Early career Chisora turned professional under
Frank Warren's Queensberry Promotions banner and was trained by Don Charles, alongside Dean Powell in his corner. Chisora made his professional debut on 17 February 2007 at the
Wembley Arena in
London, beating Hungarian István Kecskés by a
technical knockout (TKO) in the second round. Chisora's second fight was against English heavyweight
Tony Booth at the
Millennium Stadium in
Cardiff on 7 April 2007, on the undercard of
Joe Calzaghe's successful
WBO super-middleweight title defence against
Peter Manfredo Jr., winning a
points decision (PTS), by 40–36. Chisora's third fight was at the
York Hall in London against Welshman
Darren Morgan (5–1, 3 KOs) on 13 October 2007, winning on points after four rounds. Chisora stated in 2022 that Morgan was the hardest puncher he has ever faced in his career. In January 2008, Chisora scored a four-round PTS victory over
Paul Butlin at the York Hall, achieving his third points victory in a row, to take his record to 4–0. On the 11 April, Chisora was a wildcard for the inaugural
Prizefighter series on
Sky Sports. In June that year, in his first fight over six rounds, Chisora came up against the toughest test of his career in fellow undefeated British heavyweight prospect,
Sam Sexton (7–0, 2 KOs). The bout was stopped in the final 30 seconds of the last round, when the referee decided Sexton was taking too much punishment and declared Chisora the winner by TKO. In Chisora's sixth fight, on 12 September 2008 at the
Grosvenor House, in his first fight over eight rounds, he defeated American Shawn McLean via sixth-round stoppage. In Chisora's seventh fight, on 26 September 2008, against
Lee Swaby, Chisora took his undefeated record to 7–0 with a third-round stoppage victory. In his eighth professional appearance, on 6 December 2008, Chisora defeated
Neil Simpson at the
ExCeL via a second-round
corner retirement, leaving him with an 8–0 record at the end of his second year as a professional. In Chisora's ninth bout, on 30 January 2009, he defeated Russian Daniil Peretyatko by PTS over eight rounds. In Chisora's tenth fight, on 22 May 2009, he defeated Paul Butlin for the second time, to extend his record to ten wins. Chisora was suspended for four months for biting Butlin's ear during the fifth round of their contest while in a clinch. The incident was missed by referee
Dave Parris but TV replays proved conclusive, and as a result Chisora missed out on his fight for the
British heavyweight title against
Danny Williams. He was also fined £2,500. On 9 October 2009, in his eleventh bout, Chisora defeated Georgian Zurab Noniashvili, knocking Noniashvili down and winning by TKO in three rounds at York Hall. He was supposed to face
Matt Skelton for the vacant
Southern Area heavyweight title at the Wembley Arena in London, but the bout was cancelled. On 20 January 2010, it was announced that Chisora would get a second chance to face Danny Williams on 13 February 2010 after Sam Sexton was forced to withdraw through injury from his match with Williams. Chisora welcomed the chance, saying, "It was my own fault the fight with Williams didn't go ahead, and I've been kicking myself ever since." Williams pulled out of the bout. Chisora instead fought
Carl Baker in a British title eliminator, with the winner to face Williams. Baker entered with a
unanimous decision win four months prior over Williams in the Prizefighter series. Chisora grabbed and kissed Baker at the weigh-in for the fight. Chisora stopped Baker in the second round.
British and Commonwealth champion Chisora vs. Williams On 2 May 2010, it was once again announced that Chisora would get yet another chance to face Danny Williams on 15 May 2010, at the
Boleyn Ground in London, after Sam Sexton was forced to withdraw a second time from his rescheduled match with Williams, following his mother falling seriously ill. Chisora defeated former world title challenger Williams, winning the British title by stoppage. Chisora set the pace in the opening round and put Williams under pressure, Williams was warned twice for holding in the first round. In the second round, Chisora hurt Williams with a right uppercut before sending him to the canvas with a left hook. Williams beat the count but was met with a flurry of punches, resulting in Williams falling backwards towards the ropes, forcing referee Howard Foster to end the fight. After the fight, Williams announced his retirement, although he made a comeback in March 2011.
Chisora vs. Sexton II On 18 September 2010, at the
LG Arena, in
Birmingham, Chisora, defending his title for the first time, defeated Sam Sexton, who was defending his title for the second time, in a rematch. Adding the
Commonwealth title to his British title via ninth-round stoppage on the undercard of
Kell Brook vs.
Michael Jennings on
Sky Box Office. Chisora and Sexton both started fast in the opening round, exchanging punches early, with Chisora landing a series of body shots inside, and Sexton working behind the jab. In the second, Chisora began setting the pace, leading with the jab, Sexton responded, sending Chisora back against the ropes with a flurry of punches. With Chisora landing combinations to the body as the round progressed. In the third, Chisora and Sexton continued trading punches, Chisora fighting aggressively, and Sexton countering on the back foot. In the fourth, Sexton went on the offensive, and was able to land a left hook, which momentarily slowed Chisora's output. With Chisora landing punches on the front foot, taking control for the remainder of the round. In the fifth round, Chisora and Sexton began to tire, as both men kept applying pressure up close. In the sixth, Chisora landed a number of clean punches on Sexton as his work rate decreased. In the seventh, Sexton began working behind the jab once again, boxing at range. In the eighth, Chisora began trying to close the distance, with Sexton on the defensive. The bell sounding to start the ninth marked the first time Chisora and Sexton had been past eight rounds. Chisora threw a barrage of unanswered left and right hands flush on the chin, backing Sexton against the ropes, prompting referee John Keane to stop the fight. Chisora was scheduled to face
unified IBF, WBO,
IBO, and
Ring magazine heavyweight champion,
Wladimir Klitschko on 11 December 2010, at the
SAP Arena, in
Mannheim, but Klitschko pulled out of the fight three days prior, after suffering a torn abdominal muscle. The fight was postponed, and later rescheduled for 30 April 2011, with Klitschko once again pulling out of the fight due to not being fully recovered from his injury, and the bout was cancelled so Klitschko could fight a unification match against
WBA heavyweight champion
David Haye on 2 July.
Chisora vs. Fury On 11 February 2011, the BBBofC installed English heavyweight champion, and undefeated prospect
Tyson Fury as
mandatory challenger for Chisora's British title. On 13 April 2011, Fury's promotional company, Hennessy Sports, won the
purse bid to stage the contest. On 23 May 2011, it was announced that Chisora would defend his British and Commonwealth heavyweight titles against Fury on July 23, 2011, at the Wembley Arena in London, both men went into the fight with a record of 14–0. It was also announced the fight would be televised live in the United States on
pay-per-view. American outlet Integrated Sports picked up the fight charging $24.95 for a live airing at 3 p.m.
EDT. At the weigh-in, Chisora weighed a career-heavy 261 pounds, while Fury came in a 255.5 pounds. On the night, Fury won by unanimous decision, with scores of 117–112, 117–112, and 118–111, handing Chisora the first professional loss of his career, and gaining his two titles. Promoter
Mick Hennessy revealed the fight peaked at around 3 million viewers on
Channel 5.
