Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Who wins the rematch?

Poll ended at 19 Jul 2025, 14:20

Fundora - Decision
5
16%
Fundora - T/KO
6
19%
DRAW
1
3%
Tszyu - T/KO
13
42%
Tszyu - Decision
6
19%
 
Total votes: 31

Ruthless-RKO
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Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Image
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Sebastian Fundora to rematch Tim Tszyu; Xander Zayas and Jorge Garcia Perez to contest vacant WBO 154lbs title

WBC and WBO junior-middleweight champion Sebastian Fundora will not participate in Friday’s scheduled purse bid for his mandatory WBO title defense against Xander Zayas, sources have told BS. Fundora will instead fight old rival Tim Tszyu at the Las Vegas T-Mobile Arena with just the WBC belt up for grabs. July 19 is a possible date for the rematch but Fundora's promoter Sampson Lewkowicz told Boxing Scene that nothing has yet been finalized, with three dates in July and August under consideration.

"This is the fight that everyone wants to see," Lewkowicz said of Fundora-Tszyu II. "It will be raining blood."

Fundora outpointed Tszyu in a March 2024 upset over 12 bloody rounds.

Fundora’s decision to take on his former foe, the WBC No. 6 who is unranked by the WBO, means that he will be stripped of the WBO title, leaving No. 1 contender Zayas to face No. 2 Jorge Garcia Perez for the vacant strap.

Purse bids for that vacant championship bout will go ahead on Friday in place of Fundora-Zayas, with any promoter free to stake their claim to the contest.

Sampson Boxing and Zayas’ promoters Top Rank had previously failed to agree terms for the WBO-ordered bout.

Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 14 Jul 2025, 03:17, edited 5 times in total.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

He should have fought Thurman.

Probably more money.

He probably wants revenge though.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Taansend »

Good for Tim. As RKO said, he could have gone for the local money fight against Thurman but he still wants to win a big fights in the USA.

Will be great if he gets his revenge.

Will also be great if Fundora does a Murtazaliev job on Tszyu.

Either way I'm happy.

Speaking of Murtazaliev, he doesn't like to fight too often does he? Only two bouts in the last 2 1/2 years I think.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

So Fundora’s given up his WBO title.

This will be only for the WBC belt.

Honestly, who gives a crap about belts anymore

Boxers are mostly making the fights they want to make.

Money fights.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

TIM TSZYU EXERCISES REMATCH CLAUSE, TO FACE SEBASTIAN FUNDORA FOR TITLE THIS SUMMER

Sebastian Fundora and Tim Tszyu are set for a WBC junior middleweight title rematch this summer in the U.S., sources tell The Ring.

One option in play: July 19 in Las Vegas.

A rescheduled fight between Keith Thurman and Tszyu was planned for this summer in Australia before Tszyu exercised the rematch clause to enforce a contracted return bout with Fundora.

Thurman, sources said, will now land a title shot at the winner of this summer’s Fundora-Tszyu rematch, per PBC’s plans.

That rematch clause could be triggered before or after Fundora’s first title defense. That took place last month when Fundora stopped Chordale Booker in the fourth round of a routine title defense.

Fundora (22-1-1, 14 KOs) will vacate his WBO title ahead of Friday’s scheduled purse bid for a mandated defense vs. Xander Zayas, sources said.

Zayas will now be ordered to fight Jorge Garcia Perez, the next available contender, for the vacant WBO title. The Mexican is coming off a major upset win over Charles Conwell earlier this month.

Fundora was originally lined up for a high-profile fight with former champion Errol Spence Jr. that was repeatedly delayed and ultimately cancelled.

The 27-year-old American scored a major upset when he defeated Tszyu by split decision last March in one of 2024’s best action fights. Fundora, 27, accepted the fight on short notice after Thurman suffered a torn biceps.

Tszyu (25-2, 18 KOs) was affected throughout the bout by a gruesome cut on his forehead that covered his face in blood and impacted his vision. The 30-year-old Australian also had to contend with The Towering Inferno’s dizzying 6-foot-5 ½ inch height and 80-inch reach.

Tszyu landed a title shot coming off the loss and was upset yet again, this time via third-round TKO vs. Bakhram Murtazaliev in October in Orlando, Florida.

