HomeSportsBoxing: Usyk Avoids Shock Defeat Against Verhoeven

Boxing: Usyk Avoids Shock Defeat Against Verhoeven

Ukraine’s unbeaten heavyweight world champion, Oleksandr Usyk, stopped Dutch former kickboxer, Rico Verhoeven, in the last round of a ​WBC title fight, avoiding a boxing upset.

The ‘Glory in Giza’ fight at the ‌Pyramids of Egypt was considered a mismatch, but Verhoeven, whose sole previous professional boxing fight was 12 years ago, tore up the script in mind-boggling fashion from the opening bell.

Action during WBC title fight between Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk (L) and Dutch former kickboxer, Rico Verhoeven (R).

It took until the fourth for Usyk to have a round that was clearly his, but the champion was unable to capitalise on it with the bigger and heavier ​Verhoeven still taking the fight to him.

With Usyk tipping the scales heavier than ever before, and looking strangely lethargic at times, the 39-year-old ​Ukrainian went into the penultimate round needing to pull something out of the bag to be sure of a ⁠win most had taken for granted.

Usyk Avoids Shock Defeat Against Verhoeven2

Scorecards published by The Ring magazine afterwards showed two of the three judges had the fight tied 95-95 going ​into the 11th of 12 rounds and the other had Verhoeven ahead 96-94.

The decisive moment came right at the end, ​with Usyk dropping Verhoeven with a right uppercut and the Dutchman beating the 10 count but not the referee, who stepped in to wave off further punishment.

The ring announcer timed the stoppage at two minutes and 59 seconds of round 11. In the end, the 39-year-old Ukrainian extended his record to 25 unbeaten fights and retained all three titles.

Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk.
Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk.

“This fight was hard. It was a good fight. I was just boxing, my right uppercut, bang. Bang, bang, bang. Thank you, God,” he said, with Britain’s former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua in ​the crowd.

“Right now, in Ukraine, my ​people and my country – there is ⁠bombing. My people are sitting in bomb shelters. My family. My daughter sent me a message: ‘Papa, I love you, you win. I’m afraid.’ I said, ‘Oh my God’.”

Verhoeven was fighting only for the WBC belt, ‌with ⁠Usyk risking also the loss of his WBA and IBF ones, which would have been declared vacant titles had he been beaten.

“I thought it was an early stoppage, but in the end it’s not up to me,” Verhoeven, 37, said in an interview. “The referee knows that we are almost at the end of the round, so or let me go out on my shield or ​let the bell go.

“But you know … I was already super thankful for the opportunity as well,” he added, pitching for a rematch.

SourceReuters
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