European title challenge He was supposed to face Larry Olubamiwo (10–2, 9 KOs) on 5 November 2011, at the Wembley Arena in London, but the bout was cancelled, following Olubamiwo withdrawing due to illness. Chisora defeated Lithuanian Remigijus Ziausys on 11 November in a six-round points decision at the North Bridge Leisure Centre in
Halifax. Referee John Latham scored the fight 60–54 in favour of Chisora.
Chisora vs. Helenius Chisora faced undefeated contender
Robert Helenius (16–0, 11 KOs) on 3 December 2011, at the
Hartwall Arena in
Helsinki for the WBA and WBO Intercontinental, and vacant
European heavyweight titles. At the time of the fight, Helenius was ranked #1 by the WBO, #3 by the WBA, #4 by the IBF, and #8 by the
WBC. Chisora lost the bout in a controversial split decision, after two judges scored the fight 115–113 twice, in favour of Helenius, and the third scored 115–113 in favour of Chisora. The decision was highly criticised as most pundits and observers scored the fight in favor of Chisora.
The Ring considered the outcome of the match "a gift", dropping Helenius' ranking from fifth to sixth challenger in their ratings. Chisora complained afterwards, demanding an immediate rematch on a neutral territory.
First WBC heavyweight title challenge Chisora vs. Klitschko Sources in Germany reported that Chisora was likely to fight WBC heavyweight champion
Vitali Klitschko on 18 February 2012, at the
Olympiahalle in
Munich. On 12 December 2011, it was confirmed that Chisora would challenge Klitschko for the WBC heavyweight title. At the weigh-in, Chisora slapped Klitschko across the face when the two went head-to-head during the staredown. Chisora was quoted as saying after the slap "I ain't come here to play games I come here to fight". Moments before the fight, Chisora spat water in the face of Wladimir Klitschko whilst in the ring before the pre-fight introductions. Klitschko boxed a disciplined fight with changing angles and superior footwork, and was able to keep the aggressive and offensive Chisora at range for the majority of the rounds. Despite bobbing and weaving, and constant pressure applied by Chisora, Klitschko was able to use his height and reach advantage to land clean straight right hands and power shots from a distance to outland Chisora, and control the pace as the bout progressed. At times, Chisora was able to deliver some punishment of his own, with most of his work coming with body shots and hooks to Klitschko's head, forcing Klitschko onto the back foot, and his best rounds being the eighth and twelfth round. All three judges unanimously scored the fight in favour of Klitschko, with scores of 118–110, 118–110 and 119–111. Despite being a decisive victory for Klitschko, 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 twelve round distance. During the Klitschko vs Chisora post-fight press conference, David Haye was present amongst the media in attendance. Haye began a verbal confrontation with both Klitschko, and his manager Bernd Bonte, challenging the WBC champion to a fight. Boente claimed Haye had turned down an opportunity to fight Klitschko, and that he would not get a second opportunity. Chisora then intervened, calling Haye an "embarrassment", and challenged Haye to a fight, to which Haye responded that Chisora had lost "three fights in a row". Haye continued his verbal assault. Chisora taunted Haye, asking him "how's your toe?", and then left the stage to confront Haye face to face and, in front of the assembled media, the two British fighters and several bystanders became involved in a mass brawl. Haye threw punches at Chisora whilst holding a bottle in one hand, leading to Chisora accusing Haye of glassing him. Chisora's trainer Don Charles was also involved in the brawl and Haye's long-time trainer
Adam Booth received a cut to the forehead whilst trying to break things up; Booth would later accuse one of Chisora's entourage of striking him with a bottle during the confrontation, though the cause turned out to be a camera tripod that had been picked up and brandished by Haye at the end of the melee, whilst in the aftermath, Chisora was caught on video threatening to "shoot Haye". German authorities sought both Haye and Chisora following their involvement in the brawl. On 19 February 2012, Chisora and Charles were arrested by German police at
Munich Airport. Police detained Chisora, but released him without charge following questioning, whilst urging Haye to turn himself in. On 21 February 2012, Haye and Chisora both released formal statements about the incident. While Chisora "wholeheartedly" apologised for his involvement, Haye was less contrite, refusing to issue a direct apology for his involvement, claiming he had acted in self-defence.
Issues with WBC and BBBofC Subsequent to a hearing in March the following year regarding the incident, Chisora had his British boxing license withdrawn, and the WBC initiated a motion to ban Chisora indefinitely and fine him for his involvement.
Chisora vs. Haye On 8 May 2012, it was announced Haye would come out of retirement to fight Chisora, and the bout would take place on 14 July 2012, at the Boleyn Ground Stadium. It was also announced that
BoxNation would promote the event in association with Team Sauerland and
Hayemaker Promotions, and
Alexander Povetkin would defend his
WBA (Regular) heavyweight title against
Hasim Rahman on the undercard. Additional security were present at the press conference and a steel fence was put in place to keep Haye and Chisora separated during the announcement. On 9 May 2012, tickets went on sale, with 17,000 being sold on the first day of sale. On 18 May 2012, it was announced that the fight had been sanctioned by both the WBA and WBO, and Chisora and Haye would be licensed by the Luxembourg Boxing Federation. In front of a crowd of 30,000 in attendance. Chisora entered the stadium, hooded and masked to the theme from
Gladiator, and Haye to his entry music "
Ain't No Stoppin' Us Now" by
McFadden & Whitehead. In the opening two rounds, Chisora applied constant pressure, with Haye landing scoring shots at range. The bout heated up at the end of the third round, as Chisora closed the distance and caught Haye with a flush left hook after the bell had gone, which appeared to hurt Haye. Chisora emerged at the start of the fourth round aggressively, exchanging punches with Haye. Towards the end of the fifth round, Haye landed with a quick, hard left hook, followed by a right hand, which
knocked down Chisora for the first time in his career. At the eighth count, Chisora made it to his feet, Haye connected with a series of punches, knocking Chisora down for a second time, and though he regained his feet again, the referee waved the fight off, therefore giving Haye the win by TKO in the fifth round.
Return to the ring In March 2013, Chisora was issued a new British Boxing Board of Control licence. Chisora said, "I'm glad that this whole episode is finally behind me and I can carry on with my boxing career in my own country and with a British Boxing Board of Control licence." Chisora made his ring return on 20 April 2013 at the
Wembley Arena in London. He fought Argentinian
Héctor Alfredo Ávila. Chisora told
ESPN that he would dedicate his victory to late former Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, who was an MP for Chisora's hometown of
Finchley. Avila had one point deducted in the 6th round for holding and another in the 9th for use of the elbow, but was eventually stopped in the ninth round. When asked whom he would like to fight next, Chisora mentioned British rival
David Price.
