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Abstract:The victory was praised by the UFC fighter Conor McGregor, who called Deontay Wilder's win a "demolition job."
Deontay Wilder knocked out Dominic Breazeale in a single round.Wilder's win sent a violent message to the rest of the heavyweight division, but particularly to his main rival Anthony Joshua.Wilder later promised that a fight against Joshua “will happen.”Wilder's stoppage win earned him praise from the UFC fighter Conor McGregor, who marveled on Twitter at the American's “demolition job.”Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.Deontay Wilder just sent a chilling message to the rest of the heavyweight division.The big-punching American lived up to his status as one of boxing's most feared knockout specialists, by sending his Saturday opponent Dominic Breazeale crashing to the canvas in the very first round.Breazeale had been on a three fight winning run having stopped Izuagbe Ugonoh, Eric Molina, and Carlos Negron, after suffering his first professional career loss to Anthony Joshua in London, England, in 2016.But Wilder beat Breazeale far easier than Joshua managed, and he scored his knockout win with a simple but horrifyingly effective two punch combination after little more than two minutes of World Boxing Council competition at the Barclays Center in New York.Read more: Anthony Joshua's team told us how they're planning to make him even bigger than Floyd Mayweather in the USWilder closed the distance between himself and Breazeale with canny footwork, threw a distance measuring jab at Breazeale with his left, then followed up with a powerful right that Breazeale never saw coming. A right hand launched with such venom it buckled Breazeale's knees and lay him flat on the deck, defeated.Finishing Breazeale was Wilder's 40th victory by knockout, his 41st win in total.Watch it right here:Tweet Embed: //twitter.com/mims/statuses/1129948364563472385?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED.@BronzeBomber banks a Round 1 KO against @TroubleBoxing.#WilderBreazeale pic.twitter.com/dtmcsVFqQh Wilder, who had attracted controversy this week because of his “get me a body” comments, later said he welcomes a challenge from the unified champion Joshua, and would even be willing to watch the Englishman defend his belts against Andy Ruiz Jr. from ringside at Madison Square Garden in New York City on June 1.Read more: Deontay Wilder's desire to 'get me a body' on his boxing record by killing an opponent makes a mockery of the fighters who have died through the sport“I think it [a fight with Joshua] will happen,” Wilder said in the ring, on the Sky Sports broadcast. “The heavyweight division is lit right now. And it is our obligation and our duty to give the fans what they want. The next time the discussions will come around, something will get done.”Breazeale's performance was criticized by the heavyweight great Lennox Lewis on Twitter, who said: “It didn't seem like Breazeale brought much to the table.” He added: “Don't know what he was doing with the left hook, don't wait on a puncher.”Lewis then praised Wilder's “devastating power,” a skill that was also commended by the UFC fighter Conor McGregor who called it a “demolition job.”Tweet Embed: //twitter.com/mims/statuses/1129951331781881856?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw That was some demolition job at the Barclays center tonight! Wow ? #Power https://t.co/ZTJ0CbtFPp
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