LAS VEGAS — After Tyson Fury’s seven-round thrashing of Deontay Wilder in their championship rematch on Saturday, the statistics suggested that a third showdown between these two massive heavyweights might not be necessary.

Fury, the 6-foot-9 challenger from Manchester, England, landed 82 total punches, compared with just 34 for Wilder, according to CompuBox. And Wilder, who entered the bout with the World Boxing Council title and a 95.3 percent knockout rate, connected on just 18 power punches, compared with Fury’s 58. Fury landed 13 body punches, one of which dropped Wilder in Round 5, and all of which helped drain the energy and punching power of Wilder, a 6-foot-7 boxer from Alabama.

By nearly any metric, Fury’s win was about as definitive a victory as you are likely to see among evenly matched elites. Unlike the pair’s first fight, in December 2018, which ended in a draw, it left few of the unanswered questions that lead to a high-stakes rematch.

But another set of numbers foreshadows a Wilder-Fury trilogy.

Saturday night’s rematch attracted a capacity crowd of 15,816 to the MGM Grand Garden Arena, and the $16.9 million in ticket revenue was the most for a heavyweight bout in Nevada. Pay-per-view sales figures might not be public until midweek, but ESPN and Fox combined to promote the fight, and organizers on both sides expected a commercial success.