Andrew Tate Vs Chase DeMoor Tickets

Tate Vs DeMoor

US Phone +1 (347) 391-0177

UK Phone +44 (0) 207 6648-627

Sat

20

Dec

Andrew Tate vs Chase DeMoor Tickets

Tate vs DeMoor - The Fight Before Christmas Misfits Boxing

20:00

Dubai Tennis Stadium

Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Andrew Tate — brief winning history

Andrew (Emory Andrew Tate III) is a former professional kickboxer who rose through the European full-contact and K-1-style circuits. Over a long career he compiled the widely reported record of roughly 76 wins, 9 losses, and 1 draw, winning multiple ISKA/Enfusion world titles in cruiserweight / light-cruiserweight divisions. After retiring from active competition he became better known as an online personality and controversial influencer.

Andrew Tate — best performances

Multiple world titles: Tate captured several ISKA full-contact world championships and the Enfusion −90 kg (cruiserweight) crown during the late 2000s and 2010s — wins that established him among Europe’s top cruiserweights at the time.

Notable stoppages and consistency: Across his recorded bouts he notched dozens of KO/TKO victories, with some emphatic finishes (left high kicks and chopping combinations are repeatedly listed in bout results). These finishing fights are the performances most often cited when people refer to his ring legacy.

Durability and longevity: Competing across a period of years and defending titles in international events (France, UK, Netherlands, Romania, China) shows his ability to remain at a competitive level across different rulesets and opponents.

Chase DeMoor — brief winning history

Chase DeMoor is a newer entrant to the paid influencer/celebrity boxing scene who first boxed on social/influencer cards in 2022 and has since become an active heavyweight within the Misfits Boxing/DAZN crossover world. He’s been promoted as the Misfits Heavyweight Champion (since late 2024 in Misfits promotions) and, across his recent run, has accumulated multiple stoppage wins and an extended winning streak under that banner.

Chase DeMoor — best performances

Title wins and defenses: DeMoor’s jump into the Misfits Boxing title picture (winning and defending the Misfits Heavyweight title) is his highest-profile achievement so far — the promoter-driven scene gives these bouts broad visibility and big audiences. Recent reports highlight strong finishes in his title defenses.

High-impact stoppages: Several of DeMoor’s recent wins have come by stoppage — for instance a TKO/KO victory that retained his Misfits belt and another stoppage win that ended in a doctor’s stoppage after a cut in a heated bout (events covered by contemporary fight press). Those finishes are the performances that raised his profile in the influencer-boxing ecosystem.

Cross-media profile: Beyond the ring, DeMoor’s background in reality TV/social media helps him draw attention to his fights; he’s part of the modern hybrid “content creator turned boxer” trend, which amplifies the spectacle and marketing of his best nights.

Head-to-head comparison — what their records and styles tell us

Experience and pedigree: Tate is a product of the traditional kickboxing ladder — many years of amateur/pro/pro-level fights, multiple sanctioning titles, and a long track record of bouts against seasoned opponents. DeMoor’s résumé is much newer and sits in the influencer/celebrity boxing niche; his experience is concentrated in high-profile, promotion-driven events rather than decades of full-contact kickboxing.

Finish ability: Both men have shown the ability to finish fights — Tate with numerous K-1/full-contact KOs during his kickboxing tenure, and DeMoor with several recent stoppages in Misfits boxing. The contrast is that Tate’s finishes were compiled across a much broader range of competitive circuits, while DeMoor’s have come within a shorter, more recent run in promoter-controlled boxing events.

Public profile and context: Tate’s notoriety today mixes sporting legacy with large-scale controversy and legal scrutiny; DeMoor’s notoriety is sport/entertainment-focused, with spectacle around fights and social-media moments. That context affects how their performances are perceived and promoted.