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Boxing 'fight of the year' ends with incredible KO

In what many are calling the boxing bout of the year, Dereck Chisora has produced a stunning knockout punch to flatten Carlos Takam.

Chisora weathered the massive storm to sensationally stop his fellow heavyweight and claim the vacant WBA International title.

Cheered on by his home crowd at the O2 Arena, the Londoner withstood some serious punishment before producing a chilling finish in the second half of the bout.

In action for the first time since losing to Anthony Joshua in October 2017, Takam took control early in proceedings as the chief support act ahead of Dillian Whyte against Joseph Parker threatened to steal the show.

The brutal knockout punch. Image: Sky Sports/Getty
The brutal knockout punch. Image: Sky Sports/Getty

Chisora was caught by clean shots on numerous occasions, while both fighters appeared set to tumble during the sixth round of a brutal battle that had the sold-out audience on their feet at times.

The end finally arrived 61 seconds into the eighth round as, having already dropped his opponent once with the same shot, Chisora landed another overhand right to topple Takam and force the referee to wave the contest off.

“That was emotional,” Chisora said afterwards.

“There was doubters out there but we believed in God, we done it and we emerged victorious.

“I was up for it from the time I left the dressing room. It was tough. The guy is a tough man.

“I done the rope a dope on him. I could not stand in the middle of the ring with him.”

Carlos Takam (right) and Dereck Chisora after their WBA International heavyweight title at the O2 Arena, London. (Photo by Nick Potts/PA Images via Getty Images)
Carlos Takam (right) and Dereck Chisora after their WBA International heavyweight title at the O2 Arena, London. (Photo by Nick Potts/PA Images via Getty Images)

Whyte makes his point against Parker

Dillian Whyte overcame a late scare to defeat fellow heavyweight Joseph Parker on points and further his case for a shot at a world title.

The two fighters capped an eventful card at the O2 Arena with a 12-round scrap that saw both recover from knockdowns to hear the final bell.

Parker began brightly, landing a rapid one-two combination in the opening seconds, while he also finished the first strongly, with a clean shot drawing gasps from the partisan crowd.

His fast start hit a speed bump when referee Ian John Lewis judged the New Zealander was dropped by a body shot in the second round, albeit replays suggested the most notable blow came when the pair clashed heads.

Still, buoyed by the moment of success, Whyte wrestled control of the contest.

The Londoner seized the centre of the ring, forcing the pressure against an opponent in Parker who appeared to be feeling the pace as the rounds ticked by.

Warned twice in the fourth for foul play, Whyte was willing to take a shot – his face flashed a wry smile when caught by a combination in round seven – to get into range.

Dillian Whyte (back) knocks down Joseph Parker during their prior to his WBC Silver Heavyweight title and WBO International Heavyweight title at the O2 Arena, London. (Photo by Nick Potts/PA Images via Getty Images)
Dillian Whyte (back) knocks down Joseph Parker during their prior to his WBC Silver Heavyweight title and WBO International Heavyweight title at the O2 Arena, London. (Photo by Nick Potts/PA Images via Getty Images)

His bravery paid off in the eighth, as a short left hook landed flush on Parker’s chin, sending him slumping to the floor for a knockdown.

At that stage it appeared Parker was slipping towards a second successive defeat, yet he showed tremendous strength of character – not to mention impressive powers of recovery – to launch a late onslaught.

Whyte wilted in the final round, a straight right sending him down, but found the strength to rise again and make it through to the end, allowing him to record a unanimous triumph on the scorecards.

The verdict – 113-112, 114-111 and 115-110 – secures the Londoner the WBC silver and WBO International belts. More importantly, though, it pushes him to the front of the queue for a chance to take on the two dominant names in the division, Anthony Joshua or Deontay Wilder.

With Omnisport