Vitali Klitschko vs. Dereck Chisora

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Showdown in Munich
Klitschko vs. Chisora fight poster.jpg
Date18 February 2012
VenueOlympiahalle, Munich, Germany
Title(s) on the lineWBC heavyweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Vitali Klitschko Derek Chisora
Nickname Dr. Ironfist Del Boy
Hometown Kyiv, Ukraine London, England
Pre-fight record 43–2 (40 KO) 15–2 (9 KO)
Height 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 6 ft 1.5 in (1.87 m)
Weight 243.5 lb (111 kg) 241 lb (109 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBC
heavyweight champion
WBC
No. 15 ranked heavyweight
Result
Klitschko defeats Chisora via unanimous decision

Vitali Klitschko vs. Derek Chisora, billed as Showdown in Munich, was a professional boxing match contested on 18 February 2012 for the WBC heavyweight title. The fight reportedly generated 500 million television viewers worldwide.[1]

Background[]

Vitali Klitschko had first become a heavyweight champion in 1999, when he picked up the WBO title for knocking out Herbie Hide. In his third defence against Chris Byrd, Klitschko was forced to retire from the fight with a shoulder injury at the end of the ninth round, and despite being well ahead on the scorecards this meant he lost his title and his undefeated record. Five consecutive victories followed before a fresh world title challenge against Britain's Lennox Lewis in 2003. In a close, hard hitting fight, Klitschko was once again ahead on the scorecards before the referee called an end to the fight at the end of the sixth round, deeming a deep cut on Klitschko's face meant that he was unable to continue. With Lewis now retired, within a year Klitschko faced Corrie Sanders for the vacant WBC heavyweight title and won via knockout in the eighth round. After just one defence, he made his first retirement from boxing. After returning to the ring after a four-year absence in 2008, he regained the WBC title at the first attempt by stopping Samuel Peter after eight rounds. He then saw off a series of challengers, mostly recently Tomasz Adamek, and was now looking to make an eighth consecutive defence of his crown.

Meanwhile, challenger Derek Chisora had become British heavyweight champion in May 2010 after knocking out veteran Danny Williams, and added the Commonwealth title to his name after stopping Sam Sexton four months later. Chisora had been chasing a fight with Vitali's fellow world champion and brother Wladimir, and with that fight scheduled to happen on 11 December 2010, Klitschko pulled out just days prior with a torn abdominal muscle. The rescheduled fight for 30 April 2011 was also cancelled so [Wladimir] Klitschko could fight David Haye on July 2. With [Vitali] Klitschko due to fight Adamek, this left Chisora with no other option than to face his mandatory challenger for the British title, the upcoming Tyson Fury. Chisora's 14-0 win streak ended at the hands of the undefeated Fury, who won via twelve round unanimous decision. Chisora then challenged for the vacant European heavyweight title against Finland's Robert Helenius on the Fins home turf in Helsinki. The close fight ended in a split decision victory for Helenius, yet many observers felt this was a robbery and that Chisora had won the fight. Off the back of this, Vitali agreed to make his next defence of his title against Chisora.[2]

However, Chisora was heavily criticised for his behaviour at the pre fight weigh in after slapping Vitali across the face when the two went face to face during the staredown,[3] and caused yet more controversy just before the fight when he spat water in the face of Wladimir whilst in the ring before the pre fight introductions.[4]

The now 40 year old Klitschko would go into the fight with a record of 43-2, while the 28 year old Chisora was entering just his 18th professional fight with a record of 15-2.[5]

The fight[]

An injury to Klitschko's left shoulder in the third round prevented him from using his jab and left hand as effectively as normal, but he was still able to keep the hard charging Chisora at bay for the majority of the fight. Despite the constant pressure applied by Chisora, Klitschko was able to use his height and reach advantage to land many powerful right hands to outland his opponent and stay in control. At times Chisora was able to unleash and land some punishment of his own, with most of his work coming to the body and his best round being the twelfth and final round.[6]

All three of the judges scored the fight to Klitschko with scores of 118-110, 118-110 and 119-111. Despite the fight being fairly one sided, Chisora earned credit for his chin and heart, and also for giving Klitschko his most competitive fight since his defeat to Lennox Lewis in 2003. Chisora also became only the fourth man (after Tino Hoffmann, Kevin Johnson and Shannon Briggs), to take Klitschko the full twelve round distance.

Aftermath[]

In the post match press conference, Chisora was involved in a controversial confrontation with fellow British boxer David Haye, which subsequently paved the way for the pair's own grudge match later in the year.[7]

Undercard[]

Confirmed bouts:[8]

Broadcasting[]

Country Broadcaster
 Germany RTL
 Ukraine Inter
 United Kingdom BoxNation
 United States Epix

References[]

  1. ^ "Віталій Кличко: Друзі, дякую за підтримку!" (in Ukrainian). 21 February 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  2. ^ "New WBC Ratings Are Out". 24 December 2011.
  3. ^ Christ, Scott (2012-02-17). "Klitschko vs Chisora Weigh-In: Chisora Slaps Klitschko, Fined $50,000 (Video)". Bad Left Hook. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  4. ^ Christ, Scott (2012-02-19). "Klitschko vs Chisora: Dereck Chisora Spits in the Face of Wladimir Klitschko (Video)". Bad Left Hook. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  5. ^ "Vitali Klitschko vs. Dereck Chisora - BoxRec".
  6. ^ Munich, Ben Dirs BBC Sport in. "Vitali Klitschko taken the distance by Dereck Chisora in Munich". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  7. ^ "On This Day: The story of the bottle, the brawl, and David Haye and Dereck Chisora settling their differences in the ring - Boxing News". 2016-07-14. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  8. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Vitali Klitschko' bouts
18 February 2012
Succeeded by
vs. Manuel Charr
Preceded by Derek Chisora's bouts
18 February 2012
Succeeded by
vs. David Haye
Retrieved from ""