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David Haye v Tony Bellew: Liverpudlian wins in 11th round

David Haye and Tony Bellew

WBC cruiserweight champion Tony Bellew produced a stunning upset to stop bitter rival David Haye in a thrilling heavyweight contest at London's O2 Arena.
The Liverpudlian, 34, pounced when Haye appeared to turn his ankle in the sixth round to score a knockdown and seize momentum.
Haye, who quickly had his ankle strapped, fatigued in the middle rounds as Bellew stressed he would, his attacks becoming wild and wayward.
And in the 11th, a second knockdown saw ex-WBA heavyweight champion Haye tangled in the ropes, the towel enter from his corner and his hopes of a return to the world-title level of the sport left in tatters.
Bellew - a big underdog with bookmakers - raced to trainer Dave Coldwell in celebration as he scored a victory which will likely filter through to non-boxing fans far more than his 2016 world-title win at Goodison Park did.
And the bitter war of words leading up to the fight ended with Haye congratulating Bellew in the centre of the ring and the victor offering a rematch which will likely be the best offer Haye has.
The first round had those in the O2 Arena intrigued. A hate-fuelled slug-fest or artistic boxing?
The latter won the day, with Bellew happy to see Haye jump in while he fired off solid replies in-between darting out of trouble.
And so established a pattern, Haye taking the centre of the ring, Bellew nearer the ropes.
As the established heavyweight stalked his man, often they stood statue-esque for moments as Bellew looked for Haye's trigger - his own prompt to counter.
But slipping shots can be a dangerous game and a straight right to Bellew's jaw in the fifth was audible ringside, though nothing could be heard in the sixth as the Arena screamed to the drama.
Both men went down - Haye twice - though neither faced a count as their falls to the canvas were deemed slips but the sheer punch volume from Bellew then legally felled Haye, who looked stunned and shattered in answering a nine count.
Bellew, who stressed his rival would fatigue after four rounds, had his wish, dominating, boxing at his own pace, jabbing when he wanted to slow down and engaging more violently when the chance arose.
Haye's low blow in the ninth summed up his increasing desperation and, two rounds later, his clamber from the ropes after a barrage of punches was pitiful for one once at the top of the sport. The towel entered, signalling the third defeat of a 31-fight career.
-BBC

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