Tag

JOHN FURY

Browsing

John Fury believes Tyson Fury defeated Oleksandr Usyk in both of their epic fights last year.

He also claims that senior boxing officials have made a huge mistake by ‘stealing’ Fury’s belts, adding that his son now feels there’s ‘no more Gypsy King.’

Fury suffered consecutive defeats to Usyk last year, losing the first four-belt shootout in May via split decision, before suffering a unanimous decision defeat seven months later.

JUST IN: Devin Haney’s father ‘a grown man lying to the world’

Usyk became the first undisputed heavyweight champion in 25 years when he edged Fury in their first meeting, with two judges scoring the bout 115-112 and 114-113 in his favour, with the third having it 113-114 in Fury’s favour.

The Ukrainian then vacated his IBF strap to rematch Fury in December, earning a more convincing decision, with all three judges ruling the contest 116-112 for Usyk.

Fury Sr was part of a three-man corner for his son’s first defeat but was a notable absentee in the rematch for ‘personal reasons.’

He has finally broken his silence on his son’s all-time classics with Usyk, emphasising that Fury will not make a U-turn on his retirement as he believes he was robbed.

“He had them stolen off him, to be honest,” Fury Sr explained to Seconds Out Boxing.

“What can you say? When somebody’s paid you a shed load of money they seem to resent letting you stay champion as well…

“They probably didn’t want to pay him the same amount of money again, probably couldn’t afford to pay Tyson that same money again if they let him remain as champion.”

Fury hung up the gloves for a fourth time in January, just weeks after his second defeat to Usyk.

He hinted at reversing that decision last month, but his dad’s scathing review of the current situation won’t inspire much confidence among boxing enthusiasts.

“For me, he won both fights,” Fury Sr continued. “He didn’t look in fantastic shape in the second one.

“In the first one, he needed more rest time – he put a full camp in, seven weeks, got cut, he had three weeks rest, and he’s back in the gym for another eight weeks.

“You can’t do those things, so by the time he got in the ring for the first fight with Usyk he had overtrained; there was nothing left in him.

“But, he was facing a $10-15million fine, he was backed in a corner, I told him, ‘Take the fine, take the fine,’ I said, ‘They’re not going to fine you, because there’s no show without you.’”

Fury has been linked to a huge fight with fellow British pugilist Anthony Joshua if he returns to the sport.

‘AJ’ hasn’t fought since being brutally stopped by Daniel Dubois last September.

He remains keen on a showdown with Fury, but that fight now seems further away than ever after Fury Sr’s comments.

“Listen, for my money, [Tyson] won both fights, they stole his belts off him,” he concluded.

“They’ve taken the biggest seller out of the game, because without Tyson Fury there’s no dance partners.

“This [Usyk vs Daniel Dubois] fight, that’s never going to be a 95,000 crowd, you need a dance partner, and let me tell you, Tyson Fury ‘The Gypsy King’ is the best dance partner anyone can ever have…

“It’s bad business. They think, ‘OK — we’ll rob you today, let the dust settle, offer you a few more quid later on and get you back at it.’

“But guess what? They can’t do that with him now, because he’s had enough. He believes he’s had his belts stolen off him, which he has had. And he thinks, ‘Jog on, there’s no more ‘Gypsy King.’

“No disrespect to Usyk, great fighter, all-weight division fighter, but he hasn’t got the charisma, pulling power or selling power that Tyson Fury has.

“[He’s a] great fighter but you need to be more than a great fighter where them big dollars are concerned.”

Dubois is the next challenger to Usyk’s throne as the 27-year-old Londoner fights for undisputed heavyweight status at Wembley Stadium on July 19.

The pair have history, with Dubois’ right hand dropping Usyk in their first 2023 battle, which was ruled a ‘low blow’ as it floored the Ukrainian.

Usyk went on to win the fight stopping the Briton, but Dubois felt aggrieved and is keen to get his revenge.