Chisora vs. Scott It was confirmed that Chisora would return two months later on 20 July at the Wembley Arena, against undefeated American boxer
Malik Scott (35–0–1, 12 KOs), for the vacant WBO International heavyweight title. Chisora won the bout via controversial knockout in round 6, following an over hand right. Scott was warned by the referee throughout the contest for repeated fouling and clinching, but was not penalized. Scott boxed well with his jab, while Chisora scored well with body punches. With 15 seconds left in the sixth round, Scott went down along the ropes from a right hand to the back of the ear, and took a knee, smiling. Scott got up at the count of nine, but then referee Edwards shouted "Out", ending the contest. Scott did not protest the seemingly premature stoppage but his corner did. Going into round six, Scott was ahead 48–47 on all three judges' scorecards. Scott's promoter, Dan Goossen stated he would lodge a protest. The BBBofC said they would not review the fight.
European champion Chisora vs. Gerber Chisora next fought on 21 September for the vacant European heavyweight title against 25-year-old German boxer
Edmund Gerber (23–1) at the
Copper Box Arena. The fight was announced 20 days prior to the fight taking place. Chisora controlled the fight from the opening bell, eventually drawing blood from Gerber after three rounds. The fight came to end in round five when Chisora threw combinations which went unanswered. The referee stepped in waiving the fight off. Chisora entered the ring in tears following the recent death of his mentor, Dean Powell. At the time of stoppage, Chisora was ahead 40–36 on all three judges' scorecards. On 11 October, the BBBofC ordered purse bids for a fight between Chisora and David Price for The latter's British heavyweight title, with the fight to potentially take place by February 2014. The purse bid was due on 13 November. Chisora's promoter
Frank Warren won the purse bid, but a fight was not made.
Chisora vs. Pala On 30 November, Chisora defended his WBO International title against late replacement
Ondřej Pála (32–3, 22 KOs). The fight was also for the vacant
WBA International title. Chisora was originally scheduled to fight
Arnold Gjergjaj, who broke his ribs in sparring. He was then replaced with Italian Matteo Mudugno, who pulled out injured. Pála being the third choice. Pála landIng was able to land heavy left hooks in the first two rounds. In round three, Chisora trapped Pála in a corner and clubbed him to the head and body with a series of powerful shots which forced Pála to turn his back from the oncoming onslaught, forcing the referee to stop the contest. Chisora fought four times in 2013, winning all inside the distance.
Chisora vs. Johnson On 27 January 2014, it was announced that Chisora would fight former world title challenger
Kevin Johnson (29–4–1, 14 KOs) at the Copper Box in London on 15 February 2014. Chisora inflicted the first knockdown of Johnsons career in the fifth round, and won by unanimous decision after twelve rounds. The official judges' scorecards read 118–109, 118–109, and 118–110 in favour of Chisora. This set up a second fight against Tyson Fury in London, although after the fight, Chisora also called out former
WBA (Regular) titleholder
Alexander Povetkin.
Chisora vs. Fury II Chisora and Fury were due to meet on 26 July 2014 in a rematch. On 21 July, Chisora was forced to pull out after sustaining a fractured hand in training. Belarusian
Alexander Ustinov was lined up as Chisora's replacement in the bout scheduled to take place at the
Manchester Arena, Fury pulled out of the fight after his uncle and former trainer
Hughie Fury was taken seriously ill. Fury and Chisora rescheduled the rematch for 29 November 2014 at
ExCeL London. The bout was shown live on
BoxNation. The bout was dubbed 'The Fight for the Right' as it was a final eliminator for the WBO heavyweight title and a shot at champion
Wladimir Klitschko. Chisora struggled with Fury's height, reach and movement, with Fury winning the rounds comfortably until trainer Don Charles had seen enough and pulled Chisora out at the end of the tenth round. Fury used his jab to trouble Chisora and kept on the outside creating a distance with his longer reach. Chisora failed to land any telling punches, and due to Fury's awkward fighting style, end up hitting him below the belt. Chisora was warned by referee Marcus McDonnell in the first round.
Signing with Sauerland Chisora vs. Pulev After a period of eight months without a fight since his defeat to Fury, Chisora won five fights in five months against low ranked opponents, helping set up a fight for the recently vacated European heavyweight title against highly ranked Bulgarian
Kubrat Pulev in
Hamburg on 7 May 2016. The bout was also an eliminator for the IBF heavyweight title. Despite what had seemed a fairly comfortable points win for Pulev the fight ended in a split decision, with two judges scoring it 118–110 and 116–112 in Pulev's favour while the third scored it 115–113 for Chisora. The defeat left Chisora's chances of a world title shot against IBF champion
Anthony Joshua in doubt. Chisora made a comeback in Sweden on 10 September 2016 against Bosnian Drazan Janjanin and scored a second-round
knockout victory following a body shot. Although Janjanin beat the count, the referee waved the fight off.
Chisora vs. Whyte Terms were finally agreed for a fight between Chisora and British heavyweight champion
Dillian Whyte to fight in a WBC title eliminator for Whyte's British heavyweight title. The fight took place in Manchester on the undercard of the
Anthony Joshua vs. Éric Molina heavyweight title fight. Chisora and Whyte were feuding over the year through social media. The hype continued through to the press conference on 7 December when, following Whyte's comment that he'd attack Chisora anytime he would see him after the fight, Chisora picked up the table he was sitting at and threw it towards Whyte, just missing everyone in the way which included the promoters and trainers. As a result, the BBBofC withdrew its sanction of the fight so that the British title was not at stake. Instead, Whyte's WBC International title was at stake. Chisora lost the fight by split decision with two judges scoring the fight 115–113 and 115–114 for Whyte and one scoring 115–114 in favour of Chisora. Whyte was hurt a number of times in the fight by Chisora in the eighth, tenth and twelfth rounds. On two occasions in the twelfth, Whyte was knocked off balance by Chisora after being hit with huge shots to the head. Post fight, Whyte stated he would not give Chisora a rematch, only to change his mind later to say the potential was there. In March 2017, in an interview, Chisora claimed he offered Whyte £1.1 million for a rematch, which Whyte declined. On 24 March 2017, it was announced that Chisora would get his much awaited rematch against Finnish boxer
Robert Helenius (24–1, 15 KOs) at the
Hartwall Arena in
Helsinki,
Finland. The same arena they fought at when Helenius won a controversial split decision in December 2011. The bout would be contested for the vacant
WBC Silver heavyweight title on 27 May 2017. In December 2015, the
EBU ordered for Chisora and Helenius to meet, where the winner would fight
Anthony Joshua. A purse bid deadline was set for 21 January 2016, but no progress was made. The fight was postponed on 16 May to take place after Summer 2017. There was no specific reason given by promoter Nisse Sauerland as to why the fight had been postponed.
Signing with Matchroom On pursuing a rematch with Dillian Whyte, on 31 August 2017, Chisora announced that he had split with promoter Team Sauerland, but re-signed with manager Steve Goodwin. On 20 September
Eddie Hearn announced that Chisora had signed with
Matchroom Sport, making his debut on the
Paul Butler-
Stuart Hall undercard on 30 September at the Echo Arena in Liverpool live on
Sky Sports. Hearn believed if Chisora could win two fights by the end of the year, possibly winning the European title in the process, he would have a good case to fight Whyte again. Hearn said, "You know what you are going to get with 'Del Boy', plenty of drama and a load of heart. He will return to action in Liverpool and challenge for the European title in November. We will work towards a Whyte rematch for early next year. It's a fight that I think boxing needs to see again." Chisora fought Croatian Robert Filipovic (4–2, 3 KOs) at the
Echo Arena in Liverpool, on 30 September. Filipovic was a late replacement for Jay McFarlane (3–3, 2 KOs). The fight was scheduled for 6 and ended in round 5 when the referee had seen enough, giving Chisora the win via TKO. Filipovic had one point deducted in the 4th round and another in the 5th for holding, which was done to prolong the fight. Chisora explained that he had the power to put his opponent away, but wanted to enjoy the fight.
