David Haye’s career was left in ruins after he again lost to Tony Bellew, this time following a fifth-round stoppage in their rematch at London’s O2 Arena on Saturday.

The heavyweight had conceded he would have no choice but to retire if hesuffered another unexpected defeat.

At 37-years-old and having proved increasingly injury prone, Haye’s reputation has been left beyond repair after successive defeats by an opponent who was a light-heavyweight, while he reigned as the WBA heavyweight champion at his peak.

Regardless of his claims he would rediscover the reflexes and power that had brought him such success, one of Britain’s finest fighters looked older than ever when being dropped three times and to the extent he would be foolish to fight on.

An Achilles injury when losing in the 11th round last March had then robbed Haye of his power and balance, but it had also masked the ring rust that had built after previously fighting less than three rounds since 2012.

To overcome an opponent enjoying the finest run of his career, and in his first fight since appointing Ismael Salas as his new trainer, he needed to swiftly begin to time Bellew before the likelihood of him tiring after the opening rounds.

He had come to the ring considerably lighter than 14 months ago, but Bellew regardless remained an awkward style of opponent who demanded he become the aggressor instead of fight on the back foot, where he was once consistently at his best.

Bellew, 35, was also lighter having recognised he is not a true heavyweight, and while struggling until landing the fight-changing right hand that put Haye down in the third, he then exposed his rival as shot.

The statistics from the fight make pretty painful reading for Haye too.

As you can see by the graphic below, as per talkSPORT, the Hayemaker really struggled to find any sort of accuracy.

Interestingly, there isn't much difference between the pair's jabbing statistics, with Bellew just 2% more accurate.

But, as with most fights, it was won and lost by the number of power punches landed.

The fact Haye hit Bellew with just six heavier shots from 55 attempts, really does sum up where it all went wrong.

Of course, once Bellew had rocked his opponent the first time, it was a lot easier for him to unload a lot more powerful attacks but the Liverpudlian did very well to continue to avoid getting hit by a wounded Haye.

Where do Haye and Bellew go from here though? Let us know in the comments below!