Tszyu returned to winning ways with a fourth-round TKO of Joey Spencer earlier this month in his native Australia.

Boxing Scene first reported the news of the Fundora-Tszyu rematch.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Les Norton »

Taansend wrote: 29 Apr 2025, 15:44
Speaking of Murtazaliev, he doesn't like to fight too often does he? Only two bouts in the last 2 1/2 years I think.
In fairness to him I don't think too many are lining up to fight him. After the pasting he gave Tszyu, nobody is fighting him
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Taansend »

Les Norton wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 06:58
Taansend wrote: 29 Apr 2025, 15:44
Speaking of Murtazaliev, he doesn't like to fight too often does he? Only two bouts in the last 2 1/2 years I think.
In fairness to him I don't think too many are lining up to fight him. After the pasting he gave Tszyu, nobody is fighting him
I don't believe that for a second.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by margaret thatcher »

murta was jermell's mandatory for years. kept getting step aside payments from charlo so charlo could fight other guys

then took a while to get a vacant title fight sorted once charlo vacated

murta should have kicked on after smashing tim though, but he let the momentum fizzle out. there are a lot of big players and potential money at 154 with turki involved, crawford and ortiz up there, pbc involved at the weight, so maybe biding time for a big opportunity. with a title, you'd think he could figure into that mix

he could have at least smashed somoene lower level up in the meantime though
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Taansend »

Exactly. Just because you're not getting big offers from the big names, at least stay busy. That's what GGG did.

Do a Winky Wright or Sergio Martinez. Fight in other countries. Zerafa in Oz or Kelly in the UK.

Sitting on your arse in your 30s doesn't do you any good at all
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Les Norton »

Taansend wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 10:08
Les Norton wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 06:58
Taansend wrote: 29 Apr 2025, 15:44
Speaking of Murtazaliev, he doesn't like to fight too often does he? Only two bouts in the last 2 1/2 years I think.
In fairness to him I don't think too many are lining up to fight him. After the pasting he gave Tszyu, nobody is fighting him
I don't believe that for a second.
He holds a legitimate belt and nobody is calling him out.
You think that’s normal?
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Taansend »

Les Norton wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 21:13
Taansend wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 10:08
Les Norton wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 06:58

In fairness to him I don't think too many are lining up to fight him. After the pasting he gave Tszyu, nobody is fighting him
I don't believe that for a second.
He holds a legitimate belt and nobody is calling him out.
You think that’s normal?
Yes, it's everyone else's fault that he barely fights. Nothing to do with him or his promotional team :lol:
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Sebastian Fundora stripped of WBO junior middleweight title

Sebastian Fundora is now down to one major title.

A decision by the 6’5 ½” junior middleweight and his team to secure a rematch with Tim Tszyu in lieu of an ordered mandatory title defense against Xander Zayas resulted in the end of his WBO junior middleweight title reign. The sanctioning body confirmed that Fundora was stripped of the belt in a ruling obtained by BS.com.

“It is hereby resolved that… Fundora is hereby stripped his WBO Jr. Middleweight champion status, effective immediately,” declared WBO Championship Committee chairman Luis Batista-Salas. “[The] WBO Jr. Middleweight Championship is declared VACANT, effective immediately.”

As previously reported by BS’s Lance Pugmire, Fundora, 22-1-1 (14 KOs) is now set to defend his WBC junior middleweight title against Australia’s Tszyu, 25-2 (18 KOs) on July 19 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The same venue hosted their first meeting last March 31, won by Fundora via split decision to claim Tszyu’s WBO title and the vacant WBC belt.

The decision to proceed with the rematch came just days ahead of a WBO-scheduled purse bid hearing planned for Friday to determine promotional rights for Fundora-Zayas.

Fundora was ordered to next face Zayas, 21-0 (13 KOs) on March 24, just two days after his knockout win over Chordale Booker in a voluntary title defense.

The two sides asked for an extension following the initial deadline, creating false hope that a deal could be reached. They remained far apart on money and never fully saw eye to eye on the preferred location, all of which contributed to the bout being sent to a May 2 purse bid hearing.

Upon BS’s report that Fundora opted to move in a different direction, the WBO reached out to the unified titlist seeking clarification. More so than taking another fight, Fundora jeopardized the WBO portion of his title reign by not going through the proper channels.

