Fury felt he did enough to win the rematch. His promoter
Frank Warren was shocked at the scorecards, bringing the scorecard sheet into the ring. 5 out of the 12 rounds were all scored unanimously for Usyk on all three judges cards. Prior to speaking to the reporters, Warren showed Fury the scorecards, which led Fury and his team to exit the ring and make their way to the dressing room. Warren said, "I showed it to him, I’m dumbfounded. They gave him four rounds out of 12, which is impossible. I’ve been around a long time, and I know I’m biased, but one judge didn’t give him any rounds from six onwards. Not one round. How can that be? Same with another judge, he gave him one round out of the last six, and the same here with this guy. It’s crazy." Usyk spoke with respect towards Fury in the post-fight ring interviews, "I very respect this guy because I think he's very tough .. Tyson Fury makes me strong. Tyson is a great opponent. Big man. He's a good man. Tyson, a lot of talk, but it's just show." Usyk felt the rematch was easier than the first. Despite being absent in the ring following the fight, Fury attended the post-fight press conference. He said, "More serious … I thought I won the fight again … I was on the front foot the entire time." When you don't get the knockout, this is what can happen." Heading into the final round, Fury was confident he was ahead. Following the fight, Usyk held aloft a
sword in the ring belonging to 17th century
Cossack warrior and leader
Ivan Mazepa. The sword had been flown in especially from a museum in
Ukraine. Fury then retired (for the second time) on 13 January 2025. In the lead up to Usyk’s rematch against
Daniel Dubois, Usyk stated that he believed Fury was still boxing because Fury was a "great man" behind his trash talk ("lot of speak").
Main event unofficial scorecards ==Undercard==