Deontay Wilder vs. Luis Ortiz (1st meeting)
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| Org. | Pos. | As of | Published |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1+ Mth. Old | |||
| WBA | NR | 30.11.2017 | 01.12.2017 |
| WBC | 3 | 09.12.2017 | 01-12.12.2017 |
| IBF | NR | 30.11.2017 | 07.12.2017 |
| WBO | NR | 11.11.2017 | 15.11-12.12.2017 |
| Ring | 4 | 05.09.2017 | by 08.09.2017 |
| 2+ Mth. Old | |||
| WBA | 1 | 28.10.2017 | 28.10.2017 |
| WBC | 3 | 01.11.2017 | by 10.11.2017 |
| IBF | NR | 31.10.2017 | 06.11.2017 |
| WBO | 14 | 11.10.2017 | 10-28.10.2017 |
| Ring | 4 | 05.09.2017 | by 08.09.2017 |
| 3+ Mth. Old | |||
| WBA | 1 | 28.09.2017 | 29.09.2017 |
| WBC | 2 | 01.10.2017 | 06-12.10.2017 |
| IBF | NR | 30.09.2017 | 03.10.2017 |
| WBO | 9 | 11.09.2017 | 26.09-10.10.2017 |
| Ring | 4 | 05.09.2017 | by 08.09.2017 |
Deontay Wilder 215 lbs beat Luis Ortiz 241 lbs by TKO at 2:05 in round 10 of 12
- Date: 2018-03-03
- Location: Barclays Center, Brooklyn, New York, USA
- Referee: David Fields
- Judge: Glenn Feldman 85-84
1 9102 1093 1094 9105 1086 1097 8108 9109 109 - Judge: Kevin Morgan 85-84
1 9102 1093 9104 1095 1086 1097 8108 9109 109 - Judge: Carlos Ortiz Jr 85-84
1 9102 1093 9104 1095 1086 1097 8108 9109 109
- WBC World Heavyweight Title (7th defence by Wilder)
- Promoters: Lou DiBella (DiBella Entertainment) & Tom Brown (TGB Promotions)
- Ring Announcer: Jimmy Lennon Jr.
- Aired On: Showtime Championship Boxing (Main Event), Sky Sports
Notes
Timeline
- On August 11 in an interview with Premier Boxing Champions (PBC), Wilder said that he wanted to fight against Luis Ortiz next: "Ortiz is considered the 'Boogeyman' of the sport, whatever that means. I'm the one that's calling him out. I'm the one that wants to see him in that ring, and I do mean soon."[1]
- Ring Magazine informed on August 25 that Wilder and Ortiz were in "advanced talks" to schedule the fight for November 4 in Brooklyn, New York. The only serious obstacle was WBC mandatory Bermane Stiverne, who had so far turned down step-aside payment. WBC president Mauricio Suleiman expressed hope to have the situation resolved "within 10 days".[2]
- Journalist Dan Rafael reported on September 1 that Stiverne had finally agreed to a step-aside deal. Per the agreement, Stiverne would face Dominic Breazeale on the Wilder-Ortiz undercard; winners of both fights would then meet each other for the WBC title next.[3][4]
- In an article published September 14, Yahoo! Sports wrote that Wilder-Ortiz was essentially a done deal: they obtained a confirmation that the New York Athletic Commission reserved the date of November 4 at Barclays Centre in New York, while Wilder himself posted a tweet that day: "You see @kingkongboxing and NYC don't mix, for we all know what happened to KING KONG when them #BombZquad cannons hit."[5]
- On September 20, PBC officially announced that Wilder would defend his title against Ortiz on November 4 at Barclays Center in a bout televised by Showtime.[6][7]
- It was revealed on September 29 that Ortiz failed a drug test a week prior.[8] On October 4 WBC called the fight off.[9] The next day, Stiverne was announced as a replacement.[10]
- Despite this, Wilder insisted that he was still interested in fighting Ortiz, "to make him pay".
- Ortiz defended himself by claiming that illegal substances came from the medication he was taking for high blood pressure. On December 1, WBC announced that it had accepted Ortiz' explanation and thus would not ban him from competing for the title. Ortiz was fined $25,000 for failing to inform the WBC about the medication.[11]
- On December 8, Ortiz stopped journeyman Daniel Mertz in the second round. After the fight, Wilder came out to the ring and called Ortiz out: "I think you're one of the best and I want to prove I'm one of the best. So for for the best to prove they're the best, the best must fight each other. So I'm going to bless you again with a second opportunity. I'm coming for you, I don't want no excuses!"[12]
- It was reported on December 21 that both sides were targeting March 3, while the original place and network - Barclays Centre and Showtime, respectively - remained in tact.[13]
- Bout officially announced by the PBC on January 12.[14][15][16]
Ranking Movements
- As of September/October, The Ring Magazine rated Ortiz as the fourth-best heavyweight contender in the world. He was also rated No. 1 contender by the WBA, No. 2 by the WBC and No. 9 by the WBO, though WBO dropped Ortiz to No. 14 in October.
- Shortly following the announcement that Ortiz had failed a drug test, WBA and WBO dropped Ortiz from their rankings.
- In November, WBC completely reshuffled their Top 5:
- Bermane Stiverne dropped from 1st to 15th.
- Previously third, Dillian Whyte was elevated to No. 1.
- Carlos Takam dropped from fifth to 11th.
- Mariusz Wach went from seventh to fifth.
- Ortiz, despite being withdrawn from the title bout by the organization because of a failed drug test, only dropped from second to third.
- Dominic Breazeale elevated from sixth to second.
- The Ring Magazine also decided against punishing Ortiz, keeping him fourth.
The Fight
- Ortiz down once in round five and twice in round ten. Upon the last knockdown, the referee immediately waves off the bout without starting a count.
- Wilder earned $2.1 million for the fight, Ortiz earned $500,000. [17]
- The fight averaged 1.1 million viewers on Showtime, peaking at 1.2 million.[18]
| Preceded by: Wilder vs. Stiverne II |
WBC Heavyweight Title Fight # 113 |
Succeeded by: Wilder vs. Fury I |