Eh, they might be OK as close in an informal poem, but Pep & Step are definitely not rhymes with Greb.
Now the rematch is upon us, another verse of this I'll type, Tis the way that I can cope with all the never ending hype, For the bombers fans amnesia it continues TILL THIS DAY, Can't accept he lost that fight no matter what the scorecards say, Now the talk is that mark breland taught bronze bomber what to do, Bet the day he took that job on is a day he'll always rue, Just what more can Deontay bring than his windmills of the ring?
There once was a lad called Wilder He thought he was the best But an ancient man from Cuba Had been his only real test He then fought the big Manc Fury Who was clearly no fool And despite a couple of knockdowns Took Wilder to elementary school They soon face each other next The winner looks a toss up Will Wilder retain his title ? Or will he just be a big dosser ? Not of the quality of prose of @Holler which is Shakespearean but all i can do is my best.
I like your rejection of rhyme scheme and meter in the third stanza. As if overcome by the spirit of Ezra Pound himself, you eschew the paltry constraints that hitherto held you back and embark upon the wild prairies of free verse.
Imagine a Tyson uppercut detonating on his chin while he's doing that. Tyson would catch a body, like Deontay says.
Oh good. I really don't want to see people throwing around "Tyson" by itself as if Fury has earned that particular mononym. He likely never will.
Well we finally got our answers as to what Deontay knew, About boxing very little seems he didn't have a clue, In the first he landed a punch but the watching fans weren't fooled, Tyson Fury began to advance and the Bronze Bomber was schooled, In the seventh watching Breland finally called a welcome halt, Deontay took it with the grace of someone all filled up with salt. Fury never felt the sting, of the windmills of the ring,
Especially if the ref wasn't stunned. If I had the mad CGI skillsz I'd have Wilder continue to windmill as the ref holds onto him and slowly see the pair of them rise into the air.