Tony Bellew vs. David Haye II

Last updated

Repeat Or Revenge
Tony Bellew vs. David Haye II.jpg
Date5 May 2018
Venue The O2 Arena, Greenwich, London, UK
Tale of the tape
Boxer Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Tony Bellew Flag of the United Kingdom.svg David Haye
Nickname "Bomber" "The Hayemaker"
Hometown Liverpool, Merseyside Bermondsey, London
Purse >£2,500,000 >£2,500,000
Pre-fight record 29–2–1 (19 KO) 28–3 (26 KO)
Age 35 years, 5 months 37 years, 6 months
Height 6 ft 3 in (191 cm) 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight210+14 lb (95 kg) 220 lb (100 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition Former WBC Cruiserweight Champion 2-division world champion
Result
Bellew defeated Haye via 5th round TKO

Tony Bellew vs. David Haye II, billed as Repeat Or Revenge, was a professional boxing match contested on 5 May 2018. [1]

Contents

Background

After his shock victory in their first fight, Tony Bellew stated that he would next fight in either November or December 2017 with his three options being WBO heavyweight champion Joseph Parker, WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder and a rematch with Haye. Parker was his main interest. [2]

In July 2017, Bellew admitted that a potential fight with widely regarded pound for pound number one fighter and unified light-heavyweight champion Andre Ward was of interest and the teams of the respective fighters were currently in negotiations. [3] On 3 August, Hearn stated a rematch between Bellew and Haye was 'virtually dead', due to both fighters believing they are the A-side and have the right to demand ring walks, poster, changing rooms and split of purse. [4] On 6 September, Hearn stated a deal could be made within seven days. [5] According to trainer Dave Coldwell, both Haye and Bellew had held positive talks and looking more likely to agree to a fight, as long they stay on the same page and agree to the same terms. [6] On 19 September, Haye agreed all the terms and tweeted Bellew to sign the contract. He said, "It's taken months of negotiating but teams have finally agreed all terms for Haye-Bellew 2. Will Bellew put pen to paper?" The fight was reported to take place on Sunday 17 December 2017. [7] Promoter Eddie Hearn stated the fight was not a done deal, but he had hoped to confirm the fight within a week. [8] Bellew replied the following day, tweeting, "I OBLIGE YOU @mrdavidhaye , happy? Now leave me alone with my family please. I'll see you soon enough!" [9] The fight was officially confirmed on 29 September for the fight to take place at The O2 Arena in London. Bellew claimed the rematch wasn't personal any more, just business and hoping to dedicate a win to his late brother-in-law, who had died in August. Haye stated that Bellew wouldn't win the lottery twice. Like the first fight, it was scheduled to be shown live on Sky Box Office. [10] [11]

Haye split with trainer Shane McGuigan in June 2017. It was said that they had reached a mutual agreement and parted on good terms. Some rumours indicated that McGuigan had urged Haye to retire, which eventually caused the split. [12] [13] On 6 July, Haye announced that he had hired Cuban Ismael Salas as his new trainer. [14]

However, on 20 November, it was reported that Haye had injured his arm and forced to pull out of the fight. In a statement, Haye said, "I am devastated to announce my much-anticipated rematch against Tony Bellew has been postponed until 24 March or 5 May, subject to scheduling. It was believed that the injury occurred during a stair conditioning session." Bellew was said to be disappointed with Haye's announcement, but stated he may take an interim bout. [15] [16] Hours after the cancellation was confirmed, Tyson Fury released a video on social media calling out Bellew. In the video, he said, "I'll be ready, willing and waiting to fight Tony Bellew, May 5, O2 Arena, London." [17] Dillian Whyte tweeted Hearn about taking Haye's place and then called Bellew a coward for declining the fight. [18] Speaking about a potential Fury fight, trainer Dave Coldwell said, "That's not a fight I would entertain whatsoever. Fury is big, long and very, very clever in that ring. There's no way that I'd be interested in that fight." [19] Fury himself denigrated Bellew and his corner stating that: "They are not good enough to tie my shoelaces. They're not good enough to hold my jock strap." [20] The fight was rescheduled for 5 May 2018. [21] Haye weighed 220.2 lbs, 4 lbs lighter than the first fight. Bellew also came in lighter 210.4 lbs. [22]

The fight

Haye started the fight using his jab, leaving a mark around Bellew's right eye. As round three began, both boxers started getting closer and unloading power shots. As Haye started to step backwards around the ring, Bellew landed a clean left-right combination which dropped Haye. At this point it appeared Haye may have injured his ankle, with the Sky Sports commentary team mentioning this, as well as the post-fight interviewer. Haye later denied he was injured. Bellew then dropped Haye again with a hard left hook. Bellew came out cautiously in round four, still wary of Haye's power. In round five, both traded punches, but it was a left hook from Bellew that dropped Haye a third time. Haye managed to beat the count again, not long before Bellew started unloading a barrage of punches. With Haye against the ropes, referee Howard Foster stepped in at 2 minutes 14 seconds, giving Bellew his second stoppage win over Haye. [23]

Aftermath

Immediately after the fight Haye congratulated Bellew on the win. [24] Bellew went on to dedicate the win to Ashley, his brother-in-law, who had died in August 2017. He also mentioned Andre Ward, who his team had brief negotiations with in 2017, Dillian Whyte as well the winner of the upcoming World Boxing Super Series final between Oleksandr Usyk and Murat Gassiev. Haye stated he would review the tapes and see what went wrong. [25] [26] According to CompuBox stats, Haye landed 42 of 189 punches thrown (22%) and Bellew landed 70 of his 219 thrown (32%). [27]

On 12 June 2018, just over a month after the bout, Haye released a statement via social media announcing his retirement for boxing. [28] In the statement, Haye spoke about his career from start to finish, all the injuries he suffered, rehab and also revealed he had spinal surgery in March 2015. [29] [30] [31]

Undercard

Confirmed bouts: [32]

WinnerLoserWeight division/title belt(s) disputedResult
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg John Ryder Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jamie Cox Super middleweight (12 rounds)2nd round KO.
Flag of Puerto Rico.svg Emmanuel Rodríguez Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Paul Butler IBF World Bantamweight ChampionshipUnanimous decision.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Joe Joyce Flag of Jamaica.svg Lenroy Thomas Commonwealth Heavyweight Championship2nd round KO.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Joshua Buatsi Flag of France.svg Stephane CuevasLight heavyweight (8 rounds)5th round TKO.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg James Tennyson Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Martin Joseph Ward Commonwealth & European Super Featherweight Championship5th round TKO.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Luke Campbell Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Troy JamesLight welterweight (6 rounds)5th round TKO.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Kody Davies Flag of Poland.svg Przemyslaw GorgonLight heavyweight (4 rounds)1st round TKO.
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jordan Gill Flag of Ireland.svg Carl McDonaldSuper featherweight (6 rounds)Points decision.
Flag of the United States.svg Money Powell IV Flag of Hungary.svg Mark KrammerstodterMiddleweight (4 rounds)4th round TKO.

Broadcasting

CountryBroadcaster
Flag of the United States.svg  United States AWE
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom Sky Sports

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References

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  32. "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Tony Bellew' bouts
5 May 2018
Succeeded by
David Haye's bouts
5 May 2018
Retired