“Mr. Sebastian Fundora has knowingly failed to comply with a valid, binding, and enforceable obligation as mandated by this Committee,” noted Salas. “Which was imposed as a condition for the retention of his title and reaffirmed in multiple resolutions.

“Mr. Fundora failed to request or obtain prior written authorization from the WBO to engage in the bout publicly announced for July 2025 against Mr. Tszyu, and no justification has been presented for failure to comply with the mandatory defense order. In light of the foregoing, and in compliance with the WBO’s obligation to safeguard the integrity of its World Championships and enforce its rules uniformly, this Committee is compelled to act decisively.”

The ruling did not specify that Zayas would next face Jorge Garcia Perez for the title, just that the belt is now vacant.

Nor will Terence Crawford, 41-0 (31 KOs), receive an upgrade to full titlist from his current interim WBO beltholder status. The four-division champ is waiting out the result of the Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez-William Scull undisputed super middleweight championship, given wide reports of a rumored Alvarez-Crawford clash likely to take place in September.

Crawford directly acknowledged the possibility of the fight in a written request to the WBO, where he could keep his interim title status until the super fight is formally announced.

Fundora previously had his feet held to the fire when it came time to enter talks for a mandatory title defense against Crawford last fall. The principle condition of his jumping the line to face Tszyu was that the winner had to face Crawford by no later than September 30, 2024.

That deadline was extended when Fundora – through promoter Sampson Lewkowicz – filed an injury exemption. The WBO honored the request and subsequently permitted Crawford to fight for its interim belt. It came in his August 3 points win over Israil Madrimov, where he also claimed the WBA junior middleweight title which he still holds.

Since it’s clear that Crawford will not return to the division, Zayas will await further instructions on his first major title fight.

“The WBO Championship Committee shall immediately convene to determine the next available and eligible contenders to contest for the vacant WBO Jr. Middleweight Championship title in accordance with the Regulations,” the ruling stated in determining next steps.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Les Norton »

Taansend wrote: 01 May 2025, 12:52
Les Norton wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 21:13
Taansend wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 10:08

I don't believe that for a second.
He holds a legitimate belt and nobody is calling him out.
You think that’s normal?
Yes, it's everyone else's fault that he barely fights. Nothing to do with him or his promotional team :lol:
Yes, I don’t disagree with that.
But again my question was that he is recognised champion and nobody is calling him out?
Again, is that normal?
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - Summer 2025

Post by Taansend »

Les Norton wrote: 02 May 2025, 21:53
Taansend wrote: 01 May 2025, 12:52
Les Norton wrote: 30 Apr 2025, 21:13
He holds a legitimate belt and nobody is calling him out.
You think that’s normal?
Yes, it's everyone else's fault that he barely fights. Nothing to do with him or his promotional team :lol:
Yes, I don’t disagree with that.
But again my question was that he is recognised champion and nobody is calling him out?
Again, is that normal?
Because his promotional team are not doing their job properly. Because he doesn't fight often enough.

He's just had one decent performance. Let's not pretend other professional boxers are suddenly scared of him. They do this for a living.

Get him a catchy nickname & have him fight more than once a year. You'll see people lining up to fight him the more his reputation grows.

Golovkin had a scarier reputation &, after he burst onto the scene with the win over Proksa, he fought FOUR times in 2013, THREE in 2014, THREE in 2015 And TWICE in 2016 & 17.

Now I ain't saying everyone has to be that busy but not fighting doesn't help him at all.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

PACQUIAO-BARRIOS CARD TO FEATURE FUNDORA-TSZYU REMATCH, ISAAC CRUZ RETURN

Manny Pacquiao will end his retirement at age 46 to challenge Mario Barrios for the WBC welterweight title July 19 in Las Vegas, sources confirmed to The Ring.

The legendary boxer will return to the ring nearly four years after his supposed final fight when he dropped a decision to Yordenis Ugas. Pacquiao is one of boxing’s all-time greatest fighters.

He’s the only boxer ever to win titles in eight divisions, capturing titles from 108 to 154 pounds.

But his last time in the ring was an exhibition in December 2022 in South Korea where he looked far from the dynamo that took boxing by storm.

