Usyk’s transition through the division barely slowed. He had a couple of entry fights: Chazz Witherspoon, Derek Chisora and then went straight through the main men. Joshua twice. Fury twice. Stopped Dubois. The work’s been clean, clinical, and complete.
Wilder’s run went the other way. The Fury losses exposed real gaps, discipline, balance, reaction speed. Since then, he’s looked heavy and slower to reset. The right hand still cracks, but everything before it looks like waiting. He talks about being patient and staying relaxed, but that’s another way of saying he doesn’t have many tools left. Even he seems to know he’s not winning rounds against Usyk.
Usyk Has the Leverage, Wilder Brings the Danger
Usyk’s team says talks are live. U.S. dates are being looked at, Vegas and Los Angeles both mentioned. Spring feels likely. They want a return with value, not a layup. Wilder, for his part, calls it steady progress, code for waiting on the financials. He’s the B side now. That’s just reality.
The fight only works on one axis: danger versus control. Usyk chips away at punchers until they stop taking chances. He pressures with movement, not volume, and breaks them by timing. Wilder has to gamble early, before the rhythm locks him out completely. If he waits, it’s just punishment and fatigue from round three on.
And if it goes wrong, it won’t just be another loss. It’s the last one that matters. Another clean defeat turns him into a checkpoint — the name younger heavyweights mention to justify their own raise. That’s the real danger now.

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2026-01-01 02:33:10