
Deontay Wilder vs. Derek Chisora Odds, Live Stream and KO, Judges' Scorecards Predictions
Two of the most entertaining heavyweight boxers in the business collide on Saturday night with Deontay Wilder taking on Derek Chisora at the O2 Arena in London, England.
Wilder, 40, has continued to work his way toward getting back to the title picture. The American shook off a 1-4 run with a seventh-round TKO win over Tyrell Herndon. Now, he'll look for a win over a much bigger name in Chisora.
Chisora, 42, is looking to end his career on a high note. This will be his 50th fight in a career in which he has shared the ring with Tyson Fury multiple times and Vitaly Klitschko and Oleksandr Usyk.
Now, he gets one last chance at a signature win over one of those former champions.
Here's all the info you need to catch the massive heavyweight showdown along with a prediction and preview.
Fight Odds, Schedule and Scorecard Prediction
1 of 2
When: Saturday, April 4 at 2 p.m. ET (main event ringwalks at approximately 5:26 p.m. ET)
Where: O2 Arena, London, England
Live Stream: DAZN
Tickets: Vivid Seats
Odds: Chisora -200 ($200 bet to win $100); Wilder +168 ($100 bet wins $168)
Prediction: Stevenson wins via unanimous decision (116-112 x2, 117-111)
Odds via FanDuel
Preview
2 of 2
This is a fun heavyweight matchup and, as the odds would indicate, it's a tough call on paper. Wilder is the more decorated fighter, Chisora is on a better run and Wilder always has the power card to play.
This also seems to be a tale of two fighters with different understandings of where they are.
Chisora has openly said this is his last fight. He's on a three-fight win streak and he's putting together solid wins, but at 42 he's acknowledged the training camps are getting too hard. This is his final chance to take down one of the biggest names in the division before he hangs up his gloves.
In the other corner, is a fighter who might not be honest with himself. Wilder insists that he has another title run in him, but his only wins since 2019 have come against Robert Helenius and Tyrrell Herndon.
"It's important for me to go out and do what I need to do. It's important because the heavyweight division needs me. I brought it back once before and I'll bring it back again," Wilder told James Regan of ESPN.
Wilder isn't wrong necessarily. The heavyweight division is more exciting when he is relevant, but we have have officially entered see-it-to-believe-it territory.
The most logical outcome here is that Chisora's volume carries him. He's the more aggressive fighter and Wilder's tendency to wait for the perfect opportunity to land his signature right hand hasn't improved with age.
Unless The 40-year-old has truly turned things around and dialed in his approach, it feels like Chisora will use the home crowd to pour on the output, outbox Wilder and take home a decision to finish out his career.
.jpg)
.jpg)





.jpg)

