DEREK CHISORA, at the age of 40, perhaps would have been much wiser if he had done a Joe Biden a couple of years ago and quit the heavyweight race.
The perfect time would have been immediately after Tyson Fury had given him a terrible ten-round belting in 2022.
It was another brutal defeat, one of 13 for Chisora in his riotous 17-year, 47-fight career.
He has endured a total of 135 torrid rounds against a mob of savage punchers.
They include Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko, Fury (twice), Joseph Parker (twice), Kubrat Pulev (twice), David Haye and Oleksandr Usyk.
Zimbabwe-born Chisora has been one of the most successful, courageous and colourful characters to have graced British rings.
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He has won British, Commonwealth and European titles and been a two-time world championship challenger.
When I told Chisora he should think seriously about hanging up his gloves, he said he would think about it.
It must have been a fleeting thought because Del Boy is still at it.
And, no doubt to the delight of his huge ringside following — who don’t take the punches — he tangles with Joe Joyce at London’s O2 Arena on Saturday.
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Derek said: “I listen to nobody — I’m my own boss. I make my own decisions and I do what I want to do.
“I only care to bring enjoyment to those hard-working people in this beautiful nation of ours.”
Chisora is an enigma and a maverick, and the fans love him.
He is a one-man soap opera, never far from chaos and controversy.
Chisora has received a suspended sentence for assaulting a girlfriend and bitten an opponent.
He slapped Vitali Klitschko’s face at their weigh-in in Munich and was arrested by German police for brawling with Haye after the fight.
He was also banned for throwing a table at Dillian Whyte before their bout.
Only last week he took his two daughters to lunch in Hampstead — and head-butted a motorbike delivery rider who was insane enough to attack him after a row outside the restaurant.
If this makes Chisora sound like an ogre, nothing could be further from the truth.
This religious, devoted father is liked by everyone who meets him.
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He has fully earned the rapturous ovation he’s bound to receive when he makes his ring walk.
But I sincerely hope that, win, lose or draw against Joyce, he has the sense to make it his last.
Source: Boxing - thesun.co.uk