“I’m in my prime now,” Wilder said on Cigar Talk. “I started boxing very late. I started at 21.”
At this stage of his career, that argument has become his main defence against the idea that time has caught him. Unfortunately, the problem is not confidence. The problem is that the ring no longer supports the claim.
Wilder’s recent run has been defined by long stretches where his right hand never arrives. In four of his last six bouts, he has lost, and the defeats have been clear rather than competitive.
In December 2023, Joseph Parker controlled him over twelve rounds, managing distance and pace while Wilder followed without solutions. Six months later, Zhilei Zhang applied steady pressure and stopped him in the fifth round. In both fights, Wilder was slower to react and unable to change the direction once the pattern was set.
The win over Tyrrell Herndon did little to shift that picture. Wilder scored two knockdowns and finished the fight in the seventh round, but the performance did not resemble a return to elite form. In earlier years, that fight would not have reached the middle rounds.
That gap has been widening for a while.
At his peak, Wilder just needed one opening. When the power shows up now, it’s usually too late.
That reality matters when discussing a possible fight with Usyk. Usyk doesn’t wait for mistakes. He drains fighters, takes their timing, and forces them to work at his pace for every minute of every round. Against that kind of opponent, Wilder’s dependence on a single release point becomes a weakness.
Wilder’s career doesn’t need rescuing. The title run mattered, the knockouts were real, but insisting he’s still in his prime no longer sounds like confidence. It sounds like resistance.
If this fight happens, belief won’t decide it.
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2026-01-03 17:42:42