It was a
dour and often messy fight but Fury, courtesy of his superior boxing skills,
fully deserved to be awarded a unanimous decision.
Klitschko,
whose nine-year reign as champion was brought to an end, simply could not work
the challenger out and did not do enough to win.
Fury, who
was awarded the fight 115-112, 115-112, 116-111 on the judges' scorecards, is
now the WBA, IBF and WBO champion.
Klitschko
had not been beaten since 2004 and his second reign as champion included 19
successful defences.
This
represented a big step up in class for Fury, whose biggest previous win was
against fellow Briton Dereck Chisora (twice).
After a
build-up which included Fury impersonating Bette Midler at a public workout,
few expected the Englishman to make good on his promises and dethrone
Klitschko.
But Fury's
mobility and head movement, as well as his ability to switch between orthodox
and southpaw, added up to a puzzle the 39-year-old champion simply could not
work out.
He is only Britain 's
fifth bona fide heavyweight world champion after Bob Fitzsimmons, Lennox Lewis, Frank Bruno and David Haye.
Fury said
"with God, everything is possible".
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