Chisora vs. Kabayel On 25 September, Hearn revealed Chisora would challenge European heavyweight champion
Agit Kabayel (16–0, 12 KOs) at the Casino de Monte Carlo Salle Medcin in
Monte Carlo, Monaco on 4 November 2017. In a lethargic performance where he was outboxed by Kabayel, Chisora suffered a 12-round
majority decision defeat. One judge scored the fight a 114–114 draw, whilst the remaining two judges' scored the fight 115–113 and 115–114 for Kabayel, giving Chisora his 8th professional loss. Chisora started the fight slow, remaining patient. He became more active after round 6, but failed to bustle the attack on Kabayel, who moved well with his feet. Kabayel also used quick combinations and jabs to win many of the rounds. Speaking to Sky Sports after the bout, Chisora said, "I'm not going to complain, I lost the fight. I always bounce back so I'm not worried." Eddie Hearn stated a rematch with Chisora and Whyte would still be possible. On 3 February 2018, whilst backstage at
The O2 Arena in London for
Lawrence Okolie vs.
Isaac Chamberlain, Hearn told
YouTube channel iFL TV, Chisora would be returning to the ring on 24 March on the undercard of
Dillian Whyte vs.
Lucas Browne, which would also take place at the O2 Arena. Also backstage, Chisora met with
David Haye and
Joe Joyce, where Chisora revealed Haye had contacted his manager Steve Goodwin and offered £60,000 for him to fight Joyce. Chisora later stated if the money was right, he would fight Joyce on the
Tony Bellew vs. David Haye II card on 5 May 2018. After Joyce knocked out Rudolf Jozic on 16 February, Haye revealed a new six-figure offer would be presented to Chisora, which would see him earn around the same purse he received in his loss to Kabayel. On 1 March, Joyce claimed Chisora had rejected the fight completely. Matchroom confirmed French boxer Zakaria Azzouzi (14–2–2, 10 KOs) as Chisora's opponent. After a slow first round where Chisora used his jab and stalked Azzouzi, Chisora dropped Azzouzi with a big right hand in the next round. The fight was then stopped by referee Robert Williams after Azzouzi struggled to get to his feet. The official time of the stoppage was at 2:12 of round 2. After the fight, whilst being interviewed by the Sky Sports team, Chisora called over David Haye and his fighter Joe Joyce. Prior to calling them over, Chisora referred to Joyce as a Chihuahua. Chisora first asked Haye if he had confidence in Joyce and then stated, "In front of the British public on
live television, I'll make a deal with you right now: if he (Joyce) beats me you write me a cheque of £1, if I beat him you give me your purse against Tony (Bellew) and your TV rights". Haye rejected the offer. Chisora then told Haye to not mention his name again. Haye told Sky Sports, "We offered him the same money he got for (Kubrat) Pulev, more money than he got for the European title, but you said no. Okay, we understand".
Chisora vs. Takam After a month of speculation, on 15 June 2018, a fight between Chisora and former world title challenger
Carlos Takam was finally announced to take place at the
O2 Arena in London on 28 July 2018, with the bout taking place on the undercard of
Dillian Whyte vs.
Joseph Parker on Sky Box Office. Takam started the fight out-working Chisora, who spent most of the rounds against the ropes looking for counters. Chisora began to take more punishment as the fight progressed and fell clearly behind on the scorecards. At one point in round 6, referee Howard Foster was looking at possibly stopping the fight with Chisora taking shots against the ropes. By round 7, Takam was landing the better shots and looked to be on his way to an eventual stoppage win; however in round 8, Chisora connected with a big right hand to Takam's head, sending him to the canvas. Takam made it unsteadily to his feet and the fight resumed only for Chisora to immediately land an identical punch and drop Takam a second time. Foster then stopped the fight with 1 minute remaining in the round. With the win, Chisora claimed the vacant WBA International title. Promoter Hearn and pundits in the arena stated he had made his way back into the heavyweight title mix. After the bout, on who he would like to fight next, he said, "I definitely want the winner of the main event (Whyte vs. Parker)." Hearn stated in the post-fight press conference that he would issue a challenge to WBC champion
Deontay Wilder to defend his title against Chisora in either Brooklyn or London.
Chisora vs. Whyte II In mid October 2018, Whyte and Cuban boxer
Luis Ortiz appeared to have a war of words and called each other out, with Ortiz stating he would come to the UK and fight Whyte on 22 December, a potential PPV date allocated to the possible Whyte vs. Chisora rematch. After hearing this, Chisora came out saying 'No one wants to see that [Whyte-Ortiz]', that he was 'the Money Man' and Whyte should fight him if he wants to earn more money. Hearn also stated despite Ortiz putting his name forward, Chisora was the front-runner to fight Whyte. On 17 October, it was reported that Chisora had hired former rival
David Haye as his new manager. The news came as a shock as both Chisora and Haye had been rivals since before they had their grudge match in 2012 and in early 2018 were involved in broken down talks when Haye tried to persuade Chisora to fight his boxer Joe Joyce. Both Haye and Chisora sat down in the Sky studios and talked about their relationship, explaining how they came to a deal. They also stated that Chisora will no longer go by the name 'Del Boy' and would now be 'WAR'. On 22 October, Whyte told Sky Sports that Chisora needed to sign a deal quick or he would look at other options. On 1 November, the rematch was announced to take place on 22 December at
The O2 Arena on
Sky Sports Box Office. Chisora weighed 246.2 pounds, his lightest since he fought Kubrat Pulev and Whyte weighed 246.5 pounds. Chisora lost the fight via KO in the eleventh round. At the time of stoppage, two judges had Chisora ahead 95–94 and one judge had Whyte ahead 95–94.
Change of trainers On 15 February 2019, it was announced that Chisora had split with long-time trainer Don Charles and linked up with Rotherham based, experienced trainer
Dave Coldwell, who was most well-known for leading
Tony Bellew to win the WBC cruiserweight title. Speaking on the new partnership, Chisora said, "People know by now that I don't like to do things the conventional way. This is a new direction for me, I'm excited to be working with Dave Coldwell, I'm learning every day, I'm buzzing. Dave has done amazing work with my good friend Tony Bellew and his other boxers. I'm hungry to get back in the ring again, I will be back with new armoury I'm ready for WAR." Coldwell revealed it was Chisora's manager
David Haye to called him. Coldwell confirmed any animosity between him and Haye was over.
Chisora vs. Gashi On 11 March 2019, Matchroom Boxing announced a doubleheader which included Chisora making his ring return on 20 April, as the co-main event to
Dave Allen vs.
