Fight Name: | The Brawl To Settle It All |
Fight Date: | 22 December 2018 |
Location: | The O2 Arena, Greenwich, London, UK |
Titles: | WBC Silver and WBO International heavyweight titles |
Fighter1: | Dillian Whyte |
Nickname1: | "The Body Snatcher" |
Hometown1: | Brixton, London, UK |
Record1: | 24–1 (17 KOs) |
Height1: | 6 ft 4 in |
Weight1: | 246+1/2 lbs |
Style1: | Orthodox |
Recognition1: | WBC/WBO No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight WBA/TBRB No. 4 Ranked Heavyweight WBC Silver and WBO International heavyweight champion |
Fighter2: | Derek Chisora |
Nickname2: | "War" |
Hometown2: | Finchley, London, UK |
Record2: | 29–8 (21 KOs) |
Height2: | 6 ft 2 in |
Weight2: | 246+1/4 lbs |
Style2: | Orthodox |
Recognition2: | IBF No. 4 Ranked Heavyweight WBA No. 5 Ranked Heavyweight WBC No. 7 Ranked Heavyweight WBO No. 11 Ranked Heavyweight TBRB No. 8 Ranked Heavyweight |
Result: | Whyte wins via 11th-round KO |
Dillian Whyte vs Derek Chisora II, billed as The Brawl To Settle It All, was a professional boxing match contested between WBC Silver and WBO International heavyweight champion, Dillian Whyte, and Derek Chisora. The bout took place on 22 December 2018 at The O2 Arena, with Whyte winning by knockout in the eleventh round.
Whyte and Chisora first fought in 2016, with Whyte defending his WBC International title at Manchester Arena on the undercard of the Anthony Joshua vs. Éric Molina heavyweight title fight. The fight was a WBC "eliminator", held at the time by Deontay Wilder. Whyte won by a controversial split decision with scores of 115–113, 115–114 in his favour, and 115–114 in favour of Chisora.[1]
On 24 March 2018, at The O2 Arena, Whyte defeated former heavyweight champion Lucas Browne via 6th-round KO.[2] On the undercard, Chisora defeated Zakaria Azzouzi, winning by stoppage in the second round.[3] On 28 July 2018, at The O2 Arena, Whyte defeated former heavyweight champion Joseph Parker, winning by unanimous decision.[4] In the chief support, Chisora defeated former world title challenger Carlos Takam via 8th-round TKO, setting up a potential rematch between the two later in the year.[5]
In mid October 2018, Whyte and fellow heavyweight contender Luis Ortiz appeared to have a war of words and called each other out, with Ortiz stating he would come to the UK and fight Whyte on 22 December, a potential PPV date allocated to the possible Whyte vs. Chisora rematch. After hearing this, Chisora came out saying 'No one wants to see that [Whyte-Ortiz]', that he was 'the Money Man' and Whyte should fight him if he wants to earn more money.[6] Hearn also stated despite Ortiz putting his name forward, Chisora was the front-runner to fight Whyte.[7] On 22 October, Whyte told Sky Sports that Chisora needed to sign a deal quick or he would look at other options.[8] On 1 November 2018, the rematch between Whyte and Chisora was announced to take place on 22 December at The O2 Arena on Sky Sports Box Office.[9]
From the opening bell, Whyte and Chisora both started fast, exchanging punches early, with Chisora closing the distance and applying constant pressure, with Whyte counter punching on the back foot. As the rounds progressed, Chisora outworked Whyte with his offence, landing hooks to body and head, as Whyte worked behind the jab, boxing at range. In the middle rounds, Chisora continued setting the pace, leading with hooks and landing combinations, with Whyte responding with clean straight shots from the outside, and trading power punches on the inside. In the eighth, referee Marcus McDonnell deducted a point off Chisora for a low blow. In the later rounds, Whyte and Chisora began to fight up close, with both men exchanging a series of punches aggressively. In the eleventh, referee Marcus McDonnell deducted a second point off Chisora for use of the elbow. Later in the round, Whyte connected with a devastating left hook, which knocked out Chisora. The referee reached the count of ten, giving Whyte the win by KO in the eleventh round. At the time of stoppage, two judges had Chisora ahead 95–94 and one judge had Whyte ahead 95–94.[10]
Following Whyte's win, in the post-fight interview, Whyte challenged unified heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua who was in attendance at ringside to a rematch next in 2019. Joshua replied stating that if an undisputed title fight against Deontay Wilder did not materialise, then he would defend his world titles against Whyte, who then stormed off mid-discussion.[11]
Weight Class | vs. | Method | Round | Time | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heavyweight | Dillian Whyte (c) | def. | Derek Chisora | 11/12 | 1:56 | |||
Flyweight | Charlie Edwards | def. | Cristofer Rosales (c) | 12/12 | ||||
Featherweight | Ryan Walsh (c) | def. | Reece Bellotti | 12/12 | ||||
Light-heavyweight | Joshua Buatsi (c) | def. | Renold Quinlan | 1/10 | 1:50 | |||
Heavyweight | Carlos Takam | def. | Senad Gashi | TKO | 7/10 | 1:40 | ||
Heavyweight | David Price | def. | Tom Little | TKO | 4/8 | 2:38 | ||
Middleweight | Linus Udofia | def. | Pavol Garaj | 6/6 | ||||
Heavyweight | Fabio Wardley | def. | Phil Williams | TKO | 3/4 | 1:58 |