One vote, One Fight: Fury-Wilder is Fight of the Year in 2018’s most significant award
By Norm Frauenheim-
It was preceded by great expectations. But it began amid disappointment, delay and controversy. Another year ends and new one is about to begin amid all of usual suspects.
Still, 2018 was a little bit different perhaps because of the way it ended in a spontaneous display of emotion in one fight that exceeded expectations.
In early December, Tyson Fury got up from a crushing Deontay Wilder combination in a moment that reminded us that boxing never ceases to surprise. It is nothing if not resilient. It is always re-creating itself.
Not long after Fury somehow regained consciousness and somehow was able to stand upright late in a 10-count that began like last rites, he stood, resurrected, in front of the assembled media in a work room at Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles.
He held his long arms above his head like an old-time preacher and asked:
“Did we entertain you?’’
There was no argument about the answer, unlike the deafening controversy over the judges’ scores in a split draw.
The fight was a hit on every level other than the scorecards. Yet, even the debate was reason to celebrate. A rematch is in those cards. For 2019, more of Wilder-Fury can only be a good thing. Wilder-Fury I was reason to forget everything that didn’t happen in 2018. It also happened in the very division that has been written off for at least a decade.
The heavyweights are a relic of what they were. On Dec. 1, however, Wilder-Fury reminded us how much fun they can be. Nobody will confuse Wilder or Fury with Evander Holyfield or Lennox Lewis or any of the other legends who were in the Staples crowd.
But Wilder’s instinctive power lands like a force of nature. Add Fury’s stubborn will and clever skill, and you had a dynamic mix, the kind that creates great moments. Their performance was Fight of the Year here and, I suspect, on nearly every other ballot, too.
In terms of tone, Wilder and Fury left the boxing audience wanting more at exactly the time when there was lingering frustration over Canelo Alvarez’ PED suspension, the subsequent delay of a second fight, contentious negotiations and then a September rematch without a knockdown and just more controversy over Canelo’s narrow victory on the scorecards.
There were other moments, names and reasons to remember.
A few samples:
Aleksandr Usyk looked like Fighter of the Year, putting himself into the pound-for-pound discussion with cruiserweight victories that should make Fury, Wilder and Anthony Joshua nervous.
At the top of the pound-for-pound debate on this ballot, it’s still welterweight Terence Crawford at No. 1, Vasiliy Lomachenko at No. 2 and Mikey Garcia at No. 3. All three have good arguments for the top spot. They are redefining the sport — moving it beyond the careful, risk-to-reward ratio that ruled Floyd Mayweather’s Jr.’s rich career.
Crawford is a finisher. Lomachenko’s many punches from many angles are unprecedented. Garcia, a natural lightweight and junior-welterweight, is taking a risk, a massive one against welterweight power-puncher Errol Spence Jr. in March.
Throughout 2018, they did what Mayweather didn’t in a year that ended with Fury and Wilder, who reminded us that anything is possible.