Deontay Wilder doesn’t look like the same destructive force who once terrorized the heavyweight division but he insists the narrative of decline is wrong. At 40 years old, with visible wear from recent wars, Wilder says he hasn’t lost a step at all. “I’m in my prime now,” Wilder said recently while speaking with Naji on Cigar Talk. The intimidating stare is still there. The long, coiled frame still commands attention. But the one-punch annihilations that once defined Wilder’s reign have been harder to find.
In four of his last six fights, the former WBC heavyweight champion has fallen short often decisively. In December 2023, Joseph Parker outboxed Wilder nearly every round, neutralizing his power and rhythm. Roughly six months later, Zhilei Zhang imposed his size and strength, stopping Wilder in the fifth round.
Both performances fueled growing questions about whether Wilder’s best days were firmly behind him.
Image | Source: Dice City Sports "I'm in my prime"Deontay Wilder insists he hasn't lost a step ahead of a possible fight against Oleksandr Usyk
Image | Source: Dice City Sports pic.twitter.com/JdCSIuiihX— Ring Magazine (@ringmagazine) January 3, 2026
Wilder finally returned to the win column against Tyrrell Herndon on June 27, scoring two knockdowns before finishing the fight in the seventh round.
The result helped stabilize his career but it didn’t restore the fear factor.
As a massive favorite, Wilder didn’t overwhelm Herndon in the way fans once expected. Instead, the bout served as a reminder that while the power still exists, it may no longer arrive on command. Still, Wilder remains unconvinced that age is the issue.
Wilder believes his unconventional path into boxing has preserved him better than most fighters his age. “I started boxing very late,” he said. “I started at 21.”
Unlike many heavyweights who accumulate damage through decades of amateur and professional competition, Wilder entered the sport relatively fresh. That, in his mind, offsets the mileage from recent defeats even though three of his four career losses have come by stoppage, including the most recent in 2024.
Wilder (44-4-1, 43 KOs) still owns one of the highest knockout ratios in heavyweight history. The question is whether that power can still bail him out against elite opposition.
Despite recent struggles, Wilder is reportedly negotiating a potential showdown with Oleksandr Usyk, who currently holds the Ring, IBF, WBA, and WBC heavyweight titles.
The Ukrainian champion has openly expressed interest in facing Wilder, with discussions centered on a possible bout in the first half of 2026.
On paper, Wilder would enter as a massive underdog a far cry from the feared knockout artist who once ruled the division. But in Wilder’s mind, this is exactly where he thrives. One punch. One moment. One reminder.
Whether that belief reflects reality or stubborn self-faith will define the final chapter of Wilder’s career. At 40, with the division moving on and the margin for error gone, Wilder insists the fire hasn’t faded. He just believes the world hasn’t seen his prime yet.
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