Chisora’s slow pace, his chances of taking out Fury are very low. In the last few years, Chisora’s hand speed has disappeared, and he looks like a shadow of his former self.
Chisora, 38, for the most part (33-12, 23 KOs) praises Fury (32-0-1, 23 KOs), which is understandable since the champ threw him a bone that he did do not do. worthy.
Chisora lost three of his last four making him a poor contender to be awarded the title, as it is be rewarded for failure.
Chisora’s only win over the past three years was a questionable 12th-half decision against Kubrat Pulev last July in London.
Many boxing fans felt that Pulev deserved to win that bout because he landed and worked better than a very tired, slow, and old looking Chisora.
If you win, Chisora has his last four fights and is awarded a title against Fury instead of undefeated opponents like Joe Joyce, Frank Sanchez and Filip Hrgovic.
In other sports like the NFL and basketball, you won’t see teams win championships after losing consistently like Chisora. It shows you how boxing is different from more watched sports.
The only sanctioning body with Chisora ranked in the top 15 is the WBC, and it’s disturbing that they rank him given his lack of success in the last four games.
“Life is great, life is good,” Derek Chisora told Frank Warren’s Queensbury Promotion about his fight with WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury on December 3.
“I am the happiest. He’s bipolar because he doesn’t know if he’s coming or going,” Chisora said of Fury. “The guy is a great fighter. He went into a bigger hole and came out a bigger hole and proved everyone wrong.
“You have to take your hat off when people do good. We will never know. We don’t know,” Chisora said when asked if Fury was as good as in their second fight in 2014.
“I know he walks on his hind legs, is good at going forward, from the inside and is a bully in the ring, which is good. You can only adapt yourself to being in the ring with such a man.
“I am not allowed to answer anything about what Frank said. It’s in the contract. They have so much bitterness about Anthony Joshua, and I don’t know why,” Chisora said of some boxing fans who believed he would fight Fury better than Anthony Joshua.
“Is it because there is more responsibility than Tyson Fury? I tried to get that fight, but they said, ‘No, I’m not in their sights,’ Chisora said of Deontay Wilder. “Finally they got into a fight with some white guy [Robert Helenius].
“In the end, you fight your fencing partner and ultimately defeat him by pushing him. I think Deontay Wilder was really emotional. I think Tyson harmed him. You say hello to the guy, and he starts crying.
“Well, don’t get in the fucking ring,” Chisora said in response to being told that Wilder was emotional about boxers getting injured in a boxing match.
“You got into the ring and got paid, damn it. It’s a gladiator sport, man. Don’t enter the ring. People shouldn’t enter the ring if they are really emotional. If they think they will harm someone else’s children, don’t do it.
“Quit boxing and live your life. Because they’re p***sy’s, that’s why,” Chisora said when informed that some boxing fans suggested he retire after the best win of his career over Kubrat Pulev, 41 age.
“God will tell me it’s time to stop, and I will. A great fight. I have to win by knockout,” Chisora said of his fight with Fury on December 3. “100%. Yeah,” Chisora said when asked if he’s capable of taking down Fury.