Pacquiao (62-8-2, 39 KOs) has retired several times before only to return to the ring. His last victory - and great performance - was a July 2019 decision over Keith Thurman.

Pacquiao will attempt to become the second oldest champion ever at age 46, surpassing even the late George Foreman who shocked the world when he KOed Michael Moorer to win the heavyweight crown in 1994.

Pacquiao is currently the fourth-oldest fighter to win a title, doing so when he defeated Thurman. Bernard Hopkins holds the record at age 49.

Barrios, who turns 30 later this month, will enjoy a 16-year age advantage. The Texan is The Ring’s No. 3 boxer at 147 pounds.

Barrios (29-2-1, 18 KOs) is coming off a surprising draw with Abel Ramos in November, a fight where they traded knockdowns. Barrios’ losses came to Gervonta Davis and Thurman.

The fight has been in the works for nearly a year.

“I made history at 40 beating Keith Thurman and I feel at 45, I have a lot left in the game as I haven’t taken a lot of punishment over the last few years,” Pacquiao told this reporter in June. “ … I want to go out making history.”

Barrios said at the time: “I'm very excited at the possibility of this fight being made. Manny Pacquiao is a future Hall of Famer, a legend and someone I looked up to growing up. To share the ring with him would be an honor and a dream come true."

The Sebastian Fundora-Tim Tszyu junior middleweight title rematch will serve as the PPV chief support bout, sources said. Fundora upset Tszyu last March in one of the year’s best action fights.

Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz will return on the undercard, per sources, and one possibility is a rematch with Angel Fierro, whom he defeated in a February slugfest.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

TIM TSZYU EYES REDEMPTION IN REMATCH VS. SEBASTIAN FUNDORA

Nearly 16 months after Sebastian Fundora and Tim Tszyu delivered a Fight of the Year contender, they’re set to do battle again.

Fundora and Tszyu will rematch on July 19 in the co-feature of Manny Pacquiao vs Mario Barrios at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. This time, Fundora enters the bout with the WBC junior middleweight title that he won from Tszyu after defeating him by split decision.

The weight of the rematch isn’t lost on Tszyu, and the opportunity to avenge the first defeat of his professional career has fueled the former unified champion as he prepares.

“I intend to pick back where I started,” Tszyu said. “I know Fundora is one hell of a fighter, one hell of a champion, the current king, I believe, at 154 [pounds], but it's my turn to reclaim the throne. We're going to give the fans a real great treat.”

Tszyu, 30, and Fundora, 27, first met on March 30, 2024, as the latter stepped in as a late-replacement opponent on 12 days' notice for former unified welterweight champion Keith Thurman Jr., who withdrew with a biceps injury. Tszyu (25-2, 18 KOs) was off to a hot start in the first two rounds, but as the second round neared its conclusion, the top of his head clashed with Fundora’s elbow.

The Australian suffered a nasty gash and was a bloody mess for the duration of the fight. Tszyu and Fundora (22-1-1, 14 KOs) were covered in blood as the rounds passed and the fight turned into something more fit for a horror movie than a title bout. “The Towering Inferno” found his stride as he and Tszyu went back and forth for the remainder of the fight.

Ultimately, the 6-foot-5 junior middleweight did enough to earn the win and take the WBC and WBO junior middleweight titles from Tszyu.

“I felt him,” Tszyu said. “I felt like things were going according to plan. I can't go back and relive it, but I have to put on what I put on before.”

“I've had 10 weeks to actually prepare for this style, which is a blessing,” he added. “Knowing that you have Fundora in two weeks is quite hard from swapping opponents, but look, that's no excuse. work out a certain game plan, work on the mistakes that were previously done before and then get the job done this time.”

Since they fought, Fundora has made one title defense, defeating Chordale Booker by fourth-round stoppage on March 22. Fundora vacated the WBO title after his win over Booker, opting for the rematch vs Tszyu rather than facing mandatory challenger Xander Zayas.

Tszyu made another bid for a title when he faced undefeated IBF junior middleweight champion Bakhram Murtazaliev on Oct. 19, but suffered a devastating third-round stoppage loss after being knocked down four times. Tszyu rebounded nicely on April 5 when he defeated Joey Spencer by fourth-round stoppage on home soil.

