Sports

After his Rico Verhoeven scare, is this the beginning of the end for Oleksandr Usyk?

At the end of a long night there was relief for Oleksandr Usyk in the shadow of the Pyramids in the great Giza Plateau.

It finished with Rico Verhoeven in the arms of referee, Mark Lyson, with just one second left on the clock in round eleven; there should be no debate about Lyson’s stoppage. A fight is finished by the referee with no consideration for the clock, just a desire to make sure that a boxer is healthy.

There is talk of an official appeal, talk that the bell to end the round sounded before Lyson had stopped the fight, but there is no technology that can register the exact end, no clock that stops, just a man jumping between two battered and bruised boxers. It is an inexact science, but it works.

Rico Verhoeven after his late stoppage by Oleksandr Usyk (Getty)

The controversy surrounding the ending has helped shield Usyk from examination; the world heavyweight champion, unbeaten, untouchable in so many fights, and regal on both sides of the ropes looked troubled throughout the fight. One judge correctly had Verhoeven in front going into the round 11; two had it a kind draw. Usyk was close to defeat, closer than he had been for a very long time.

It is too easy to just say that Verhoeven offered a style that Usyk could not solve, two simple to insist that Verhoeven’s size was the factor. The truth is that Usyk, who looked fleshy and heavy and lacked a sharp edge from the opener, was just off all night. Verhoeven was expected to start fast, fade and get stopped on his feet in about six or so rounds – perhaps Usyk believed the hype. It is more likely that he simply took his eyes off the prize and that can happen. He is just human and at 39, after nearly thirty years in the boxing trade, he can be excused for having a night off.

It is, perhaps, revealing that the first thing Usyk said when he was interviewed in the ring was not about the fight, but about a conversation he had with his daughter that very day. “She is in a bomb shelter,” he said. Have we become so immune to human disaster that we hear that and still question why a man did not look and fight like he normally does? The line was lost in all the screaming and shouting in the ring at the end.

Usyk has now won 14 world title fights across two weights in seven countries, he is a national idol in Ukraine, and he has beaten in style bigger and more dangerous men than Verhoeven. However, it looked like it was far more than just a bad night, a night when he had other things on his mind. It looked like the start of the end and that can often be revealed in far more than just a decline in speed or reactions; Usyk looked like he was not enjoying the fight, and Verhoeven was heroic on the night. Usyk looked uncomfortable and that is a problem going forward. A sharper, younger and lighter Usyk would have solved Verhoeven and won in style.

Usyk was expected to dispatch Verhoeven without issue
Usyk was expected to dispatch Verhoeven without issue (Getty)

Verhoeven will be an even bigger threat in the rematch, but Usyk walking away must surely be one of the options going forward. Usyk is smart enough and rich enough to not become a victim of pride and hubris in a business he dominated for so long.

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