Five-day deadline forces decision under Misfits contract
Chase DeMoor has given Andrew Tate five days to activate the rematch clause from their previous bout. The message was direct and public, aimed at Tate’s team and the Misfits Boxing office.
DeMoor wrote, “There’s officially only 5 days left for Tate’s team to accept the rematch clause. We are eager, willing and ready. Stop picking fights with Sneako and fight the real Top G.”
That is a contractual position, not just social media noise. If a rematch clause exists, it carries a defined activation window. Once that window closes, leverage shifts. The A-side in these influencer promotions is whoever controls attention and timing. If Tate declines or lets the deadline pass, DeMoor’s side can argue the obligation expired.
Technically, the first fight was not a high-level boxing match. It was raw. Wide hooks. Limited jab discipline. Neither man worked consistently behind the lead hand. The difference was composure in exchanges. DeMoor held his feet when Tate opened up and punched through the target instead of arm-punching. Tate faded once his early combinations slowed. Conditioning showed.
If this runs back, Tate has to tighten the right hand, shorten the hook, and start with the jab instead of loading up. He cannot square up after throwing. DeMoor will look to press him to the ropes again and trade in short bursts.
From a promotional angle, this is Misfits business. No alphabet belt. No ranking implications. It moves pay-per-view numbers and social engagement. That is the currency here.
DeMoor wants closure. Tate needs credibility if he plans to stay in the boxing lane. Declining the clause would invite noise. Accepting it means answering the first result with preparation instead of branding.
Five days. Then the paperwork tells the story.
