Rico Verhoeven thought he might have gotten slighted when referee Mark Lyson inexplicably stopped the fight at the end of the 11th round. After footage of the stoppage made its rounds, there is legitimate controversy as it appears Lyson stopped the fight after the bell to end the 11th frame.
Verhoeven is protesting the results and it will be interesting to see how this is handled as it appears there is video proof of Lyson’s error.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Result: Oleksandr Usyk def. Rico Verhoeven via 11th-round TKO (2:59)
- Title: WBC heavyweight championship (Usyk retains, moves to 25-0)
- Referee: Mark Lyson
- The controversy: Replay appears to show the stoppage came as or after the bell sounded
- Scorecards after 10: 95-95, 95-95, 96-94 Verhoeven
- Status: Verhoeven is protesting the result
What Makes The Stoppage Look So Bad On Replay?
The timing is the whole problem. Usyk dropped Verhoeven with roughly 20 seconds left in the 11th, Verhoeven beat the count, and when action resumed Usyk unloaded a flurry.
Critically, Verhoeven stayed on his feet with his hands high and was trying to fire back when Lyson waved it off at 2:59, one second before the bell.
On the slowed-down footage, it appears the stoppage actually landed as or after the bell sounded to end the round. That is the detail fueling the protest, because it suggests Verhoeven was denied the chance to sit on his stool, recover, and answer the bell for the 12th.
This was not a case of a fighter taking free shots while defenseless. It reads as a proactive stoppage that came a beat too early from a referee who, in the moment, did not appear to know how little time was left.
Why Are Fans Calling The Win Suspicious?
The conspiracy talk is loud, and it is worth understanding why even if the evidence points elsewhere. Fans are stacking three things: Verhoeven was level or ahead on the cards after 10, the stoppage came with a single second left, and Usyk is one of boxing’s most valuable assets with an unbeaten record to protect.
That combination is catnip for a “they saved the A-side” narrative, and clips of the 2:59 wave-off are spreading with that framing attached. In 2026, that’s all anyone needs for a full-fledged conspiracy concept.
The more grounded read, and the one the footage actually supports, is incompetence rather than corruption. A mistimed stoppage by a referee who lost track of the clock explains everything the conspiracy theory does, without requiring a fix. Sometimes, it’s not crooked; the path to a logical explanation is straight.
It also fits a pattern fans already associate with Usyk, whose stoppage win over Daniel Dubois drew its own debate, which is part of why this one is landing so hard.
What Happens Next After The Usyk Vs. Verhoeven Controversy?
Verhoeven’s protest is the immediate story, though overturning a result on a stoppage-timing dispute is historically a steep climb. The more realistic outcome is mounting pressure for a rematch and a harsh spotlight on the officiating.
The scorecards complicate the pure robbery claim, at that term is almost always used irresponsibly. There is no exception here.
Usyk was ahead on two of the three scorecards once you factor in a 10-8 11th. But Verhoeven was “robbed” of his final three minutes, and that is a legitimate grievance. We can never say what he wouldn’t have done in the 12th, but I believe we’d be lying to ourselves if we think Verhoeven had a great chance to erase the momentum Usyk established in the 11th.
With Agit Kabayel already ordered as Usyk’s mandatory, a Verhoeven rematch may have to wait, but the noise around this finish is not fading anytime soon.










