From the 1960s to the 1990s there was a false consciousness perpetuated by the Leftist and Jewish-controlled media regarding the alleged superiority of the Negro boxer. Results seemingly supported this, and social factors were ignored. European training methods and facilities were well behind the times in comparison to those of America, and boxing was well-funded in the inner city areas dominated by Negro demographics by both governmental and private "philanthropy". In spite of this, there was still a steady stream of White European world boxing champions from Britain like Ken Buchanan, Barry McGuigan, Terry Marsh and Alan Minter (who sadly died last year). Many Western European countries also disprivileged boxing as a sport as politics moved to the Left and therefore away from traditional forms of masculinity - although there was a definite double standard when it came to non-White males. Boxing clubs were closed in Britain's industrial towns, but funded in the inner cities, while the sport was banned in countries like Sweden. Of course, half of Europe's boxers were denied the chance to compete in the professional ranks because of the Iron Curtain. The Hungarian Olympic gold medalist Laszlo Papp managed to sneak over to Austria to compete as a professional and go unbeaten in 29 fights before the communist authories put a stop to his career right before his world title bout in 1964.
Yet despite successes at lighter weights, the heavyweight title remained in Negro hands from Ingemar Johnasson's loss to Floyd Patterson in April 1960 onwards. Myths and half-truths began to perpetuate that the only reason Whites had been so successful in earlier eras was that Negroes had been denied the opportunity to compete against Whites. While there was some truth at some periods in some places, it was not the whole truth. If it were, Jack Johnson, Jersey Joe Walcott, Ezzard Charles and Joe Louis would never have become world champions. Then there were the inevitable slanders about White world heavyweight champions who beat Negroes: the biggest is always that Rocky Marciano beat old champions past their best, namely Walcott, Charles and Louis, conveniently forgetting Louis' rematch of Max Schmeling in 1938 was against a well-faded version of Schmeling, who had been at his peak in the late '20s/early '30s and who had previously beaten Louis while past his best in '36. Then in 1996 a film was released called The Great White Hype, written by two self-loathing bourgeois white liberals, financed by Jews and directed by a Negro.
The irony was that just as with the world of basketball after the film White Men Can't Jump, a sea-change was occurring during the 1990s. With the fall of the Iron Curtain, the world of professional boxing was at last opened up to the Eastern Europeans. And they certainly came. Suddenly, the heavyweight division was awash with names like Valuev, Maskaev, Lyakhovich, Povetkin, and of course two brothers from the Ukraine, the Klitschkos, who would dominate the division from 2003 to 2015. Again the cries came that now Whites were dominating, it was the worst era for heavyweight boxing ever, ignoring the 1980s era between Larry Holmes and Mike Tyson. And again, few talk about the quality of opposition during Tyson's reign. After the retirement of elder brother Vitali, Wladimir was left to continue alone until defeated by another Tyson, but this time a White European boxer, a gypsy of Irish traveller stock, Tyson Fury. There were of course many versions of the world title floating about, but Klitschko was regarded as the proper champion and thus Fury became his successor.
With the media hounding of Fury due certain of his views that would be regarded as traditionalist, Fury went into a well-publicised descent into obesity, alcoholism and drug-use that saw him unfit to defend his titles, of which he was duly stripped by the organising bodies - although the WBO stripped him straight away for being unable to face a weak mandatory challenger, due to a rematch clause with Klitschko. Such is the corrupt world of boxing. With Fury away and Klitschko seemingly retiring, two new names in Anthony Joshua and Deontay Wilder emerged - both of whom were Negroes. The racial guard had seemingly changed again, especially as an old but resurgent Klitschko failed to recapture his crown against Anthony Joshua. The return of Tyson Fury changed all that with first his moral victory (despite the draw given by corrupt judges) and then his humiliation of the black supremacist Deontay Wilder. And make no mistake, both Wilder and Joshua are black supremacists. One only has to listen to their speeches: Joshua famously at a BLM rally calling for Blacks to only use black shops etc. in Britain, while Wilder has always been a vocal supporter of BLM.