Lucas Browne at
The O2 Arena in London. Chisora's opponent was German boxer
Senad Gashi (17–2, 17 KOs). Chisora hoping to get a fight with Joseph Parker finalised but claimed Parker ducked him, who said he needed more time to prepare. Gashi didn't believe bringing in Coldwell would help change anything in Chisora's style. He said, "Derek is an old dog and it's hard to teach an old dog new tricks. Derek is a very experienced guy, he doesn't have a boxing brain but his toughness and experience makes up for that." Gashi was known to UK fans after he was a last minute replacement in fighting
Carlos Takam on the
Whyte vs. Chisora rematch undercard, where he went on to lose via a 7th round stoppage. On fight week, Gashi revealed that he had already beaten Chisora in his mind, "I definitely think I can win against Derek Chisora. I have visualised this fight in my head many times. I have fought in my head 10 times against Derek Chisora, nine times I won and one time I got disqualified." Gashi said he had a good camp with his team and was much better prepared compared to the 3-day notice he received against Takam. Chisora weighed 259 pounds and 29 year old Gashi weighed 220.3 pounds. Chisora won a comfortable unanimous points decision on the judges' scorecards, which read 99–91, 100–90, and 100–91. Although Chisora usually entertains, the fight was heavily described as dull, with fans and pundits accusing Gashi as being a spoiler. Gashi very reluctantly engaged and Chisora's lack of cutting off the ring and being slow on his feet, meant there was little action. The Sky Sports also said we would likely never see Gashi back on a UK card, on the back of his performance. New trainer Coldwell tried to look for positives in the fight. He was looking forward to the remainder of the year and the fights they would work together moving forward.
Chisora vs. Szpilka On 13 June 2019, a fight between Chisora and former world title challenger
Artur Szpilka (22–3, 15 KOs) was announced to take place at the
O2 Arena in London on 20 July, with the bout taking place on the undercard of
Dillian Whyte vs. Oscar Rivas live on
Sky Sports Box Office. The fight was being built up as a crossroads fight, a must-win for both, to keep them in the mix for bigger heavyweight paydays. Chisora knew the pressure was on based on his last performance. Chisora said Gashi would never fight on UK soil again following his performance in their fight. Gashi's performance also meant Chisora was unable to give the fans a good fight. With the
Joseph Parker fight looming in the future, trainer
Dave Coldwell also wanted Chisora to put in a performance and make a statement. According to Coldwell, Chisora had prepared well for southpaw training in camp. A win here would set up the Parker fight for the fall. During the build up and press conferences, Szpilka steered clear from any trash talk claiming his fists will do the talking. Coldwell and Haye did their best to enrage Szpilka. He also warned Chisora not to look past him, knowing the Parker fight was likely ahead. Chisora weighed in at 257 pounds and Szpilka weighed in at 243 pounds. During the face-off, both boxers wore bandanas off their countries flags over their mouth. Chisora tried to get under Szpilka's skin by
showing him the middle finger. Szpilka didn't respond. The fight was scheduled for 10-rounds. Chisora produced a ruthless display and defeated Szpilka via 2nd Round KO. The first round started slow as Szpilka did his best to keep out of Chisora's reach and landing the occasional left hand. In round 2, Szpilka was first stunned to the head following a looping right hand. He began to cover up against the ropes as Chisora landed a five-punch barrage. Szpilka became defenceless and the last blow was a right hand, which dropped Szpilka. The referee stepped in and stopped the fight. During the post-fight interviews, Chisora said, "I want Joseph Parker, bring him on. Let's hope that Australian chicken doesn't go ducking." Hearn and Haye also said it was the fight to make next.
Chisora vs. Price On 31 August 2019, a fight between Chisora and Parker was announced to take place at the
O2 Arena in London on 26 October, with the bout taking place as the co-main event to the
World Boxing Super Series: Light welterweight final between
Regis Prograis and
Josh Taylor live on
Sky Sports Box Office. On 19 September, it was reported that Chisora and Dave Coldwell had parted ways on good terms. The reason due to Coldwell being based in Rotherham, having commitments with local boxers and Chisora who was based in London, and often fighting in London. Chisora asked Coldwell to train in London and Coldwell was unable to accept the terms. On 2 October, it was announced Parker had been forced to withdraw from the fight due to a spider bite that was causing illness during training. On 8 October, 36 year old fellow British heavyweight
David Price (25–6, 20 KOs) was announced as Chisora's replacement opponent. Price was on a 3-fight win streak since being stopped by
Sergey Kuzmin on
September 2018, most recently defeating
David Allen. Price had been keeping fit and stayed in the gym through Summer knowing an opportunity could come at anytime. On 14 October, Parker's manager David Higgins announced that Parker had recovered from the spider bite. He revealed the illness caused Parker to miss 3 weeks of training, the reason he was not able to fight on 26 October. Parker was hoping the fight would be rescheduled in the near future. Speaking ahead of the fight, Chisora admitted he had a soft spot for Price, as they went through the ranks together. He said, "Come fight week, everything goes out the window, man. Best friend or not best friend, I'm coming to destroy you. After that we can shake hands and love each other, fight week it's war." During fight week, Chisora revealed Steve Broughton as his new trainer, who would work his corner for the fight. He retained Ruben Tabares as his strength and conditioning coach. Broughton was known to have worked with former world champions
Josh Taylor,
Carl Frampton and
David Haye previously. Hearn spoke about the opportunities for the winner, possibly to fight former undisputed cruiserweight champion
Oleksandr Usyk in 2020 at heavyweight. This all depended on what Usyk wanted to do. Hearn stated the winner of Chisora and Price would get a big fight next regardless. Chisora weighed in at 260¼ pounds and Price was slightly heavier at 264¼ pounds. Chisora won the fight via 4th-round TKO. He came out throwing punches, looking to land, but Price, the taller boxer, was looking to hold and at the same time land some of his own shots. In round two, the action continued with both trying to land shots. Round 3 saw Chisora increase the pressure and upped the pace of the fight. Chisora got Price on the ropes following some shots to the head and it looked as if the end was near. Price landed a right uppercut on Chisora's chin, backing him up. Round 4 started and Chisora did not take any chances in trying to get Price out of there. He landed shots on the inside overwhelming Price, who began to breathe heavily, eventually dropping to the canvas for the count. Price managed to beat the count with the help of the ropes looking distressed. It appeared as thought referee Howard Foster was going to let the action continue until his corner threw in the towel. Some felt it was premature, however Price took some heavy damage. In the post-fight interviews, Chisora said, "I came to seek and destroy. If I caught him, he would be gone. It was just business. He stepped up and saved the show. He buzzed me and caught me with an uppercut but I recovered easily and I came back and finish the job." Chisora was hoping to be added to the
Andy Ruiz Jr. vs. Anthony Joshua rematch undercard, which was scheduled to take place in Saudi Arabia in December 2019.
