Deontay Wilder has pushed himself back into the heavyweight conversation after beating Derek Chisora and then publicly calling for a fight with Anthony Joshua. The former WBC champion edged Chisora by split decision at the O2 Arena in London on Saturday, April 4, 2026, before turning his attention to Joshua moments after the final bell.
The key moment came after the bout, not during it. As Wilder walked past Joshua, who was at ringside, the two men exchanged a fist bump. Wilder then made his intention plain with a short challenge: “Let’s do it.” Reuters reported that Wilder later told journalists he wanted the fight now and was ready for anyone in the division.
That brief exchange has revived one of boxing’s longest-running heavyweight what-ifs. Wilder held the WBC belt while Joshua controlled the WBA, IBF and WBO titles, but a unification fight never happened. Instead, Wilder later lost to Tyson Fury, while Joshua was beaten by Oleksandr Usyk, who went on to become unified champion after defeating Fury in May 2024.
Ringside tension puts pressure back on Joshua
Joshua did not brush the moment off with a smile or a joke. He stared back at Wilder during the exchange, while promoter Eddie Hearn described Joshua’s reaction as “ice cold.” Hearn also said a Wilder fight would be “no problem” for Joshua, which gives the callout real substance instead of leaving it as empty post-fight theatre.
That matters because this is no longer just fan talk. Wilder has now won, spoken clearly, and done it in front of Joshua. Joshua’s camp has not shut the door either. That is enough to move the story from fantasy to live negotiation pressure, even if there is still no official fight agreement in place.
Wilder wants back into the top tier
Wilder also used the moment to remind the division that he believes he still matters. He said he wanted to “clean up” the heavyweight division and insisted the division still needs him. After a period of decline and doubt, the Chisora win gave him the platform to make that claim again.
For Joshua, the timing is also important. His last fight was a knockout win over Jake Paul in December 2025. A few days later, he was hospitalised after a car accident in Nigeria that killed two close friends. Since then, attention has focused on when he would return and which fight would define his next phase. Wilder has now tried to answer that question himself.
Why this story now matters
This is the kind of boxing story that can run beyond one result. Wilder’s win over Chisora is the trigger. But the bigger story is the pressure that follows. A public callout, a tense face-off, and a promoter who says the fight is possible all combine to push Wilder vs Joshua back into the centre of the heavyweight debate.
There is still a big gap between a callout and a signed contract. But as of Sunday, April 5, 2026, Wilder had done his part to restart the conversation. The question now is whether Joshua’s team turns that moment into a real fight, or whether boxing lets the matchup drift again.
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