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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Sport
Bryan Armen Graham

Oleksandr Usyk v Daniel Dubois: undisputed heavyweight championship – as it happened

Oleksandr Usyk celebrates after defeating Dubois in 5 rounds.
Oleksandr Usyk celebrates after defeating Dubois in 5 rounds. Photograph: Andrew Couldridge/Action Images/Reuters

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That’s all for now. Thanks as always for following along and be sure to read Donald McRae’s ringside report and join us in a few hours’ time for our round-by-round coverage of the WBC welterweight title fight between Manny Pacquiao and Mario Barrios in Las Vegas.

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“I have to commend him on his performance,” Dubois says. “I gave everything I had. There were probably a few things I could have sharpened up on. But take no credit away from the man, I’ll be back.”

He’s asked if he thought he should have targeted Usyk more to the body like his corner was telling him to do between rounds.

“I was just fighting, man,” he says. “I was in a fight and I was just trying to figure out round by round, but it is what it is. I’ll be back.”

Dubois’ co-trainer Don Charles reserves high praise for Usyk, agreeing that his fighter was simply in with an all-time great tonight.

“Most definitely, that was never in doubt,” Charles says. “We tried to get going. He’s a young champion, Daniel Dubois. Twenty-seven years old, remarkable what he’s achieved to date. He’ll be back from this, stronger. That’s a great champion, a generational great. If you’re going to lose, lose someone like that, you understand? He’ll be back from this.”

Adds Dubois: I want to thank everyone for coming out. I gave my best. We’ll go back to the drawing board and come again.”

Frank Warren, who promotes Dubois, echoes the praise for Usyk, saying: “Oleksandr Usyk is a modern-day legend. He’s an unbelievable fighter. In any generation, he’d be a great fighter. And I take my hat off to him tonight. You know, Daniel was ready for it. He was up and trained hard. No complaints, no excuses. The better man won on the night. He is a fabulous, fabulous champion.”

“Thirty-eight is a young guy, remember!” a triumphant Usyk says. “Thirty-eight, it’s only the start!”

The undisputed heavyweight champion thanks Jesus Christ, his team and the Wembley crowd, then dedicates the win to his people.

“Next, I don’t know,” he says. “I want a rest. I want to be at home with my family, my wife, my children. I want to rest now. Maybe two, three months, I want to rest. Just a rest.”

Then?

“Maybe it’s Tyson Fury,” Usyk says. “Maybe we have three options. Derek Chisora. And Anthony Joshua. Maybe Joseph Parker? I cannot say now, because I want to go back home.”

Usyk wins by KO 5!

Dubois is dropped by with a chopping right hook to the temple that he never sees coming. He beats the 10 count, but Usyk wastes no time closing the show. The Ukrainian floors Dubois with a heat-seeking left counter to the chin that sends his mouthguard flying. Referee Michael Griffin waves it off before he can complete the count and correctly.

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Round 4

Usyk is countering beautifully. He’s picking Dubois apart with that quick left hand. Just masterful work. The easiest round to score so far. Compubox’s punch statistics bear out a somewhat even fight: Usyk has landed 28 of 67 power shots (42%) compared to 22 of 67 for Dubois (33%).

Guardian’s unofficial score: Usyk 10-9 Dubois (Usyk 39-37 Dubois)

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Round 3

Dubois rebounded nicely at the start of the third. Usyk’s footwork and mobility continue to create headaches for the bigger man, but he’s landed enough scoring blows to shade the round on our card. Good fight.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Usyk 9-10 Dubois (Usyk 29-28 Dubois)

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Round 2

All class from Usyk, whose lead hand is really neutralizing Dubois’ jab, which he hasn’t been able to get going. The Ukrainian clips Dubois with a flush counter left hook as he rushes inside. Another one-two combo by Usyk sends the crowd in a frenzy. Then Usyk wobbles Dubois with a straight left at the end of the round. That might have hurt Dubois but the bell comes before Usyk can press the issue.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Usyk 10-9 Dubois (Usyk 20-18 Dubois)

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Round 1

And we’re off. They meet in the center of the right, the southpaw Usyk and the orthodox Dubois creating mirror images, touching gloves with pawing lead hands. Dubois lands a couple of crisp jabs early. Usyk moving very well in and out of range, showing that signature footwork. Dubois is throwing and landing more, but Usyk is starting to slipp jabs through the guard and really scoring in the back end of this opening round. Usyk uncorks a violent three-punch combination in the final seconds but most of the damage was swallowed up by Dubois’ guard. A close round but Usyk nicks it.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Usyk 10-9 Dubois (Usyk 10-9 Dubois)

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Buffer has made the fighter introductions. The final instructions have been given by referee Mike Griffin, the seconds are out and we’ll pick it up with round-by-round coverage from here!

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And now here’s Usyk. The unbeaten heavyweight champion walks slowly to the ring to a haunting version of Ave Maria by Tommee Profitt and Stanaj. He’s wearing a silver hooded robe and looks all business. Nothing new there. He makes the final approach to Браття by Василь Жадан, one of his more familiar ringwalk songs.

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The lights have gone down and Daniel Dubois is making his ring entrance. A half-dozen stage pyrotechnicians are doing their thing on stage to a Chase & Status banger. And now here’s Dubois, making the long way to the ring wearing a sleeveless black shirt with black shorts. He looks calm and composed, making his final approach as Dennis Brown’s Want To Be No General blasts from the stadium sound system.

