
Daniel Dubois won't wait around too long for Fabio Wardley rematch
Daniel Dubois would have preferred to move on from Fabio Wardley and will not wait too long for a rematch to be arranged

Daniel Dubois would have preferred to move on from Fabio Wardley and will not wait too long for a rematch to be arranged

Tyson Fury likens himself to a Champions League team and Daniel Dubois and Fabio Wardley to be in the third-tier of English football

Daniel Dubois has rested and is eager to return to training camp following brutal victory over Fabio Wardley

Oleksandr Usyk, preparing to do damage to kickboxer Rico Vernhoeven in Egypt this weekend, has questioned the tactics of both Daniel Dubois and Fabio Wardley following their gruelling slugfest

Heavyweight history is not exactly littered with boxers losing their first two fights against the same opponent and winning the third. But there is an example of a fighter doing just that: In the summer of 1951, after twice being conclusively outpointed over 15 rounds by Ezzard Charles, Jersey Joe Walcott flattened his nemesis in fight number three. He also went on to win their fourth collision, too.

The day before Daniel Dubois and Fabio Wardley were called “warriors” and “heroes”, they were called “squatters” by a man whose own position in boxing owes a lot to the “squatter” mindset, writes Elliot Worsell

Fabio Wardley, less than one week after being stopped in 11 rounds by Daniel Dubois, has activated the rematch clause

Referees, like Howard Foster, are only human and they, like us, will have preconceived notions of fighters' strengths and weaknesses, writes Elliot Worsell

With Oleksandr Usyk preparing to return, a potential new Mike Tyson looming and the fight-of-the-year frontrunner only days behind us, now is the time to say it: The heavyweight division is all the way back

Tyson Fury believes Anthony Joshua is "chinny" after watching Daniel Dubois halt Fabio Wardley in 11 rounds on Saturday night