Here is what would happen if America's hardest-hitting heavyweight Deontay Wilder punched you in the face
- Have you ever looked at Deontay Wilder, America's hardest-hitting heavyweight, and thought to yourself, I wonder what it would feel like to be punched by him?
- Well, you're not alone. According to his long-time trainer, Jay Deas, many people actually call them up and beg to be hit by Wilder.
- Deas told Business Insider that if Wilder, who is 6-foot-7 and weighs 220-pounds, punched a regular-sized person in the face, they'd obviously end up on the floor. "It would not be good."
- Deas even said he was caught flush on his arm by a Wilder punch during a training session and it left a bruise the size of a volleyball.
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LAS VEGAS - If Deontay Wilder punched a regular person in the head, it would not end well.
Wilder, 34, is America's hardest-hitting heavyweight and the reigning WBC champion who defends his world title on Saturday, February 22 against Tyson Fury in the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas.
Unbeaten in 43 fights, Wilder has won 42 times with 41 of those wins coming by knockout. The only blemish on his record is a draw, which was announced the last time he fought Fury at the Staples Center in Los Angeles 14 months ago.
Wilder has finished, or knocked down, every opponent he's ever faced in professional boxing. His knockout ratio is 95%, the highest of any heavyweight who ever competed.
He's 6-foot-7, weighs approximately 220 pounds, and has an impressive 83-inch punching reach.
The average man in the United States, meanwhile, is 5-foot-9 with a weight of approximately 197 pounds.
So how would it feel like if the average US male got punched by Wilder?
One man who doesn't want to find out is Fury's UK promoter Frank Warren, who recently told Business Insider: "Please, God … let's hope he doesn't do that! I wouldn't want to find out. The way he punches, it's like a mule kickin' ya. He's a huge puncher and a powerful man."
The one man who knows exactly how hard Wilder can hit, perhaps more so than any opponent, is the fighter's long-time trainer Jay Deas, who told us: "It would not be good."
Deas said you'd end up on the floor, obviously.
Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Getty ImagesHe even said that he takes phone calls from people who want to find out what a Wilder punch feels like.
"We have people who actually call us and write us and say, 'I just wanna get hit.' You know? 'I'll sign whatever release, I just wanna say I got hit.' And I'm like, nope. No, no, no … we can't do that. You think you want that, but you don't want that.
"A professional heavyweight rolls with the shots and this takes some of the steam off the shots. So what may look like a great connecting blow, in fact, isn't, because you've turned [your head] a little bit at the last fraction of a second.
"And even the guys who get hit clean, generally speaking, would have taken a little bit off the shot. A normal person doesn't have that experience or ability and they'd just take it flush, and that would be a horrible thing."
So, the average person would just be knocked to the floor in an instant, concussed? "Oh yeah, it would not be good."
Deas said he was once hit flush on the arm by Wilder during a training session. "It left a bruise the size of a volleyball," he said. "So I can attest to that, and that was with an 18 or 20-ounce glove.
"You just don't want to get hit. Your life is much better if you do not get hit by him!"
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