Chisora vs. Usyk On 11 March 2020, it was announced that
Oleksandr Usyk would fight Chisora on 23 May at
The O2 Arena in London. The fight was to take place on
Sky Sports Box Office in the UK and on
DAZN in the US. Sky Sports' Head of Boxing Development Adam Smith, described the fight a "classic Heavyweight clash". If successful, Usyk would be first in line to fight for the
WBO heavyweight title held by
Anthony Joshua. As part of his preparation for his bouts, Usyk sparred occasionally with former unified heavyweight champion
Wladimir Klitschko. Chisora described the fight as his hardest ever. In preparation, he joked that he was taking dance lessons. Chisora said he would come at Usyk non-stop and aware he would have to take five shots before he would land just one. Usyk also acknowledged this was a tough step up in class for him and would treat it as a true test at heavyweight. Chisora was entering the fight on the back of a three-fight win streak, following his
stoppage loss to Dillian Whyte in 2018.
Eddie Hearn revealed he was surprised Usyk took the fight, but was aware it was the fight Usyk needed to prepare for the world champions at heavyweight. He also said what Usyk gives up in terms of size and power, he would make up skill and speed, which would be key to victory. For further preparation, Chisora had sparred
Byrant Jennings. His manager
David Haye was working on getting heavyweights to spar with Chisora who could closely mirror Usyk's quickness. There was additional motivation for Chisora, as a win here would mean he would talk Usyk's WBO mandatory status. Haye revealed the game plan was not to outbox Usyk, but to make the fight rough and high pressure from the start. Haye thought Usyk's team were making a mistake in allowing this fight to take place. Usyk would be next in line to fight Joshua, who was
scheduled to defend his titles against
Kubrat Pulev later in the year. Usyk's manager Egis Klimas stated after the Chisora fight, they expected the mandatory to be called despite Joshua and his team discussing long-awaited fights against
Tyson Fury and
Deontay Wilder. On 17 March, there was already talks about
sports events being cancelled around UK due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Usyk had not been as active as he wanted to be since his win over Bellew in November 2018. Usyk's training camp was in isolation. Matchroom Boxing had already cancelled their shows around the world for March and April. Hearn confirmed he had contingency plans in place in case any fights were postponed. He had back-up dates in lined up for the Summer. As the days continued, Hearn admitted it was looking less likely the fight would take place on the original scheduled date. On 30 March, the
British Boxing Board of Control extended the suspension until he end of May, following the guidelines from government and medical authorities, meaning the fight would be postponed. Hearn hinted the fight could take place in Saudi Arabia, if the country was to exit lockdown before the UK. He then said it could take place anywhere outside the UK.. It was looking likely that boxing events would take place from June 2020, without any spectators. Haye told IFL tv the fight needed to take place in front of a crowd. A date in October 2020 was being discussed. Usyk and Chisora had continued to train for the upcoming fight. The fight was pushed back to 31 October 2020 due to the and the venue was moved to
The SSE Arena in London. According to
CBS Sports, Chisora was a +475 betting underdog. Usyk was reported to earn a £1.8 million purse. For his second heavyweight fight, Usyk weighed 217 ¼ pounds and Chisora weighed 255 ½ pounds, a 38 pound weight advantage. Chisora lost by unanimous decision. From the opening bell, Chisora started a fast pace, attempting to close the distance and apply sustained pressure, landing hooks to the body on the inside, and forcing Usyk to be backed up against the ropes, with Usyk boxing at range defensively. As the early rounds progressed, Chisora continued to fight aggressively on the front foot, maintaining a high work rate, with Usyk landing clean straight left hands and quick counters on the back foot. In the middle rounds, Usyk was able to control the pace, using his superior movement and footwork to lead with solid jabs and land combination punches from angles on the outside, outboxing Chisora and escaping his attacks. In the later rounds, Chisora upped his output and remained on the offensive, pressing forward and successfully landing a series of hard right hands and body shots, with Usyk responding with several heavy flurries and scoring stiff blows repeatedly. All three judges unanimously scored the fight in favour of Usyk, with scores of 117–112, 115–113 and 115–113.
Chisora vs. Parker Derek Chisora vs.
Joseph Parker had originally been scheduled to take place on 26 October 2019, but Parker was forced to pull out after suffering a spider bite injury. After the pair's respective fights against unbeaten opponents,
Oleskandr Usyk and
Junior Fa, it was announced on 19 March 2021 that Chisora would fight the former
WBO heavyweight champion on 1 May 2021 for the vacant WBO Inter-Continental heavyweight title, live on
Sky Sports Box Office. The day before the fight, the event looked to be in jeopardy as Chisora threatened to pull out, after losing a coin toss that meant he would have to walk to the ring first, which he objected to. The dispute was resolved on the day of the fight, and the fight went ahead as planned. On the night, Chisora started the fight strong, knocking Parker down in just seven seconds of the first round with a big right hand. He closed the distance and pressured his opponent in the early rounds, but Parker rallied back in the mid-to-late rounds, boxing well off the back foot and using his jab effectively to win a
split decision, with scorecards of 115–113, 116–111 in his favour, and 115–113 in favour of Chisora.
Chisora vs. Parker II Following the somewhat controversial split decision victory in their first in May, both
Joseph Parker and Chisora expressed interest in an immediate rematch. On 16 September 2021, it was announced that a rematch on 18 December, again at the
Manchester Arena, this time it was being broadcast Speaking to BBC Sport in the build up Parker would suggest that he might retire if he lost the rematch, saying "I just want to beat him properly this time. If I can't beat Derek then I have to really look at myself and where I go from there." Parker largely dominated the bout, landing many overhand rights and uppercuts that hurt Chisora. A big right uppercut from Parker had Chisora wobbling into the ropes, which the referee Howard Foster ruled a knockdown as the ropes had kept him up. Another uppercut sent Chisora down in the seventh and again in the eight. Chisora was again in trouble in the ninth, it appeared at one point that the referee was on the verge of stepping in and waving it off, but Chisora was able to the survive the round. Chisora appeared to be the fresher in the last two rounds but he was ever able to hurt Parker. The bout went the full 12 rounds and the judges all scored the bout for Parker with scores of 115–110, 115–111 and 114–112 giving him a
unanimous decision victory. According to
CompuBox, Parker landed 144 punches with 31% accuracy, against Chisora's 122 punches with 26% accuracy. Speaking in the ring after result, Parker said that "Derek always comes for war, he was one tough guy and never stopped coming forward until the end, we practised and practised that uppercut. What a Christmas present. I felt a lot stronger. It was important to start strong and not be negative from the beginning. You can see there are improvements to be made. Derek Chisora is a credit to the sport of boxing."Attention was drawn to the scorecards which were widely perceived to be overly generous to Chisora: reporters Mike Coppinger opined that "the judges were trying to rob" Parker, while Chris Mannix stated, "These are criminally, criminally, bad scorecards."
