Oleksandr Usyk Drops BOMBSHELLS on Deontay Wilder and CALLS Him Out for a Fight! The Heavyweight Clash That Could Redefine 2026

Oleksandr Usyk, the undisputed heavyweight king and one of boxing’s most masterful technicians, has just thrown down the gauntlet to Deontay Wilder in a callout that’s sending shockwaves through the division.
In a surprise interview at the WBC Convention in Bangkok, the Ukrainian champion declared Wilder as his “first option” for a blockbuster title defense, praising the American’s power while hinting at a fight that could explode the heavyweight landscape in 2026.
The announcement, made on December 1, 2025, during a media scrum with Boxing King Media, caught the boxing world off guard.
Usyk, fresh off his fifth-round knockout of Daniel Dubois in July to reclaim undisputed status (holding WBA, IBF, and WBC belts after vacating the WBO), has been selective about his next move. But his words were crystal clear: “I want to fight Deontay Wilder. For me, I think it’s interesting.
He’s a world champion guy, very famous, he’s a strong guy. He’s one of the greatest heavyweights of the last 10 years.”
This isn’t just talk—it’s a strategic masterstroke from Usyk, who has unified the division twice and dismantled giants like Anthony Joshua (twice) and Tyson Fury (twice). At 38, with a perfect 24-0 record and 15 KOs, Usyk is eyeing legacy-defining bouts before potentially retiring.
Wilder, the former WBC champion with 43 KOs in 44 wins, represents the ultimate “Bronze Bomber” test: raw power versus surgical precision.
The Backstory: Why Usyk Wants Wilder Now
Usyk’s callout comes at a pivotal moment. After his Fury rematch victory in December 2024 and the Dubois demolition, the Ukrainian has been inactive, focusing on recovery and negotiations. Rumors swirled of matchups with Joshua (again), Filip Hrgovic, or even a cruiserweight return.

But Usyk’s team has been quietly pushing for high-profile, high-stakes fights to maximize impact.
Wilder, 40 and coming off a seventh-round stoppage of journeyman Tyrrell Anthony Herndon in June 2025, has been rebuilding after a rough patch: a fifth-round KO loss to Zhilei Zhang in 2024 and a points defeat to Joseph Parker in 2023.
His last title reign (2015-2020) featured epic wars with Luis Ortiz and Dominic Breazeale, but the Fury trilogy left scars. Yet, Wilder’s one-punch KO threat—43 stoppages in 44 wins—remains legendary.
“I spoke with my team and said he is the first option,” Usyk explained, emphasizing Wilder’s fame and danger. “It’s interesting because he’s a knockout artist, very famous.
One of the great heavyweights of the last decade.” Usyk, a southpaw technician with footwork like a cruiserweight ghost, sees Wilder as the perfect foil: power versus evasion, America versus Ukraine.
The timing aligns perfectly for 2026. Wilder’s co-manager Shelly Finkel told Sky Sports on December 1: “Usyk is a great champion. We have plans for next year, and we’d like Oleksandr Usyk to be part of them.
If we receive the right offer, we would be open to that fight.” Finkel’s words signal serious intent—Wilder’s camp has been shopping for a title shot, and Usyk holds three belts.
Wilder’s Response: Confidence Meets Calculation
Deontay Wilder didn’t waste time. In a resurfaced Fight Hub TV interview aired December 2, the Alabama native doubled down on his KO confidence: “I love facing southpaws. Usyk’s style? It’s perfect for me.
One shot changes everything.” Wilder, who has stopped seven southpaws in his career, including Ortiz twice, views Usyk as a “chess match” he can end with his right hand.
But Wilder’s path isn’t smooth. After the Zhang KO, questions linger about his chin and stamina. A win over Herndon was dominant but against weak opposition. Still, Finkel confirmed: “Deontay’s ready for the biggest.
Usyk fits perfectly—legacy, money, excitement.” Insiders suggest a Wembley or Las Vegas showdown in Q2 2026, with purses north of $50 million each.
Wilder’s camp has history with Usyk’s promoters (K2 Promotions). Tom Loeffler, Usyk’s advisor, told World Boxing News: “Both sides committed. This is the No. 1 heavyweight clash now.” Finkel echoed: “We’re definitely interested. Deontay needs a big fight, and Usyk is the biggest.”
Why This Fight Could Be Boxing’s 2026 Super Bowl
Usyk vs. Wilder isn’t just a matchup—it’s a cultural collision. Usyk, the 2012 Olympic gold medalist and former undisputed cruiserweight champ, embodies tactical brilliance: 24 wins, zero losses, elite footwork that frustrated Fury.
Wilder, the Bronze Bomber with 42 KOs, brings Hollywood drama: the Fury wars, the Ortiz comebacks, the one-punch mystique.
Stakes are sky-high:
For Usyk: A win solidifies his P4P top-5 status and sets up Fury III or Joshua III. At 38, it’s a legacy capstone. For Wilder: Victory reclaims a belt at 40, silencing doubters and proving he’s not past prime. Loss could end his career.
Boxing Impact: PPV potential rivals Mayweather-Pacquiao (4.6 million buys). Riyadh Season or DAZN could host, with Saudi money fueling $100M+ purses.
Fan reactions exploded. On Reddit’s r/Boxing, a thread hit 205 upvotes: “Usyk vs. Wilder? Finally, skill vs. power!” Comments debate: “Wilder’s right hand ends it early” vs. “Usyk dances for 12 rounds.”
ESPN’s Max Kellerman: “This is heavyweight chess—Usyk’s brain vs. Wilder’s bomb.” Sky Sports’ Johnny Nelson: “Wilder’s vulnerable, but that power… fireworks guaranteed.”
Usyk’s Recent Dominance Sets the Stage
Usyk’s 2025 was quiet but perfect: the Dubois KO reclaimed undisputed glory after Fury rematch. He vacated WBO to avoid Fabio Wardley, focusing on “legacy fights.” At WBC Convention, Usyk said: “Wilder is interesting. Famous, strong—one of the greats last decade.”
Wilder’s 2025 rebound: Herndon KO avenged Zhang loss, but critics note weak opposition. Finkel: “Deontay’s chin is fine. Usyk’s the target.”
Road to the Ring: What’s Next? Timeline: Q2 2026 likely, post-Wilder’s tune-up (possibly Moses Itauma eliminator). Location: Wembley (Usyk’s UK home) or Vegas (Wilder’s U.S. stage). Promoters: K2 (Usyk) and Premier Boxing (Wilder) align easily. Odds: Usyk -300 favorite (BetMGM), but Wilder’s KO prop +250 tempts bettors.
Boxing’s elite weigh in: Eddie Hearn (Joshua promoter): “Dream fight—Usyk’s finesse vs. Wilder’s fury.” Bob Arum: “This sells out stadiums.”
Fan Frenzy and Social Media Storm
#UsykWilder trended globally, 1.2M posts. TikTok edits of Usyk’s footwork vs. Wilder’s KO reels hit 50M views.
r/Boxing: “Pointless? Nah—Usyk needs a power test; Wilder needs redemption.”
As negotiations heat up, one truth emerges: Usyk-Wilder isn’t just a fight. It’s heavyweight’s next chapter—technique vs. terror, legacy vs. lightning.
The Bomber meets the Technician. And boxing holds its breath.