
Oleksandr Usyk cements his legacy as an all-time heavyweight great with brutal knock out of Daniel Dubois
Usyk had shown his class during a one-sided contest in Krakow in 2023, where Dubois was adjudged to have landed an illegal low blow in the fifth round, but the Ukrainian had been warned throughout fight week he would face a 'different' boxer on this occasion.
Yet, the undefeated 38-year-old again proved too strong for Dubois. After Usyk enjoyed the better of the opening four rounds, he produced a masterful fifth-round finish to further cement his status as one of boxing's all-time greats.
After Usyk put Dubois down with a powerful right punch, the British boxer bravely made it back to his feet but was floored again a matter of seconds later by a huge left hook to lose for a third time.
It earned Usyk the 24th win of a stellar professional career and ensured he got his hands back on the IBF title to add to his WBA, WBO and WBC belts and become undisputed in the blue riband division for a second time, in what was dubbed his penultimate bout.
Usyk spoke to the Wembley fans after his latest big win and he didn't waste any time in calling out potential opponents for his next fight.
"Maybe it's Tyson Fury,' declared Usyk. "Maybe we have three choices, Derek Chisora and Anthony Joshua. Maybe Joseph Parker. Listen, I cannot now say because I want to go back home.
"Nothing is next. It's enough, next, I don't know. I want to rest. My family, my wife, my children, I want to rest now. Two or three months, I want to just rest."
Daniel Dubois spoke to DAZN and admitted he was beaten by the better man.
"I have to commend him on the performance, I gave everything I had. Take no credit away from that man, I'll be back,' said Dubois.
"I was just fighting, trying to pick up round by round. It is what it is."
Promoter Frank Warren paid tribute to Usyk, as he suggested New Zealand's WBO heavyweight champion Joseph Parker will be the next opponent for the Ukranian.
"Usyk is a modern day legend. In any generation he would be a great fighter,' said Warren.

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The 42
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Peerless in his own era, Oleksandr Usyk would have held his own in any of them
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As an amateur in 2006, aged 19, Usyk won a European Championship bronze medal as a middleweight (75kg) before moving up to light-heavy (81kg) in 2008 and, eventually, to heavy (91kg), where he won Olympic gold at London 2012. But heavyweight in the amateurs is still significantly smaller than heavyweight in the pros: Anthony Joshua took gold at those same London Games up at super-heavy (91+kg), the limitless weight at which Tyson Fury and Daniel Dubois also boxed throughout their senior amateur careers. A year after his London gold, Usyk turned pro as a cruiserweight, which has the same cap (91kg/200lbs) as heavyweight in the amateurs. While cruiserweight doesn't have quite the same historical depth as the divisions above and below it — it was established only in 1979 as a bridge between light-heavyweight (175lbs) and the sport's increasingly huge heavies — Usyk scorched the earth under an unprecedented field of talent. Advertisement Between April 2017 and November 2018, the Ukrainian won six consecutive world-title fights in his opponents' respective backyards. He collected their cruiserweight belts like a bailiff and, in a solitary defence of his undisputed crown, ended Tony Bellew's career in Manchester. With no more doors to darken at his weight, Usyk launched an even more daring conquest. For two decades, the heavyweight kingdom had been ruled by giants of men, nearly all of them six-foot-six-plus, 250-odd-pounders. At six-foot-three and 200 pounds, Usyk was a David among Goliaths. But David slayed only one giant. Usyk has chopped them all down. Over 70 combined professional fights, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua have found ways not to fight each other, each of them terrified by the prospect of losing to the other, their respective promoters equally petrified by the prospect of their golden goose losing its gloss. 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Even if you were to disqualify the advancements in sports science and the general increase in size of human beings over the past century, a smaller Tyson Fury would have been sufficiently skilled to have become champion in virtually every decade outside of the '70s — and he likely would have challenged at least one of Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier or George Foreman. Fury's technical talent certainly supersedes that of many who took on The Big Three. Joshua and Dubois, too, are powerful enough to have been at least low top-10 contenders throughout most of history, including the '90s wherein they wouldn't have troubled Lennox Lewis or Evander Holyfied or Riddick Bowe or Mike Tyson (at least early-'90s Tyson), but they certainly could have taken out Bert Cooper or Buster Douglas on a good day. Even Chisora, through belligerence alone, would likely have taken a scalp or two. Truly great heavyweight talent has been sparse more often than it hasn't. Joe Louis, who may top even Ali as the best of them all, wasn't exactly blessed with routine tests of his credentials in the '30s and '40s, nor was Rocky Marciano who, with some regret, ended the career of his hero in 1951 for lack of a more commercially viable option. Usyk shares a birthday with Ali and the idea of him competing in Ali's era requires fewer mental gymnastics than are needed to shrink down Fury or Joshua: at six-foot-three and with a 78-inch reach, Usyk's dimensions are also identical to those of The Greatest. He weighed on Saturday only three pounds more than Ali did for The Thrilla in Manilla. The Ukrainian is a throwback heavyweight in more ways than one. His speed, footwork, and precision would have given even Ali himself — who boxed only twice against southpaws in his 61 pro fights — plenty to contend with. 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