Now, Fundora's and Tszyu’s paths will cross again. For Tszyu, the rematch is about more than just an opportunity to win back his title. It’s about avenging the first blemish on his record and reasserting himself in a loaded 154-pound division.

And if that means enduring another grueling war against Fundora, then Tszyu is more than willing to oblige.

“I’m already prepared,” he said. “If you told me tomorrow we can go at it, I’ll go at it tomorrow. It doesn’t bother me. I’m not focusing on that. He should be thinking about the physically taxing fight he’s going to be having against me. That’s what’s on my mind.”
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Harvey Dock appointed as referee for Sebastian Fundora-Tim Tszyu rematch

The second act between Sebastian Fundora and Tim Tszyu will feature the same referee from their first meeting.

Veteran official Harvey Dock (New Jersey) was once again assigned to oversee the action in the ring between the above mentioned junior middleweights. Fundora will risk his WBC 154lbs title versus Australia’s Tszyu on July 19 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Their scheduled twelve-round title fight comes nearly 16 months after Fundora, 22-1-1 (14 KOs) edged Tszyu, 25-2 (18 KOs) via split decision. Fundora – a 6’5 ½” junior middleweight from Coachella, California – claimed the WBO and vacant WBC title in their gory affair last March 30 at nearby T-Mobile Arena.

Dock was pressed with the difficult decision to allow action to continue after Tszyu suffered a horrific cut atop his forehead in the second round. The second-generation boxer – who was unbeaten at the time – elected to continue, even after Dock and the ringside physician repeatedly checked in on his physical ability to fight through the blood.

The officiating performance by Dock was generally neutral. Most of the public criticism over Tszyu fighting under such conditions was largely directed at his corner.

Specifically catching strays was Mark Gambin, Tszyu’s cutman who was presented with the Herculean task to heal the horribly placed wound. The cut was caused when Tszyu leaned in and managed to catch Fundora’s elbow, which was believed to have nicked a vein in Tszyu’s head.

Fundora-Tszyu I headlined the first PBC on Prime Video Pay-Per-View event. The same platform will air the rematch, which serves as the chief support to the Mario Barrios-Manny Pacquiao WBC welterweight title fight.

Dock works predominantly in the East Coast but has become a fixture in Nevada’s officiating pool since 2013.

There will be one more official for the rematch who also worked the first fight. David Sutherland (Oklahoma) will be brought back as one of the three judges, joined by Eric Cheek (Nevada) and Patricia Morse Jarman (Nevada).

Judge Sutherland scored the first fight in favor of Fundora. His 115-113 card was the closest of the three ringside officials. Tim Cheatham (116-112) awarded eight rounds to Tszyu, the polar opposite of Steve Weisfeld (116-112) who had it the other way for Fundora.

Interestingly, judges Cheatham and Weisfeld are assigned to the Barrios-Pacquiao main event.

Fundora made one successful defense of his unified title reign. He stopped Chordale Booker in the fourth round of their March 22 PBC on Prime Video headliner from nearby Michelob ULTRA Arena.

Less than two months later, Fundora was relieved of his WBO title when he was unable to move forward with a mandatory title defense against Xander Zayas. A contractually bound rematch with Tszyu forced his hand, though the WBC belt remains at stake for this contest.

Tszyu suffered a second straight defeat after his clash with Fundora, a one-sided third-round knockout to IBF 154lbs titleholder Bakhram Murtazaliev last October 19 in Orlando, Florida. The 30-year-old rebounded with a fourth-round knockout of Joey Spencer on April 6 in Newcastle, Australia. Tszyu was rumored at the time to next face former unified welterweight titlist Keith Thurman but instead activated a rematch clause to run it back with Fundora.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by maurerbrian »

_
Last edited by maurerbrian on 01 Aug 2025, 09:10, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Week!! :bag:
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by goose 5 »

My money is on Fundura. Stoppage.
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Tim Tszyu seeks alternate ending in Sebastian Fundora rematch

LOS ANGELES – It was a split-decision defeat set up by Tim Tszyu’s split-second decision.

When replacement challenger Sebastian Fundora’s elbow slammed on to the top of Tszyu’s head, creating a ghastly gash late in the second round of their two-belt junior-middleweight title fight in March 2024, Tszyu bent over and witnessed a horrifying amount of blood pouring from his head on to the canvas below.