In addition, a certain Oleksandr Usyk had moved up to heavyweight after becoming undisputed cruiserweight champion (albeit with a debatable decision over Mairis Breidis). Usyk is certainly a talent, his skills and acumen being exceptional; the question was whether he would be able to cope physically with the higher weight division in the age of the giant heavyweights. His bouts against Chazz Witherspoon and Dereck Chisora left much room for doubt, and these were not big heavyweights. However, the trainer Peter Fury mentioned something in an interview that I had also considered: perhaps he was doing just enough to win without showing rivals too much of his ability and both making them underestimate him and not allowing them to prepare for his box of tricks. After all, he had been granted mandatory challenger position by the WBO as their cruiserweight champion for Joshua's heavyweight belt, and he gladly accepted, the fight taking place on 25th September. Fury was also in action two weeks later in a third fight with Wilder ordered by a court ruling, and which few people wanted to see after Fury's total destruction of Wilder in their previous encounter.
Onto the first fight itself: both boxers looked to establish themselves in the centre of the ring from the outset, with Usyk setting the quick pace, which he knew would pose problems given Joshua's questionable stamina. Usyk began the pattern that would carry him throughout the contest, the southpaw standing with his right foot outside his orthodox oppontent's left and pawing away Joshua's lead left hand before darting in to attack. The constant pawing of Joshua's lead hand meant he could not establish a jab and the fact Joshua never adapted to the tactic meant he was doomed to lose. Indeed, one must ask questions of Joshua's trainer Rob MuhCracker, who seems never to have a Plan B. Then again, perhaps Joshua is unable to change styles during a contest and is as stiff, robotic and one-dimensional as his rival Tyson Fury claims. Indeed, when one looks at Joshua and Wilder in contrast to their opponents, Usyk and Fury respectively, there is a complete reversal of the anti-White "lack of rhythm" propaganda.
Joshua was more sprightly and had successes in the second, before he was buzzed in the third. As he came out for the fourth round, his confidence had visibly left him and had a look of imminent defeat in his eyes. He did not seem to want to be there and Usyk knocked him off balance straight away. That said, the rest of the round was pretty even, as was the fifth, with Joshua perhaps taking it. Joshua also landed two big shots in the sixth, before Usyk upped the tempo, his accuracy and power also increasing, finding Joshua with a big left late into the seventh. From then on, it was all Usyk, although Joshua did manage to land the odd hard punch that left their mark on his face. One cut required stitches after the fight, but Usyk was unfazed throughout the match. Had he pressed earlier, Usyk might even have scored a knockout, but his corner advised against such an unnecessary risk. Nevertheless, Joshua had to be rescued by the bell at the end of Round 12, which suspiciously went five seconds early to save him from at least a knockdown as Usyk applied a relentless barrage of unanswered punches.
The early bell smacked of typical Matchroom (the promotion company) trickery. Earlier in the evening, Campbell Hatton (son of former world champion Ricky) had been awarded an undeserved victory over journeyman Sonni Martinez. Matchroom is run by Barry Hearn, who featured in Jeffrey Epstein's little black book and has been at the forefront of pushing multiracialism in Britain. Even now, he is setting up Dillian Whyte's brother Dean as a BLM boxing promoter. Am I suggesting Britain has been sold out to foreign interests by powerful White European paedophiles? Absolutely. His son Eddie runs the boxing side of Matchroom's business concerns and had his prize bull ahead on his unofficial scorecard after eight rounds. Of more concern was that the scorecard of Matchroom's go-to judge/referee for dodgy decisions Howard Foster concurred. It did not matter at the end of the day. Usyk's victory was so decisive that any decision going Joshua's way would have resulted in Matchroom coming under scrutiny for match fixing. It ought to do anyway, but Usyk made sure his destiny was in his own hands.
Role on to two Saturdays later and the long-unawaited third installment of the Tyson Fury vs Deontay Wilder trilogy took place in Las Vegas. Both White European boxers were fighting away from home, one notes. Few people wanted to see a third fight because of the huge beating Wilder took in the second. However, circumstances developed that ensured it would be less predictable than previously thought. Regardless of Fury's claim that he did not need a long camp, the results of being unable to train for long periods were evident from the moment he removed his top. A bout of Covid and a premature baby meant that he was either at home or at the hospital for long stretches. One Liverpudlian phoned in to a boxing programme to say he had frequently seen Fury running in the park across from the hospital, as it was the only training he was able to do around the time of the birth of his youngest daughter. Had a fully-fit Fury entered the ring, we would have seen a repeat of Fury vs Wilder II, but the questions surrounding both Fury's physical and mental state made it far from a foregone conclusion.
