South China Morning Post

FURY EYES ALI-STYLE TOUR OF THE WORLD

WBC heavyweigh­t champion would like to go on a roadshow and a give a shot ‘to some random heavyweigh­t like Apollo did in the Rocky movie’

- Agence France-Presse

Tyson Fury wants to emulate Muhammad Ali by embarking on a world tour following his allBritish world heavyweigh­t title fight with Derek Chisora in London tonight.

For Fury, it is a matter of making up for lost time, following a mental health breakdown and the impact of Covid-19.

“I have only had two years of activity in the last seven years, which is not great,” he said.

“After I beat Chisora and after I beat Oleksandr Usyk next year, I am going to try to go on a massive campaign all over the world.”

It has been eight years since WBC champion Fury, unbeaten as a profession­al, convincing­ly defeated Chisora for a second time.

Rather than a trilogy bout with Chisora, many fans would rather Fury was involved in a unificatio­n fight with Usyk at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium this weekend or an alternativ­e all-British clash with former world champion Anthony Joshua.

Usyk holds the IBF, WBA and WBO versions of the heavyweigh­t title, having taken them off Joshua in September last year.

But the Ukrainian, after defeating Joshua again, in Jeddah in July, said he would not be ready to face Fury this month.

Usyk appeared injured and mentally drained following months away from his family as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Fury’s only fight so far this year was a six-round stoppage of Dillian Whyte at Wembley in April, with Fury then announcing his retirement.

But, having reversed that decision, it appears his management wanted a warm-up bout ahead of a lucrative clash against Usyk in the Middle East next year.

Fury called out Joshua, but the long-standing bitterness between his promoter Frank Warren and Eddie Hearn, who represents Joshua, made negotiatio­ns awkward and talks broke down.

Even so, a capacity crowd of 60,000 is still expected tonight, such is the appeal of Fury.

And the self-proclaimed “Gypsy King” is ready to travel widely, should all go to plan against Chisora.

“Like go to Antarctica, they have nothing else on there,” the 34-year-old Fury said. “Fire out places like one a month, a Tyson Fury roadshow, where were you for that?”

Veteran promoter Bob Arum, now working alongside Warren, helped take Ali for world-title fights well outside his native United States in the mid-1970s.

These included two of the most celebrated wins by “The Greatest” – the Rumble in the Jungle with George Foreman in Zaire and the Thrilla in Manilla, when Ali defeated arch-rival Joe Frazier.

“We did that for Ali,” Arum recalled. “We did him in Japan, Malaysia, we did him in Indonesia. That is what a true champion does because they are a world champion.”

It would be lovely to give fans the opportunit­y to see a world champion

TYSON FURY, ON HIS DESIRE TO EMBARK

ON A WORLD TOUR FOR THE FANS

Fury added: “I am champion of the whole world...It would be lovely to give these fans the opportunit­y to see a world champion.

“I know it sounds like a pipe dream, a fairy-tale story, but just to get these fights in, to give some random heavyweigh­t – like Apollo did in the Rocky movie – the chance.”

At 38, Chisora, with 12 defeats from 45 bouts, appears to have little more than a puncher’s chance.

“I don’t care what is said,” Chisora insisted. “For me to give up, just because a newspaper says so, I can’t do that.”

Unlike many of Fury’s bouts, the build-up to this fight has been notable for a lack of trash-talking, with Chisora saying: “Tyson phoned me up and said, ‘I want to give you an opportunit­y’. So for me to sit here and talk about a man who is putting food on my kids’ table? I cannot do that.”

 ?? Photo: EPA ?? Flamboyant heavyweigh­t boxer Tyson Fury takes centre stage at the press conference ahead of his clash with Derek Chisora.
Photo: EPA Flamboyant heavyweigh­t boxer Tyson Fury takes centre stage at the press conference ahead of his clash with Derek Chisora.

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