Last month, the pair discussed their rivalry live in talkSPORT’s studios, where Usyk sparked an argument by bringing up a picture of the controversial low blow.

ANTHONY JOSHUA is one win away from a potential HALF-A-BILLION-POUND Tyson Fury two-fight mega deal.

Victory for Watford’s 34-year-old Olympic legend, over Daniel Dubois tonight at a 96,000 sell-out Wembley, will make him the hottest ticket in boxing.

JUST IN: Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury disagree with their predictions for Anthony Joshua vs Daniel Dubois…

ANTHONY JOSHUA VS Daniel Dubois

And – as long as Fury isn’t violently knocked out and injured in the Oleksandr Usyk rematch on December 21 – the wheels are already in motion for FINALLY making the fight everyone in England wants to see.

Our AJ may dream of getting one back on the 37-year-old Ukraine icon who dominated him twice to snatch away his WBA, IBF and WBO belts.

And a win over 27-year-old Dubois – with bright young trainer Ben Davison – would rightly make him a confident boost about a shot of revenge

But outside of Team AJ and cheerleader Eddie Hearn – there is no clamour at all to see Joshua vs Usyk 3 – especially when the best he can do is drag it back to 2-1 against a man who would be pushing 40 with four kids indoors to worry about.

For all of AJ’s incredible success and downright decency – London 2012’s legacy, his singlehanded revolution of British boxing, and saving of hundreds of local gyms with personal donations in lockdown, when the Government left the sport to die – it is a stain on his record that he never faced a peak and and undefeated Fury or Deontay Wilder.

He has been the golden goose and the cash cow in a sport that is usually a bit of a pigsty – his status as a British sport legend is cemented for eternity.

But across the Pond in America – which will return as the boxing Mecca when Saudi get bored or achieve their goal with funding fights – he is seen as a dud.

SEE MORE: Tyson Fury vs Anthony Joshua ‘makes all the sense in the world’ whether they win or lose their next fights, says Top Rank president…

Deontay Wilder VS Tyson Fury AND Oleksandr Usyk

The violent knockout loss on his one and only trip to the Big Apple, left a bitter taste over there and snatching a win back over Usyk will not help his reputation outside of his diehard fans.

But if he hangs up his gloves with the Gypsy King and Wilder on his record, then people will have the right to frown when his name is mentioned among the pantheon of greats.

But two great Fury fights – each likely to do around 2m pay-per-view sales at a guess of £30-a-pop – with one likely to sell out a 100,000 seater UK stadium at an average of maybe £500 a ticket – would be a spectacle right up there with the Fight of the Century, Thrilla in Manilla and Rumble in the Jungle.

The world will stop to watch the build-up – let alone the fight.

Imagine the antics John Fury would get up to, what Team Fury’s Brady Bunch of brothers and pals would say to AJ and his boardroom brotherhood.

The brilliant old stories will be dragged up.

The 2010 sparring session at Finchley where rising pro Fury offered his Rolex watch to any man who could floor him and an uppercut from the reformed bad-boy bricklayer almost clocked him.

The fight was almost made twice but collapsed over money and ego.

The bizarre time they bumped into each other in Marbella and – despite all his tirades and taunting – Fury was polite to his verbals victim.

Us hacks will definitely drag up the hilarious times Fury would video call Joshua totally unannounced and wind him up.

Carl Froch will back Fury and say Joshua is useless, John Fury will offer Froch a fight.

Wladimir Klitschko will land back on the scene and support Joshua.

It would be magnificent, hilarious, historic, slapstick, tense, dark and drenched in Saudi slush funds.

And every man, woman, child and dog and duck will want to be there – the trendies who reckons Oasis were never that good – might pretend they don’t care.

RELATED: Oleksandr Usyk Says Tyson Fury Can’t Repeat History Before Highly-Anticipated Rematch: “He Will Lose All of His Money”…

 

Verified by MonsterInsights