Chisora vs. Pulev II On 21 March 2022, Hearn made an offer to former world champion
Andy Ruiz Jr. to fight Chisora. He reportedly made the offer to PBC, who declined and wanted more money. According to Hearn, it was a great fight to make and one he wanted to make. On 22 May, Chisora signed his side of the contract for a fight against Polish boxer
Adam Kownacki. A possible date of 9 July was being looked at for Chisora's next fight. Chisora was desperate to get back in the ring following a 3-fight losing streak. Kownacki was also coming off back-to-back stoppage losses to
Robert Helenius. At this time, there was no word if Kownacki was going to sign the fight. After weeks trying to find an opponent, on 7 June, Matchroom Boxing announced Chisora would headline once again at
The O2 Arena in London streaming live on
DAZN in a rematch against former two-time world title challenger
Kubrat Pulev (29–2, 14 KOs) on 9 July 2022 for the vacant WBA International heavyweight title. Pulev won their first encounter via split decision in 2016. Since their first meeting, Chisora had won 7 and lost 7 of his 14 bouts. This was a quick turnaround for Pulev who had only come off a 10 round unanimous decision victory over Jerry Forrest in May. As the fight was announced, fans took to social media to express their dissatisfaction in the fight, with some still calling for Chisora to retire following his recent form. Some were looking forward to Kownacki being named as Chisora's opponent. Hearn defended his decision to put the fight on. He explained Chisora being a fan-favourite and still being able to put on fan-friendly fights was the reason he kept getting fights. He did admit however, the headline acts would slowly diminish if Chisora continued to take losses. The pair had a heated face-off at the final press conference. It started off with a handshake and ended with them clashing their heads together, with neither attempted to break. The security then had to intervene. At the weigh-in, which took place at
Canary Wharf's East Wintergarden, Chisora wore a mask of
Boris Johnson, who recently resigned as
Prime Minister of United Kingdom. Chisora weighed 258 pounds and Pulev checked in at 250 pounds. In front of a reported 7,000 fans in attendance, Chisora defeated Pulev via split decision with one judge scoring it 116–112 in favour of Pulev and the other two scoring it 116–112 and 116–114 in favour of Chisora. The fight was described as thrilling, punishing and gruelling and possible fight of the year contender. Chisora attacked the body a lot throughout. He also landed a lot of overhand right to Pulev's head. Pulev's chin held up and he absorbed a lot of the shots. As the fight went on, Chisora began to tire and Pulev looked the fresher of the two. He landed uppercuts of his own. Despite being badly cut over goth eyes, Pulev continued to come forward and throw shots. Chisora looked tired during the second half of the fight and spent time covering up against the ropes. The consensus was the fight was close and could have gone either way. According to CompuBox, Chisora landed 171 punches of his 526 thrown (32.5%), with 102 of them landing to Pulev's body, who landed 200 of his 796 thrown (25.1%). Both landed 133 power shots apiece. It was Chisora's 86 power shots to the body that was the difference and more accurate punches came from Chisora also. After the fight Chisora told his promoter Eddie Hearn that he wanted to fight former WBC champion
Deontay Wilder next. Chisora said he did not want easy fights and admitted he was not far off retiring, "I last won a fight three years ago… I'm happy today but at the same time I'm sad. I don't have many left in me but what I do have I will give my all to you guys. I don't have many left, so my next couple of fights... I'm on my way out." Chisora was praised on social media by many boxing personalities.
Second WBC heavyweight title challenge Chisora vs. Fury III On 20 October 2022, it was announced that Chisora would fight
Tyson Fury in a trilogy bout for the WBC heavyweight title on 3 December at
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, live on
BT Sport Box Office. Chisora weighed in at 260.6lbs to Fury at 268.8lbs. Chisora fought bravely, but was outclassed by Fury from the very start. This culminated in the referee asking Chisora if he wanted to stop the fight at the end of the 9th round, which he refused to do. However, the fight was ultimately stopped ten seconds from the end of the 10th round, which was met with no complaints from Chisora.
Chisora vs. Washington On 3 August 2023, a fight between Chisora and former world title challenger
Gerald Washington (20–5, 13 KOs) was announced to take place at
The O2 Arena in London on 12 August 2023, with the bout taking place on the undercard of
Anthony Joshua vs. Robert Helenius live on
DAZN PPV. Joshua was originally scheduled to fight long-time rival
Dillian Whyte, however Whyte was taken off the card due to failing a drug test. Heading into the fight, both Chisora and Washington were looking to rebound after recent losses. Chisora had only won one of his last 5 and Washington had only won 2 of his last 7 bouts. In February 2023, Washington left
Premier Boxing Champions and appointed former boxer
Malik Scott as his new head trainer. The fight was Washington's first since January 2022. Chisora expected Washington to avoid exchanges and be on the backfoot on fight night. Chisora said he would chase him down and catch him, predicting a 3rd round stoppage. The fight was scheduled for 10-rounds. Chisora stepped on the scales at 251.1 pounds, whilst Washington was lighter, weighing in at 237.9 pounds. It was revealed that Washington was also approached to step in and fight Joshua in the main event. Malik Scott declined the offer as it was insufficient to headline a PPV against Joshua. Chisora won by unanimous decision after ten rounds. The official judges' scorecards read 98–93, 97–94, and 96–94 in favour of Chisora. There was little action mostly due to Washington showing little interest in engaging and picked his shots on the back foot. Chisora won most rounds by default, outworking and showing the judges he wanted to win. In the 7th round, Washington landed a six-punch combination which rocked Chisora. This was the most offence Washington showed in the entire fight. Chisora did not look good at the end of the round, looking beaten. Washington did not capitalise on this for the remainder of the fight, staying on the move, despite his trainer telling him to engage more. Washington was not able to let his hands go.
Re-signing with Queensberry Chisora vs. Joyce On 22 May 2024, it was officially announced that Chisora would face fellow British heavyweight
Joe Joyce (16–2, 15 KOs) at
The O2 Arena in London, England on 27 July. Frank Warren discussed the fight and called it 'old school' and six years in the making. Upon turning professional, David Haye, who was Joyce's promoter at the time, made several attempts at making the fight, being unsuccessful in the process. By the time the fight would take place, Chisora would have been out of action for 11 months, having last defeated
Gerald Washington in August 2023 on the
Joshua-Helenius undercard. A week before the event, Chisora admitted he was already looking past Joyce and planning his next steps in boxing, regardless of the result. With this being his 48th professional fight, Chisora wanted to reach 50 professional fights and then to retire. He said it had always been 50, ever since he turned professional. Joyce weighed 281.2 pounds and Chisora stepped on the scales lighter at 256.7 pounds, but nearly 5 pounds heavier than his previous fight. Throughout the build up, Chisora teased Joyce about his stoppage losses to
Zhang and at the weigh in, he wore a mask depicting the face of Zhang. In a back and forth contest, Joyce was dropped in the ninth round, en-route to a unanimous decision loss. The scorecards read 96–94, 96–94 and 97–92. Most of the action was back and forth for most the rounds. Joyce took a couple of the earlier rounds. Both landed big shots at the end of round 5. In rounds 7 and 8, Joyce backed up Chisora multiple times and right hands. On one occasion, rocking Chisora. Until round 9, where Chisora landed his knockdown punch. In round 10, Chisora continued to land hard shots which again rocked Joyce. By the end of the fight, both boxers had bruising under their eyes. CompuBox stats showed Joyce was slightly busier in landing 211 of 835 punches thrown, a connect rate of 25.3%, while Chisora landed 192 of his 564 punches thrown. Chisora was more busier to the body landing 44 shots compared to the 11 landed by Joyce.
