
WBC STATISTICS
WBC HEAVYWEIGHT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
July 19, 2025 / London, England, United Kingdom / Wembley Stadium
QUEENSBERRY PROMOTIONS PRESENTS:
OLEKSANDR USYK (Ukraine)
· WBC Heavyweight world champion, 2nd defense
· WBA Super, WBO Heavyweight World Champion, 5th defense
· Former WBC, WBA, IBF, WBO Cruiserweight World Champion, 6 defenses
Age: 38 / Date of birth: January 17, 1987
Residence: Kyiv, Ukraine / Birthplace: Simferopol, Crimea
Record: 23-0, 14 KOs / Total rounds: 201 / World championship fights: 12-0, 4 KOs
Height: 6’3” – 191cm / Reach: 78” – 198cm / Stance: Left-handed
Manager: Egis Klimas / Trainer: Yuriy Tkachenko
DANIEL “Dynamite” DUBOIS (United Kingdom)
· IBF Heavyweight World Champion, 1st defense
· Former WBC Silver Heavyweight Champion
· Former WBC Youth Heavyweight Champion
Age: 27 / Date of birth: September 6, 1997
Residence, birthplace: London, England, United Kingdom
Record: 22-2, 21 KOs / Total rounds: 95 / World championship fights: 3-1, 3 KOs
Height: 6’5” – 196cm / Reach: 78” – 198cm / Stance: Right-handed
Manager: Martin Bowers / Trainer: Don Charles
WBC HEAVYWEIGHT WORLD CHAMPIONS
1. Sonny Liston (US) 1963 – 1964
2. Muhammad Ali (US) 1964 – 1967
3. Joe Frazier (US) 1968 – 1973
4. George Foreman (US) 1973 – 1974
5. Muhammad Ali (US) * 1974 – 1978
6. Leon Spinks (US) 1978
7. Ken Norton (US) 1977 – 1978
8. Larry Holmes (US) 1978 – 1983
9. Tim Witherspoon (US) 1984
10. Pinklon Thomas (US) 1984 – 1985
11. Trevor Berbick (Can) 1986
12. Mike Tyson (US) 1986 – 1990
13. James Douglas (US) 1990
14. Evander Holyfield (US) 1990 – 1992
15. Riddick Bowe (US) 1992
16. Lennox Lewis (GB) 1993 – 1994
17. Oliver McCall (US) 1994 – 1995
18. Frank Bruno (GB) 1995 – 1996
19. Mike Tyson (US) * 1996
20. Lennox Lewis (GB) * 1997 – 2001
21. Hasim Rahman (US) 2001
22. Lennox Lewis (GB) * 2001 – 2003
23. Vitali Klitschko (Ukraine) 2004
24. Hasim Rahman (US) * 2005 – 2006
25. Oleg Maskaev (Kaz) 2006 – 2008
26. Samuel Peter (Nigeria) Interim 2007 – 2008
27. Vitali Klitschko (Ukraine)* 2008 – 2014
28. Bermane Stiverne (Haiti-US) 2014 – 2015
29. Deontay Wilder (US) 2015 – 2020
30. Tyson Fury (GB) 2020 – 2024
31. Oleksandr Usyk (Ukraine) 2024 –
* Regained title
WBC TOP 10
1. Muhammad Ali (US)
2. Mike Tyson (US)
3. Lennox Lewis (GB)
4. Larry Holmes (US)
5. Evander Holyfield (US)
6. George Foreman (US)
7. Joe Frazier (US)
8. Vitaly Klitschko (Ukraine)
9. Sonny Liston (US)
10. Ken Norton (US)
GENERAL INFORMATION ON THE HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION IN WBC HISTORY
25 heavyweight world champions have been recognized by the WBC, five of whom have regained the title: Muhammad Ali (US), Mike Tyson (US), Lennox Lewis two times (GB), Hasim Rahman (US), Vitali Klitschko (Ukraine).
120 heavyweight world championship fights have been held in WBC history.
