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Dubois dethrones Wardley in brutal 11th round finish

Faz Ali by Faz Ali
11 May 2026
in Analysis, UK
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Daniel Dubois reclaimed world glory by stopping Fabio Wardley in the 11th round at Manchester’s Co-op Live Arena, turning a chaotic, knockdown strewn battle into a statement of power and resilience.

Dubois v Wardley brought early chaos and two dramatic knockdowns

The fight exploded into life in the opening seconds. Wardley landed a thunderous right hook that sent Dubois to the canvas inside 10 seconds. Then Wardley scored again in the third, leaving his opponent on one knee and looking vulnerable. What followed was not a measured chess match but a raw, physical war. Dubois staggered, regrouped and began to answer with heavy, fight-changing shots, something that looked unlikely after round one.

Hard hits and comebacks

Dubois’ recovery was textbook grit, movie script-esque. After the second knockdown he steadied himself, shifted gears and started to dismantle Wardley with a mix of jabs and clubbing right hands. By the fourth and sixth rounds he had Wardley bleeding and wobbling.

A sixth-round salvo nearly ended the contest. Wardley’s face told the story — a swollen eye, a cut nose, and yet he kept coming, refusing to fold.

The finish

The end came early in round 11. Dubois opened the stanza with a furious flurry that left Wardley unable to intelligently defend. Referee Howard Foster stepped in and waved the fight off, handing Dubois the WBO heavyweight title by stoppage. The victory made Dubois a two-time world champion and ended Wardley’s reign.

What does the result mean?

This fight went above and beyond what was expected. It delivered a fight for the ages.

For Dubois, it was a redemption arc, a response to the questions raised after his stoppage loss to Oleksandr Usyk and earlier setbacks.

For Wardley, it was a brutal reminder of the thin margin between toughness and being outgunned. His rise from white-collar boxing to world champion remains remarkable, but on this night, Dubois’ power and precision proved decisive.

Aftermath and what’s next?

Dubois celebrated a hard-fought win and praised Wardley’s heart, calling the contest “a war”. Promoter Frank Warren confirmed a rematch clause sits in the contract, so this rivalry is unlikely to end here. Both fighters leave Manchester with reputations burnished — Wardley for his iron chin and refusal to quit, Dubois for his capacity to absorb punishment and deliver the knockout blows when it mattered.

Key moments in the rounds

  • Round 1: Wardley’s opening right drops Dubois inside 10 seconds; momentum swings wildly for Wardley.
  • Round 3: Second knockdown for Wardley; Dubois takes time to recover and does not seem as though he will get through.
  • Rounds 4–6: Dubois lands heavy hooks and jabs; Wardley begins to show visible damage as Dubois begins to wear him down.
  • Round 11: Dubois’ flurry forces the stoppage, which ends the contest with an unbelievable finish.

Final round

This was heavyweight boxing in its most primal form. It was hard to watch but also extremely admirable — two men trading thunder, testing limits, and leaving everything in the ring.

Dubois’ win answers some lingering doubts about his resolve and power. Meanwhile, Wardley’s performance cements his status as one of Britain’s toughest heavyweights, even in defeat.

Expect nothing but war if, and when, they meet again.

Featured image via the Canary

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