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Fundora built his lead round by round, using his length and activity to keep Thurman on the defensive and force him to react rather than lead. Thurman had brief moments where he tried to land counters, but he was largely outworked and took the heavier shots as the fight moved into the middle rounds, with visible damage forming around his face.

By the sixth, the gap had widened. Fundora pressed forward with repeated combinations, and Thurman, showing the effects of the punishment, was unable to offer enough in return. With Thurman’s face in bad shape and the incoming shots continuing, the referee stepped in to stop the fight, handing him the first stoppage loss of his career.

The result underlined the difference between an active world champion and an aging former titleholder brought back into a main event against elite opposition. Fundora kept his belt with a clear, one-sided win, while Thurman was left to absorb the consequences of stepping in at this stage against a fighter operating at full pace.

It was a tough watch. The physical disparity tonight was jarring, as Thurman, 5’7″, was too short and old to be going up against the 6’6″ Fundora.  Activity is the lifeblood of a fighter, and when a guy like Thurman tries to jump from a low-level comeback against Brock Jarvis straight into the deep end with a giant like Fundora, the lack of timing and “fight fitness” gets exposed immediately.

The hustle really did hit a wall. Thurman used to rely on elite lateral movement and explosive bursts to offset reach advantages, but tonight those legs just weren’t there. By the fourth, he was fighting purely on muscle memory and desperation. Fundora is a nightmare for a “faded” fighter because he doesn’t let you breathe; he just keeps those long levers moving until the target breaks.

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