
Wilder called Fury “the biggest cheat in boxing” and doubled down on every accusation. When Jordan listed the excuses and called Wilder “flaky,” the Alabama native erupted, yelling he had facts, not opinions, then stood and left the set while security intervened.
Chisora Brings Fury Cutout to Set
Chisora (35-13, 23 KOs), who remains friendly with Fury, arrived holding a life-size cardboard version of the British champion and asked Wilder to pose for a photo. Wilder responded by saying he’d “put my nuts on his bald head.” The stunt set the tone before Jordan turned confrontational. Chisora sat quietly during the blowup, letting the exchange unfold without stepping in.
One day before the talkSPORT breakdown, Fury addressed his own back-to-back losses to Oleksandr Usyk with a pointed Instagram post.
“You don’t hear me crying and moaning about it, saying someone cheated,” Fury said. “That’s not me. There’s no point crying over spilt milk.” The timing suggested Fury was aware Wilder would continue revisiting their trilogy during fight week.

Wilder hasn’t fought since his knockout loss to Zhilei Zhang last June. The Chisora fight marks his first appearance in nearly a year and his attempt to stay relevant at heavyweight despite three losses in his last five outings.
Chisora, meanwhile, has dropped four straight and hasn’t won since 2019, making the fight a collision of fading names rather than legitimate contender positioning.
Wilder’s refusal to move past the Fury rivalry continues to define his public presence more than any current ranking or mandatory path. The outburst confirms he’s still controlled by those losses, even as the division operates without him.

