[6][7][8] The pair had a rematch in February 2020, with Fury emerging victorious via seventh-round technical knockout to capture the WBC and vacant Ring magazine heavyweight titles.
After ESPN was unwilling to televise the bout as the event would conflict with their NFL schedule, it was suggested the date be pushed back for a third time.
Wilder responded to the comments by releasing a video on social media, accusing Fury of cheating in their February 2020 fight.
[11] In the meantime, Fury entered negotiations for a unification bout with reigning WBA (Super), IBF and WBO champion, Anthony Joshua.
[13] Following the arbitration decision, Fury's co-promoter, Bob Arum, revealed a targeted date of July 24, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
In round ten, Fury landed another heavy right hand that sent Wilder sprawling to the canvas for the second time in the fight.
Fury applied more forward pressure in the eleventh round, as he hurt Wilder repeatedly at range and in the clinch.
Nearing a minute into the round, Fury landed a clean right hand to Wilder's temple, causing the challenger to collapse to the floor.
Referee Russell Mora immediately called a stop to the bout, securing a knockout victory for the defending champion Fury.
[22] Fury as the victor ultimately defended his WBC and Ring world titles against Whyte on April 23, 2022, winning the bout via sixth-round technical knockout.