Chisora laughs it off
Chisora never tried to rewrite history. When Fury’s name came up, his response was immediate and crude.
“He beat my ass three times.”
On the podcast, when Rick Reeno pushed the point further, Chisora shut the door completely.
“F*** that. We’re not talking about that motherfer, I swear to God. He whooped my ass three times, whooped Wilder’s ass three times. We’re not talkin’ about him. F him.”
There was no bitterness in it. Just closure. Chisora treated the Fury chapter as finished business, not something that needed defending or explaining years later.
Deontay Wilder escalates
Wilder refused to let it rest. When Chisora said Fury deserved credit and reminded him he had been ringside for two of their fights, Wilder snapped back.
“He ain’t whoop me twice at all.”
From there, the response turned into a full indictment.
“You’re only seeing what you saw. He didn’t win nothing. They gave it to him. I can’t think about the third one, but the two of ’em, he definitely cheated. I got proof and evidence of that.”
Wilder went further, tying the accusations to a future project.
“When I do my documentary and my movie about it, it’s going to be presented. I will bring the people and the artifacts and everything I know.”
He then challenged Fury directly.
“Why you think he can’t come back to America now? The man cheated. He is the biggest cheater in boxing history if you look him up. You will see it. And if I’m lying, then please tell him to sue me for defamation of character so I can have the proof. I want that. I can’t wait on it.”
Wilder pushed the argument into race and officiating.
“Being a black man with dark skin, it’s harder to believe me than to believe a white man. And then that first fight, the referee, that’s white supremacy. What he did. He said, ‘what’s best for boxing.’ No, your job is to count his ass out. He gave him an extra 15 count. It is what it is. I speak with truth, heart, and passion.”
He repeated the core claim again later, unchanged.
“He didn’t whoop me twice at all. I’m telling you what I know. You’re only seeing what you saw. He didn’t win nothing, they gave it to him.”
Chisora’s response ended with a laugh. Wilder’s never did. That difference is the story. One fighter accepts damage, loss, and the limits of time. The other keeps reopening old fights with new explanations.
Fury has not answered these latest allegations…yet. When he does, it will definitely not be quiet.
For Wilder, this fight is still in his head heading into April. Fighters who argue with past defeats often struggle when plans break down in the ring. Against Chisora’s pressure, timing must come early. If it does not, the noise in Wilder’s head may be louder than anything coming from across the ropes.
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