Chris Byrd vs. Wladimir Klitschko II


Chris Byrd vs. Wladimir Klitschko II, billed as "Revenge Is The Name Of The Game", was a professional boxing match contested on 22 April 2006 for the IBF and vacant IBO heavyweight championship.

Background

After beating Evander Holyfield in 2002 to win the IBF title, Byrd has successfully defended the IBF belt four times against Fres Oquendo, Andrew Golota, Jameel McCline, and DaVarryl Williamson. At the time he was ranked as the best Heavyweight in the world by Ring magazine.
Klitschko had won four fights in his comeback from his shock defeat to Lamon Brewster while trying to regain the WBO title he had lost to Corrie Sanders in 2003.
The two men had fought six years earlier with Wladimir winning via a unanimous decision.

The fight

The fight was a one sided affair with Klitschko dominating Byrd before Klitschko's right hook finished off the American 41 seconds into round 7, the second time Byrd was floored in the fight.

Aftermath

Byrd had originally planned to fight then reigning WBA champion Nicolai Valuev; he would instead go on to lose to Alexander Povetkin before briefly returning to the light heavyweight division and ultimately retiring in 2010 with the record of 41–5–1.
Klitschko held the IBF title for a record-breaking 3,507 days before his defeat at the hands of Tyson Fury in November 2015.
This fight would mark the fourth time trainer Emanuel Steward guided a fighter to a Heavyweight title, after Evander Holyfield, Oliver McCall and Lennox Lewis.

Undercard

Confirmed bouts:
WinnerLoserWeight division/title belt disputedResult
Sebastian Sylvester Steven BendallEBU Middleweight Title3rd round TKO.
Oleg Platov Colin KennaHeavyweight 5th round TKO.
Alexander Abraham Mazen GirkeSuper Welterweight Unanimous decision.
Timo Hoffmann Abraham OkineHeavyweight Unanimous decision.
Rene Dettweiler Ondřej PálaHeavyweight Unanimous decision.
Alexander Povetkin Friday AhunanyaHeavyweight Unanimous decision.
Andy Lee Wassim KhalilMiddleweight 5th round TKO.

Broadcasting