Chisora vs. Wallin On 17 October 2024,
Jarrell Miller (26–1–2. 22 KOs) told BoxingScene.com that he would fight Chisora at an arena in Manchester on February 8, 2025. He said, "That's the biggest one we're talking about right now – Chisora. It's not locked in yet; the deal's not signed yet. But there are definitely talks. In November, it was reported that Chisora would face Miller in Manchester, England on 8 February 2025. It was later announced that the fight against Miller fell through. Miller posted via his Instagram account it was
Salita Promotions who caused the fight to fall apart after saying Chisora was ready to finalise. According to Miller, his contract with Salita Promotions had expired but said they exercised their first and last right of refusal. Salita later replied stating it was Miller who eventually turned down the fight. On 27 November 2024, Chisora was announced to fight 34 year old Swedish heavyweight
Otto Wallin at
Co-op Live in Manchester. Wallin, who was also promoted by Salita, was given the opportunity after Miller was dropped. The pair went face-to-face at a press conference the next day. The fight was billed was 'The Last Dance', hinting Chisora's retirement. Chisora had recently said he wanted to have 50 professional fights. The fight with Wallin would be his 49th in the pro ranks. Wallin said he was there to win, "I'm here to fight and here to win and that's all. I don't worry so much about The Last Dance and all that, this is my time. You're gonna get stopped." Chisora responded, "There's nothing you've got that I haven't tasted in my life. I don't believe you've got the power to bother me. Even the biggest punchers have not bothered me, so, you know, don't worry, I've got fear of you but it gives me that motivation to train harder. I'm definitely going to come for you." Lead promoter Frank Warren said the winner would be locked in to a big fight later in the year. Wallin received a call from his manager Jolene Mizzone, the day after his birthday, to offer him the fight. He called in a belated birthday gift. The fight was scheduled for 10 rounds. During the final press conference, Chisora said, "I'm buzzing for this fight. It's going to be one exciting fight, I can tell you that now. Do not sit down because we're going to drown this guy. We're going to go hard. I know for a fact he hasn't trained the way I expect him to train for me, so I'm excited. I just want to fight." Chisora explained he was told to retire from boxing after 50 fights. Had he not been told, he could have 'gone to 100'. The press conference was billed as Chisora's final in the UK. Chisora weighed in at 259.7 pounds, 20 pounds heavier than Wallin, who came in at 239.1 pounds. During the face-off, Chisora jokingly put Wallin in a headlock and security had to break it up. Upon entering the arena, videos surfaced on social media of Chisora very emotional and in tears. In front of 13,000 in attendance, Chisora defeated Wallin by unanimous decision, scoring a knockdown in the 9th and 12th rounds in the IBF title eliminator contest. In the opening round, Chisora fought on the inside attacking Wallin's body. It was more of the same in the next round until Wallin landed several left uppercuts on Chisora. He gained Wallin's attention in round 4 following a number of overhand rights. By round 5, Wallin was holding on. An accidental head clash caused a nasty cut between the right eye and eyebrow of Chisora. Referee John Latham sent Chisora to the ringside doctor to be examined a few times for the remainder of the fight, but was allowed to finish the fight. Chisora tired himself out in round 8, when he threw a 30-punch combination, however not all clean punches and not all landed, but Wallin was hurt from this. The first knockdown occurred in round 9 when Chisora landed a right hand. Wallin stumbled back a few stops and lost his footing, ending up staggering backwards across the ring, onto the canvas. Another right hand to the head dropped Wallin again to close the final round. The scores read 117–109, 114–112 and 116–110 for Chisora. Many felt the fight was not close. Fans took to social media to call out judge Bence Kovac of Hungary, for his 114–112 card. Had Chisora not scored the two knockdowns, his card would have been scored a draw, still giving Chisora an overall majority decision win. After the fight, Chisora asked the fans to stay in the arena, as he had prepared to ask them the question of who he should fight next. He had members of his team hold up three posters, one each of Usyk, Joshua and
Dubois. The former two of which got the loudest crowd reactions. He said, "You tell me, I think I've earned number 50. A big blockbuster, please. So you tell me." Chisora told the reporter his ears popped in round 3.
Chisora vs. Wilder Chisora spoke to the media after the Wallin fight and appeared to do a U-turn on the fight being his last in the UK. He stated he may have his final professional bout in London. When asked if he would continue if he was to win his 50th, he replied, "No". In recent interviews, Promoter Frank Warren revealed that Chisora could land a world title shot in his final fight. On 24 September, Chisora announced that his 50th professional fight was set for 13 December 2025 at the
Co-op Live in Manchester, in conjunction with a Queensberry Promotions event. Chisora highlighted the importance of the occasion on Instagram, urging fans to make their accommodation arrangements. He stated, "So book your hotels, book your restaurants, me and Queensberry are coming to shut it down in Manchester." Chisora mentioned that he had a particular opponent in mind. However, he stated that circumstances shifted due to decisions made by higher authorities within the boxing hierarchy. The card was to be headlined by
Moses Itauma. According to Warren, a fight between Chisora and Itauma was explored. Chinese boxer
Zhilei Zhang threw his name into the hat, telling Chisora, “I want to fight you," he said. "I want to bang you. Maybe you want to bang me, too.” On 19 October, 37 year old Miller emerged as the frontrunner to fight Chisora. Miller was scheduled to fight Chisora earlier in the year, before being pulled from the card due to promotional issues. Miller was now promotional free. Chisora made an appearance at The O2 Arena on 25 October, during the Parker-Wardley event, alongside other heavyweight contenders. It was revealed that Chisora's next opponent was likely to be
Dillian Whyte, in a trilogy fight. Chisora was willing to fight if the contract terms were favorable. Miller was reportedly rejected by Chisora from the shortlist of potential opponents, which included Zhang. Warren stated, "Chisora against Whyte is done and dusted. We’ve got a couple of bits to sort out but I’ll sort them out." He also stated the fight would headline the event, with Itauma's fight being pushed back to 2026. Whyte was eager and recognized the importance of the fight given his age and career trajectory. He acknowledged Chisora as a challenging opponent. While there is mutual respect, there was also some personal tension, with Whyte describing Chisora as a bully. On 1 November,
Dan Rafael reported that the fight was cancelled, and Chisora would no longer be competing on 13 December. There was speculation that Chisora might have suffered an injury, but this was not confirmed. Chisora stated that the fight contract did not meet his expectations, leading him to tear it up. On 22 January 2026, it was announced that Chisora would fight
Deontay Wilder in London in April. On 30 January 2026, it was confirmed the bout would take place at
The O2 Arena on 4 April 2026. It was the 50th professional fight of both fighters' careers. During fight week, Chisora was made a 1/2 favourite by
Sky Bet and Wilder was a 13/8 underdog. Chisora arrived to the fight week press conference in a
tank with
Reform UK leader
Nigel Farage. On the night of the fight, Wilder dominated the early rounds and Chisora rallied late. Wilder won the fight by split decision. Two judges scored it for Wilder 115–111 and 115–113, while the third judge scored it for Chisora 115–112. ==Public image==