One factor I mentioned before the fight was whether the bout of Covid would have affected Fury's punch resistance, as it had so obviously Alexander Povetkin's, which no other commenter seemed to mention. I believe this was partly the reason for the knockdowns, so let us get to the fight. Wilder, like Fury, was at a career heaviest, but his weight gain was a deliberate strategy to put on muscle to deal with Fury's mauling and rough-housing from the second fight. He had also installed Malik Scott as head trainer, who had obviously formulated a plan to target Fury's body before moving upstairs. This tactic worked well in the first two rounds, but Wilder, with his limited intelligence and arrogance that saw him belittle Scott in pre-match interviews, soon forgot about the tactic and reverted back to type, stalking and looking for the big right hand to the head. This resulted in him being knocked down in the third, because he again started to forget about jabbing as a defence to break up Fury's rhythm and offence. Fury from the outset had targetted Wilder's left ear, an injury to which he obviously figured would destabilise him, as it had in the second bout. Indeed, it was a powerful right hook to the ear that put him down.
Wilder beat the count quite comfortably, but was still clearly unstable well into the fourth round. Fury then walked straight into a short straight right, which put him down. Throughout the fight, Fury's head movement had been nowhere near the level of the second bout and he was far easier to hit. Fury easily made the count, but was still unsteady and was swiftly put down again, although again he was fully in control of his faculties and arose in good time. There has been some controversy surrounding supposed long counts by the referee for Fury. This is of course more nonsense by the LDBC black supremacists, fueled by certain biased American commentators during the fight. Even if one goes by the amount of seconds from the moment when Fury's gloves touch the canvas to when he gets up, the first knockdown lasts 8 seconds and the second 11. Of course, counts are neither so accurate, nor do they start as soon as one hits the deck. The reason for the "long" second count was simply that Wilder has a nasty habit of not retiring to a neutral corner, which is why the referee suspended the count. In the first bout, Wilder even started moonwalking from one corner to another during the count in the 12th round. Wilder's own stupidity is often the cause of his own conspiracy theories. The referee was also consistent in the speed of his counts to Wilder and to Fury, but it was the American commentators for ESPN who again created a polemic where there was none. In any case, the counts are irrelevant, for Fury was ready to get up anytime he was required, but made the most of the time allowed. After he got up the second time, the round was over, the bell ringing right on schedule, as it should.
The fourth round had obviously taken a lot of energy out of Wilder, as well as Fury's tactic of mauling and leaning on him while sneaking in uppercuts, and Wilder's tactic of coming in heavier began to backfire spectacularly. From then on, Fury began to dominate, with Wilder eating up more and more punishment as his stamina waned. The fifth was close, the sixth less so, with Scott demanding Wilder get back to targeting the body, which Wilder duly ignored. By the tenth, he was reduced to being a punchbag and was floored towards the end of the round. The onslaught continued into the eleventh before a viscious right hook finally put him out of his misery. As he had wanted to in the second bout, Wilder went out on his shield. I suspect, however, that the sustained barrage he has faced in the last two Fury fights will have taken a toll on his health, athletic ability and durability. Mark Breland saved him from his own egotism in the second fight, but had been sacked for doing so, his replacement Scott having been left with instructions never to throw in the towel. Hopefully, this is the last we will see of Wilder, although the race-baiting was far more low-key this time during his ring walk.
The two fights leave us with the reality of two White European heavyweight world champions in contradiction to all the anti-White propaganda that tells us that White Men can't fight. Does this mean that we White Europeans are inherently superior in the boxing ring to Black African fighters? No, but neither are we inferior. There are so many determining factors in a boxing match, but one of them is certainly intelligence. It is no coincidence that Usyk and Fury have a vastly superior intelligence to their foes, which they bring into the ring. If the Negro brings faster reflexes into the ring (although no heavyweight has as fast reflexes as Fury), the White European brings greater brainpower. Both races are strong and durable and can be proud of their strengths. It is just a shame that there is so much race baiting going on. Only a separation of the races can bring a solution to the problem.
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