Saturday, December 1, 2018

Watch Wilder vs Fury Live Streaming Free Boxing Fight on Showtime tv Undercard Hurd vs Welborn, Gvozdyk vs Stevenson

Watch Deontay Wilder vs Tyson Fury Live Streaming Free Boxing Fight 2018 WBC Heavyweight World Championship Online at Los Angeles on Showtime PPV. Wilder vs Fury Fight will be kick of Saturday 01 December 2018, 9 p.m. ET. Welcome to watch Wilder vs Fury Live Stream online on your pc/laptop, mac, ipad. Do not wait to access this HD link and you will get live stream,scores,results and highlights.


Date: Saturday, Dec. 1 | Time: 9 p.m. ET (6 p.m. PT)
Location: Staples Center -- Los Angeles, California
TV: Showtime PPV  | Price: $74.99
Cable providers: Cox, DirecTV, Dish, Optimum, AT&T U-verse, Xfinity, Verizon Fios, Spectrum, Frontier, SuddenLink, Mediacom Xtream
Live stream: Showtime App

Tonight (Saturday, December 1st) sees reigning titleholder Deontay Wilder (40-0, 39 KOs) put his belt and undefeated record on the line against former unified champion Tyson Fury (27-0, 19 KOs) in what is a fascinating stylistic matchup with a lot of hype behind it. Wilder is coming off the biggest win of his career against Luis Ortiz in March, rallying from almost being knocked out to brutally knock Ortiz out with his vaunted power. Fury has won a couple of tune-ups after being out of boxing due to a drug test failure, substance abuse problems, and mental health issues. In his most recent high-level fight in 2015, Fury ended the longstanding reign of Wladimir Klitschko, and he’ll be eager to hand “The Bronze Bomber” his first loss.

If you're like us, you love heavyweight boxing. And one of the biggest heavyweight title fights in recent memory is set to go down Saturday night from Los Angeles as WBC champion Deontay Wilder puts his title on the line against lineal heavyweight king Tyson Fury. Boxing's elite and royalty will descend upon Staples Center on Saturday night (9 p.m. ET, Showtime PPV) for the massive bout.

Wilder is finally getting a true test in the ring when he squares off Fury. Both have taken incredibly difficult roads to get here, and both have their eyes set on reaching the pinnacle of the sport and becoming the undisputed heavyweight champ by facing off with Anthony Joshua later in 2019. But first, one must emerge victorious on Saturday night. Wilder (40-0, 39 KOs) is coming off of a thunderous knockout win over Luis Ortiz in March where he was truly challenged for the first time in his career. After scoring an early knockdown, the champion seemed to be dazed after a series of blows from Ortiz. But Wilder rallied to drop Ortiz in the 10th round and score the knockout win.

Fury (27-0, 19 KOs) is coming off a pair of decision wins over Francesco Pianeta and Sefer Seferi in his first action since taking a hiatus following a decision win over then unified heavyweight king Wladimir Klitschko. With such a busy week expected, CBS Sports is providing a guide of all events taking place, plus our feature content, all in one place.

Deontay Wilder takes on Tyson Fury in Los Angeles this weekend in a huge heavyweight fight.

All eyes will be on the Staple Center, in downtown LA, to see whether Fury can cap his return to the big stage with victory against home favourite Wilder.

Speaking ahead of fight week, Fury said he is particularly motivated to win on Wilder's home turf.

I'm hoping it is going to be the biggest fight of my life, that's what I'm preparing for. If it is anything less it will be easy for me," he said.

I'm happy it is here. It gets me on the road again and I've become a road warrior.

We could have had this at Old Trafford and sold 75,000 tickets. I think it doesn't really matter where the fight is going to be, the outcome is going to be the same.

Britain's Joe Joyce is targeting a seventh successive knockout victory on the undercard of Tyson Fury's fight with Deontay Wilder in an attempt to further his reputation as one of the world's most promising heavyweights.

The 33-year-old, a silver medallist at Rio 2016, is being fast-tracked towards world-level through an unusually challenging standard of matchmaking that surpasses the route taken by either main-event fighter and even Anthony Joshua, who won gold four years before him.

Working under the respected trainer Abel Sanchez and influential manager Al Haymon in the United States he is expected to continue his fast progress, which will likely lead to him coming into contention to fight one of the division's champions.



His fight with New Jersey's Joe Hanks, 35 and an experienced professional, also continues the British-versus-American theme of Saturday's bill in Los Angeles. Discussing his most significant professional stage to date, Joyce said: "The streak's going to continue. I guarantee it'll be exciting.

I'm excited to be here on such a massive card. The whole world is watching a treat, on such a big event. Stay tuned and watch me start off the show on Saturday night.

It's a fantastic opportunity. I have to show everyone my skills. I'm excited to lace the gloves on and get the party started.

Hanks' only two defeats have come against established opposition, but he similarly senses an opportunity to enhance his reputation against a fighter so widely expected to succeed.

It's a great time to be a heavyweight, and I'm ready to put my name in that hat and do something special, so I'm ready," he said. "Being the 'underdog' doesn't really mean much to me. I'm from a place where all of us are underdogs.