In the eighth, the Englishman begins to weaken physically. He bluffs, is less precise, turns more and more, hangs on. He tries to throw hard punches to achieve a knockout. He barely finished the round. In the ninth, Usyk, who realizes that Fury is less and less well, accelerates. On a left hook, the Englishman is stunned, crossing the entire ring backwards off balance. It wasn't so much the hook that destabilized him as the fatigue. The referee could have stopped it, but he prefers to count it. There is no longer a standing count, but when you are held by the ropes, it is as if you were on the mat. Fury still survives the tenth round. He loses it, but lands uppercuts. Through his technique, he has this ability to come back which impresses me. When he is embarrassed, he hangs up, but recovers. In the eleventh and twelfth rounds, he returned to the fight, which was balanced. Usyk is tired too, but he is still moving forward. Throughout his career, we rarely see him falter physically. »