MEMORABLE WBC HEAVYWEIGHT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHTS
Dec. 21, 2024 Oleksandr Usyk W12 Tyson Fury – Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
May 18, 2024 Oleksandr Usyk W12 Tyson Fury – Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Dec. 3, 2022 Tyson Fury TKO10 Derek Chisora – London, England
Apr. 23, 2022 Tyson FuryTKO6 Dillian Whyte – London, England
Oct. 9, 2021 Tyson Fury KO11 Deontay Wilder – Las Vegas, Nevada
Feb. 22, 2020 Tyson Fury TKO7 Deontay Wilder – Las Vegas, Nevada
Nov. 23, 2019 Deontay Wilder KO7 Luis Ortiz – Las Vegas, Nevada
Dec. 1 2018 Deontay Wilder D12 Tyson Fury – Los Angeles, California
Jan. 17, 2015 Deontay Wilder W12 Bermane Stiverne – Las Vegas, Nevada
Oct. 11, 2008 Vitali Klitschko TKO9 Samuel Peter – Berlin, Germany
Mar. 8, 2008 Samuel Peter TKO6 Oleg Maskaev – Cancun, Mexico
Apr. 24, 2004 Vitali Klitschko KO8 Corrie Sanders – Los Angeles, California
Jun. 21, 2003 Lennox Lewis TKO6 Vitali Klitschko – Los Angeles, California
Jun. 8, 2002 Lennox Lewis KO8 Mike Tyson – Memphis, Tennessee
Nov. 17, 2001 Lennox Lewis KO4 Hasim Rahman – Las Vegas, Nevada
Apr. 22, 2001 Hasim Rahman KO5 Lennox Lewis – Brakpan, South Africa
Mar. 19, 1999 Lennox Lewis D12 Evander Holyfield – New York, New York
Sep. 2, 1995 Frank Bruno W12 Oliver McCall – London, England
May 8, 1993 Lennox Lewis W12 Tony Tucker – Las Vegas, Nevada
Apr. 19, 1001 Evander Holyfield W12 George Foreman – Atlantic City, New Jersey
Mar. 18, 1991 Mike Tyson TKO7 Donovan Ruddock (Eliminator) – Las Vegas, Nevada
Oct. 25, 1990 Evander Holyfield KO3 James Douglas – Las Vegas, Nevada
Feb. 11, 1990 James Douglas KO10 Mike Tyson – Tokyo, Japan
Jul. 21, 1989 Mike Tyson TKO1 Carl Williams – Atlantic City, New Jersey
June 27, 1988 Mike Tyson KO1 Michael Spinks – Atlantic City, New Jersey
Nov. 22, 1986 Mike Tyson TKO2 Trevor Berbick – Las Vegas, Nevada
Mar. 22, 1986 Trevor Berbick W12 Pinklon Thomas – Las Vegas, Nevada
Apr. 11, 1981 Larry Holmes W15 Trevor Berbick – Las Vegas, Nevada
Sep. 28, 1979 Larry Homes TKO11 Earnie Shavers – Las Vegas, Nevada
Jun. 9, 1978 Larry Holmes W15 Ken Norton – Las Vegas, Nevada
Oct. 1, 1975 Muhammad Ali TKO15 Joe Frazier – Manila, Philippines
Oct. 30, 1974 Muhammad Ali KO8 George Foreman – Kinshasa, Zaire
Mar. 8, 1971 Joe Frazier W15 Muhammad Ali – New York, New York
Dec. 10, 1968 Joe Frazier W15 Oscar Bonavena – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
May 21, 1966 Muhammad Ali TKO6 Henry Cooper – London, England
By James Blears
All four Belts are there for the taking on July 19th when Oleksandr Usyk who is the WBC, WBA and WBO Heavyweight Champion, strolls into Wembley Stadium to take on IBF Champion Daniel ‘’Triple D’’ Dubois in a rematch of their 2023 encounter which the Ukrainian won via a ninth round TKO.
One can only anticipate the collective roar and the hairs standing up on the back of the neck, when the two of them are introduced to a crowd of one hundred thousand at the Stadium of The Three Lions. Most of The Pride will be willing, welling, coaxing and pleading for Daniel to achieve an historic victory…something which no other opponent of ‘’The Cat,’’ has come close to springing.
Cool cats aren`t possessed by us mere mortals. There`s no ownership clause, as they choose their ‘’Purrfect’’surroundings and comfort zones. To them home is where the heart is, so Daniel won`t necessarily enjoy turf advantage. Well- funded, a considerable kitty is available.
In their first encounter in the Wroclaw Stadium, Poland on Ukraine`s Independence Day, Oleksandr was the teacher and Daniel absorbed a lot of punishment as the pupil, from the Ruler and via the Slide Rule. It was his second defeat and he got caught with a cascade of jarring, jolting southpaw jabs, which set him up for the heavy artillery, which was then to inevitably follow. As early as round two his left eye was swelling from the precise drilling and he was constantly trying to catch up in a catch me if you can contest.
Daniel was aiming for the body in an attempt to slow up Oleksandr. In the fifth a right which was thrown in an upward arc, appeared to land a trifle low, according to Referee Luis Pabon. Oleksandr went down in evident acute discomfort, gasping and wincing. He was allowed up to five minutes to recover. Eventually he took three minutes and forty- five seconds. From then on, after he had got up from his haunches, it was increasingly one way traffic.