“I remember when I bowed my head down, it was a fountain, a waterfall, and I remember thinking, ‘All right, blood doesn’t usually splatter like this …’,” Tszyu told PPV.COM.

As the round’s bell sounded, Australia’s then-WBO champion Tszyu had two choices to make – admit the cut was too severe and blinding to continue, and postpone the bout for another day while retaining his belt, or continue in what was Premier Boxing Champions’ Prime Video debut and try to win the fight.

“In my head, I was thinking, ‘It’s going to be tough, but I’m going to get through it, round by round’,” Tszyu said of his consequential and monumental choice.

Instead, the distraction and discomfort of the injury proved too much as Fundora performed effectively, thanks to his near 10-inch reach advantage, and claimed the WBO and WBC belts by split-decision at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

“It was distracting, but it is what it is,” said Tszyu, the son of former 140lbs champion Kostya Tszyu.

Tszyu, 25-2 (18 KOs), has never expressed regret about fighting on, and he didn’t blame any members of his team for failing to intervene, or criticize the Nevada State Athletic Commission doctor, who could have stopped the bout as well.

“Everyone’s got to be responsible – everyone makes their own mistakes, I believe,” he said. “I wasn’t able to adapt. That’s all it was. No excuses.”

On Saturday night, Tszyu and California’s Fundora, 22-1-1 (14 KOs), return to Las Vegas, staging their rematch for Fundora’s WBC 154lbs belt at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Prime Video and PPV.COM in the co-main event to Mario Barrios’ defense of his WBC welterweight belt versus eight-division champion Manny Pacquiao.

“It’s definitely unfinished business,” Tszyu said, explaining that the cut diminished his focus on the task at hand during the first fight.

Even so, he had enough success to win on one of the scorecards.

“I could feel his shots, feel his distance and I was able to land shots,” added the fighter who is not expecting a bloodbath this time around. “A bit more present this time. That’s my aim.”

Fundora, 27, has expressed confidence in the fact that he’s returned from the first fight with the 30-year-old Tszyu to dismiss challenger Chordale Booker in four rounds in March, while Tszyu opted to make a quick return to the ring in October, reacted to a head shot from IBF champion Bakhram Murtazaliev with what Fundora described as “PTSD”, and was knocked down four times before being stopped in the third round.

Those events tempered Tszyu’s willingness to rush headlong into ring danger. The Australian paused after the Murtazaliev bout to get married, then took a more manageable date against Joseph Spencer in April, to regain confidence and provide financial winnings that allowed him to buy a new Porsche.

He said he’s learned: “The importance of refreshing myself. I was able to refresh my body and mind, and I came to the Joey Spencer fight looking fresh. I understand how my body works – what works and what doesn’t.”

It leaves Tszyu feeling as if he can now author a redemptive tale.

“It’s a story, something I can tell [about] being able to come back,” he said. “Being able to deal with adversity is a big thing for me – to inspire the next generation, the youth. Just because there’s a setback doesn’t mean there’s not a place for a comeback – in anything you do in life, not just boxing.”

Participating in a division that Tszyu ranks as the most formidable in boxing will make him a power player by defeating Fundora and gaining the WBC belt, with fighters like Murtazaliev, Vergil Ortiz Jnr, Jaron “Boots” Ennis, Xander Zayas and Serhii Bohachuk clamoring for high-profile showdowns.

This is where Tszyu envisioned himself, before glancing down at the canvas and seeing all of that red stuff.

He said he knows there’s much to be gained from “just everything you get from holding a belt… everyone’s on notice”. Particularly Fundora.

Asked if he wanted to send a message to the champion, Tszyu started into the lens and said, “Chop, chop, chop, Fundora.

“This time, we’ll fight – with no cut.”
giacomino
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by giacomino »

Fundora has the freakish height and is busy in the ring but I can see Tszyu taking him out late this time
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

amwsnw
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Re: Sebastian Fundora vs. Tim Tszyu II - July 19, 2025

Post by amwsnw »

All credit to Sebastian. He took some great shots but kept on moving forward and throwing punches. Tim made soooo many basic errors. Why he didn’t parry and move to his left astounds me. He stayed on the center line and move to the right too much. Fundora v murtazaliev I wanna see.
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