The return of former WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder is no longer speculative. It was confirmed on Friday, with Wilder set to face Derek Chisora on April 4 at the O2 Arena in London.
A few years ago, this would have been treated as a routine assignment for Wilder. That version of him is gone. He enters the fight having lost four of his last six outings, and the decline has been difficult to ignore.
The timing is slower. The balance is less secure. The confidence that once turned brief openings into sudden knockouts has worn away. At 40, Wilder is no longer operating from a position of control, and this fight exists because the risk now runs in both directions.
Chisora arrives from a different place. At 42, he has stayed active and competitive rather than fading quietly. Wins over Joe Joyce, Gerald Washington, Otto Wallin, and Kubrat Pulev have kept him in circulation in a division that struggles for dependable heavyweights.
At this stage of his career, Chisora is not chasing titles. That window has closed. He is chasing fights that still demand something from him, and Wilder fits that description.
The bout will headline the first show promoted by MF Pro and will air globally on DAZN. Promotional talk has leaned toward nostalgia, but the reality is more immediate. This is not about revisiting past status. It is about seeing how much remains..
Wilder still possesses that eraser of a right hand, and Chisora has never met a scrap he didn’t like. That makes for a compelling sell, but it also highlights the crossroads both men are facing.
Wilder can’t control the distance like he used to, and Chisora is still willing to walk through fire even when the cost is high. Both of these 40-ish heavyweights are near the end of the line. It’s one of those toss up matches between two older fighters that could go either way.
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Last Updated on 01/30/2026
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