A combination flurry put Daniel down in the eighth, he got up and the bell rang. Only a brief respite. In round nine, a jarring straight jab put tiring Daniel down again and this time he was unable to beat the count. It was over at the forty- eight second mark. Oleksandr had landed eighty-eight of three hundred and fifty- nine punches thrown, while Daniel had landed only forty-seven of two hundred and ninety punches he threw. It proves just how hard it is to land blows on elusive Oleksandr.
Even prior to this Daniel had suffered a setback, and had been left with a real scare. The first happened against Joe Joyce. As early as round two Joe`s jabs had found and swelled Daniel`s left eye. He soldiered on, but by the tenth when a peach of a jab landed agonizingly on Daniel`s by now tightly closed eye, he took a knee and waited until he was counted out. He`s suffered a fractured left orbital bone and nerve damage.
Some diehard armchair warriors, insist that he should have rockily continued to soak it up and not have called it a day. With a cut, a cracked rib or a broken nose, this might be possible, but with an injury of this severity, it could end a career and permanently blind him. Danial had no option but to stop and live to fight another day. Once the swelling had gone down, the injury didn`t require surgery but rehab, which kept him out of the ring for more than six months.
Perhaps the writing had already been on the wall before the Usyk encounter? One fight prior to it, up stepped Kevin Lerena from south Africa, who is now the WBC Bridgerweight champion and a small heavyweight, when he ventures up. Kevin gave Daniel a real jolting shock, canvassing him three times in round one, all with left hooks. Still dizzy at the beginning of round two, Daniel recovered to clobber Kevin with a huge overhead right to the head, and after he somehow got up, Daniel followed on with uppercuts to drop him again. Referee Howard Foster wisely stopped it. Alas, Daniel had injured an anterior cruciate ligament which required surgery, delaying the first Usyk bout.
After being stopped by Oleksandr, Daniel who had almost reached the summit, but then fallen off and down to base camp, had to climb the mountain all over again in order to redeem himself. He TKO`d Jarrell Miller in ten rounds. Then he stopped Filip Hrgovic, with the IBF Interim Title at stake, cutting him over both eyes and the Ring Doctor recommended to Referee John Latham to stop it after fifty- seven seconds of round eight.
Then against Anthony Joshua for the Absolute IBF belt. Daniel confounded the bookies` odds, to drop AJ in rounds one, three, four and five. A booming counter right ended it with AJ not being able to beat the count. Daniel has redeemed himself and is an appreciably better plus wiser fighter, but is this enough and is he capable of defeating Oleksandr, who has proved himself supreme, nimble and able, with no trips or stumbles.
All of these thrills and spills for Daniel who is still only twenty-seven, while Oleksandr is aged thirty-eight and The Pride of Ukraine, whose body is his temple, trains to perfection in every aspect and appears younger than his years, in spite of coming through two epoch-epics with Tyson Fury, both of which he has won brilliantly.
A portrait artist of the Noble Art, Oleksandr uses his box/palate to render brush strokes to plaster. Religious and devout, Oleksandr who crosses himself at the beginning and end of every round, succeeds in everything he turns his hand to. Having won Olympic Gold, he is one of only two fighters who is undisputed in the two weight categories during the modern era, namely cruiser and heavy, and he remains undefeated.
Boxers and experts are wowed and awed by his brilliant footwork, hand-speed, spartan unremitting work rate, range finding judgement of distance, sound adept defence, his attacking mode and his uncanny ring- generalship. He almost stopped Tyson Fury first time around in a torrid round nine. But his second UD victory was overall, even more convincing. He leans, learns, stores up the experience in his memory banks and then accordingly adopts plus adapts strategy.
Prior to fighting Daniel, Oleksandr had twice comprehensively defeated Anthony Joshua for the WBA, WBO and IBF belts coming very close to stopping him in the final round of their first fight, when the bell appeared to ring five seconds early, as AJ was teetering on the ropes, under the cosh.
As well as his boxing, Oleksandr is a talented soccer player, a martial artist at Jiu-Jitsu, Sambo and judo, an accomplished long- distance swimmer and to unwind he stretches it to yoga. Years don`t equal vitamins, but as of now, he is still very much A Plus tip top.
Who wins this rematch, will have gleaned and learned the most from the first absorbing encounter, to apply with aplomb. It is also very much involves who has been the most single minded and stringently dedicated, in their rigidly disciplined preparation, leading up to the clang of the opening bell.
Oleksandr has memorably stated: ‘’If you want to be great in what you`re doing, you really need to limit yourself. So, consider my life as the life of a monk.’’
Accordingly. and from John Donne`s sermon: ‘’Ask not for whom the bell tolls. It tolls for thee!’’
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