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Lawrence Okolie has beaten Kevin Lerena by a unanimous decision in the final undercard bout. Now it’s time for the main event. Ring announcer Michael Buffer has taken his position and we’ll have the playing of a couple of national anthems before the fighters make their entrances.

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Could be something, could be nothing. But Daniel Dubois didn’t arrive at Wembley until around 8.20pm tonight, less than two hours before the scheduled ring entrances and long after Oleksandr Usyk had started having his hands wrapped.

Our man in the building Donald McRae has checked in with a dispatch from ringside.

It’s good to be ringside for this one as at the last few big shows in the UK most of us humble boxing hacks have been shunted up into the gods. Ninety thousand fans are expected tonight, which is 6,000 less than last September when Daniel Dubois shocked Anthony Joshua and many in British boxing by crushing his older rival. But it’s still an impressive crowd as Dubois lacks the kind of vast following Joshua and Tyson Fury have built up over the last dozen years.

The main undercard fight between Lawrence Okolie, campaigning as a heavyweight now, and the South African Kevin Lerena is approaching the later rounds. Okolie can be a destructive puncher and Lerena knocked down Dubois multiple times during their slu-fest in 2022. But this scrap is a more typical Okokie bout – low on thrills and high on tedium. At the moment there is a low hum around Wembley which only breaks out into something more enthusiastic when the bell rings for the end of another round and one of the usual old fight-night ditties is cranked up.

In contrast to Okolie and Lerena, Jake Paul caught the attention of the crowd who responded with deep and sustained booing when he arrived 30 minutes ago with his fiancée, the Dutch speed skating star Jutta Leerdam. But we’re all really just waiting for the lights to dim and Usyk and Dubois to make their ring walks. The atmosphere then, unlike now, will be electric …

Also here at Wembley is Hamzah Sheeraz, the rising British star fresh off his career-best win last Saturday in New York. Fighting in the main event of a Ring Magazine card at Louis Armstrong Stadium – the first boxing show ever held at the US Open tennis venue – the 26-year-old from Ilford dropped Edgar Berlanga twice in the fourth round before finishing him just 17 seconds into the fifth. It was a spectacular 168lb debut for Sheeraz, who rebounded from a frustrating draw at middleweight in February with a headling-grabbing performance under new trainer Andy Lee.

The stars are out tonight at Wembley. An expected crowd of 90,000 are here to watch Dubois attempt to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis.

Lawrence Okolie and Kevin Lerena are just under way in the final preliminary of the evening, a scheduled 12-round heavyweight bout. Before that, Daniel Lapin extended his unbeaten run to 12-0 with a mostly forgettable points win over Lewis Edmondson in a 10-round light heavyweight scrap. The Ukrainian southpaw edged it on two of the three scorecards, 96–94, while the third judge had it even at 95–95, a reflection of a fight short on clean action and high on clinches.

Edmondson, coming off two strong wins including a breakout performance against Dan Azeez, struggled to find rhythm against the awkward 6ft 6in Lapin. Both men were guilty of excessive holding, and referee Marcus McDonnell repeatedly intervened to separate them and issue warnings. Lapin landed occasional left hands, while Edmondson responded with sporadic right hooks, but neither fighter was able to impose their will. The contest deteriorated into a maul by the later rounds, drawing ironic cheers from the crowd. In the end, Lapin’s slightly sharper work down the stretch proved just enough.

Preamble

The stakes could hardly be higher. On Saturday night at Wembley Stadium, Oleksandr Usyk and Daniel Dubois will square off once again, this time with every major heavyweight title on the line and a crowd of 90,000 watching from the stands.

It’s been nearly two years since their first encounter in Wroclaw, where Usyk weathered a contentious low blow and stopped Dubois in the ninth round. That bout ended with more questions than answers. Was Dubois denied a fair shot by referee Luis Pabon’s ruling? Or did Usyk simply prove, as he has time and again, that he’s one of the sport’s most complete fighters?

Since then, the Ukrainian southpaw has only strengthened his case. Back-to-back wins over Tyson Fury in Saudi Arabia made him the first undisputed world heavyweight champion in nearly a quarter-century. He briefly relinquished his IBF title to pursue a rematch with Fury – a belt that eventually made its way to Dubois – but on Saturday he has the chance to collect it once again and become a two-time undisputed champion.

Usyk has made a habit of dismantling British heavyweights, from Anthony Joshua to Derek Chisora to Fury, and arrives in London unbeaten as a pro, a perfect 23-0 with 14 wins coming inside the distance. He’s heavier than ever, but still moves with the grace of a former cruiserweight king and Olympic gold medallist.

Dubois, however, insists this time will be different. The 27-year-old Londoner is riding high off three straight knockout wins, capped by a stunning stoppage of Joshua last September at this very stadium. He’s been rebuilt, rededicated and restructured under the ever-watchful eye of his father, Stan Dubois, who remains the architect of his career.

Still, questions linger. Can Dubois cope with Usyk’s jab and angles? Can he close the distance without getting picked apart? Or will Saturday mark yet another masterclass from the man who continues to outwit and outfight the best of Britain?

Lennox Lewis remains the last British man to unify the heavyweight division. If Dubois can spring the upset, he’ll do what Fury and Joshua could not and join Lewis in the history books.

The main event ringwalks are expected around 9.45pm local time. Stick with us for full coverage, analysis and live round-by-round updates as it happens.

Bryan will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s Donald McRae’s lookahead to tonight’s main event.

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