Derek Chisora denied fairytale ending by Deontay Wilder in ‘barbaric’ slugfest
Derek Chisora was denied his perfect sendoff by Deontay Wilder at London’s O2 Arena on Saturday night.
The heavyweight titans exchanged three knockdowns in an enthralling fight that was full of controversy.

In the end, Wilder got his hand raised via split decision with scorecards of 115-111, 115-113 in his favour, while a third judge sided with Chisora by a margin of 115-112.
Chisora didn’t fully commit to confirming his retirement in the immediate aftermath, but he had promised to hang up his gloves before the fight.
And if it is to be Chisora’s last dance, then he went out the way he came in: swinging.
“Some of the rounds were very close,” said a dejected Chisora post-fight.
“I’m just upset that I came out of the ropes.
“If I didn’t come out of the ropes, I would have won that fight…
“I’m going to go home and do the school run.”
Chisora was tangled in the ropes on more than one occasion.
At the end of the second round, Wilder forced ‘Del Boy’ over the top rope and began raining down shots.
As he did, Chisora’s trainer Alexis Demetriades stormed the ring and attempted to break them up while referee Mark Bates wrestled the two behemoths apart.

Under British Boxing Board of Control rules, seconds and unauthorised personnel are not allowed in the ring during an active round.
It is down to the referee’s discretion to choose whether to issue a warning or a disqualification.
Thankfully, for Chisora, Bates let it slide, although Demetriades got a ticking off from General Secretary of the Board Robert Smith.
Chisora was then sent hurtling through the ropes again in round eight after eating a clubbing right hand, in the first knockdown of the fight.
Seconds later, Wilder was deducted a point for, this time, pushing his adversary through the ropes.
There was more drama in round 11 when Wilder scored another knockdown through the ropes.

But in a moment straight out of a Rocky Balboa film, Chisora turned the tables with a clubbing right hand to send Wilder tumbling to the canvas.
The 12th and final round saw both men throw hell to the wind in a grandstand finish that had the packed-out O2 Arena on its feet.
talkSPORT’s Gareth A Davies perhaps summed up the fight best.
“It’s been a very odd, barbaric, peculiar 50th fight for these two men,” said the long-serving journalist.
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