

Why Wilder’s direction feels unresolved
Wilder is now 40, and his recent form explains why his matchmaking has narrowed. Since the second Fury fight, he has managed only two wins from six outings. He lost a points fight to Joseph Parker, was stopped hard by Zhilei Zhang in 2024, then returned quietly with a mid-round stoppage of Tyrell Herndon on a low-profile Kansas card.
The right hand remains dangerous. The problem is delivery. His set-ups have grown simpler, his foot positioning less reliable, and opponents with patience have found ways to step off line and reset before he can load.
Chisora’s farewell search meets reality
Chisora, at 42, has been open about wanting one final fight to close his career. He has spoken for over a year about reaching number 50, and his last outing, a decision win over Otto Wallin in Manchester in early 2025, reflected stamina and grit rather than control of range.
He still comes forward. He still leans into exchanges. What he no longer does is force opponents to fight at his speed unless they agree to it.
The options both men are passing over
Usyk sees Wilder as the last heavyweight of his era worth ticking off after Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury. Chisora, meanwhile, has been linked to a title opportunity of his own, with WBO champion Fabio Wardley openly receptive to making his first defense against a fellow Briton.
A Wilder Chisora fight would sell in the UK. Fans would watch and I would too.That does not make it a step forward. It is a fight built on familiarity rather than necessity, taken because the alternatives demand more than either man can safely give. For Wilder, it delays a final answer about where he stands. For Chisora, it trades a last title chance for one more payday, which he deserves. Neither leaves the ring closer to a belt. Both leave knowing the road has narrowed.