Chisora laughs it off
Chisora never tried to rewrite history. When Fury’s name came up, his reaction was immediate and brutal.
“He hit me three times.”
On the podcast, when Rick Reno pushed the point further, Chisora shut the door completely.
“F*** that. We’re not talking about that momUgh, I swear to God. He yelled three times at my ass and three times at Wilder’s ass. We’re not talking about him. F he. “
There is no bitterness whatsoever in it. Just close. Chisora views the Fury chapters as something accomplished, rather than something that needs to be defended or explained years later.
Deontay Wilder upgraded
Wilder refused to let it go. Wilder retorted when Chisora said Fury deserved the praise and reminded him he had been on the sidelines for both of their fights.
“He wouldn’t yell at me twice.”
From there, the response turned into a full indictment.
“You only see what you see. He didn’t win anything. They gave it to him. I can’t imagine a third one, but two of them, he definitely cheated. I have proof and evidence.”
Wilder went a step further and tied the accusations to future projects.
“When I make documentaries and films about it, it’s going to be represented. I’m going to bring people and artifacts and everything I know.”
He then challenged Fury directly.
“Why do you think he can’t come back to the United States now? This man cheated. If you look him up, he’s the biggest liar in the history of boxing. You’ll find out. If I’m lying, then tell him to sue me for defamation of character so I can get the evidence. I want this. I can’t wait.”

Wilder pushed the debate towards the game and the referee.
“As a dark-skinned black man, it’s harder to believe me than it is to believe a white man. And then the first fight, the referee, that’s white supremacy. What he did. He said, ‘Whatever is best for boxing.'” No, your job is to count his ass. He counted 15 more to him. That’s it. I speak with authenticity, sincerity and passion. “
He later reiterated his core proposition without changing it.
“He didn’t yell at me twice at all. I tell you what I know. You just see what you see. He didn’t win anything, they gave it to him.”
Chisora’s answer ended in laughter. Wilder never did. This difference is the story. A fighter accepts damage, losses, and time limits. The other keeps reopening old battles with new explanations.
Fury has yet to answer these latest accusations. It’s definitely not quiet when he does this.
For Wilder, the fight is still on his mind heading into April. Fighters who quibble over past failures often find themselves in trouble when plans fail in the ring. Facing the pressure from Chisora, the timing must be earlier. If not, the noise in Wilder’s head may be louder than anything coming from the other side of the ropes.










