The Star (Jamaica)

Fury, Joshua agree two-fight deal

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An all-British world heavyweigh­t title showdown between Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury in 2021 is a step closer.

Fury said yesterday that an agreement has been reached with

Joshua’s camp on a two-fight deal between the current holders of the heavyweigh­t belts.

“The biggest fight in British boxing history has just been agreed,” Fury said in a video message posted on Twitter. “Two-fight deal.”

Joshua’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, told British broadcaste­r Sky Sports yesterday that the camps had agreed to two fights.

“We’re in a good place,” Hearn said. “It’s fair to say that, in principle, both guys have agreed to that fight. Two fights.”

Specific dates and venues have not been finalised and contracts have not been signed, but Hearn said the sides have agreed on the financial terms.

“The first fight could happen next summer,” Hearn said, although he acknowledg­ed that “there is still a lot to overcome.”

First, Fury plans to fight Deontay Wilder for a third time. Fury’s promoter, Bob Arum, told The Associated Press on Monday that Fury “owes” Wilder a third fight after claiming the

WBC belt off the American with a seventh-round stoppage in February.

AIMING FOR NOVEMBER

But Fury described a third Wilder fight as a “hurdle” yesterday.

“I’ve just got to smash Deontay Wilder’s face right in, in the next fight, and then we go into the Joshua fight next year,” Fury said.

Arum, the CEO of Top Rank, said they’re aiming for November or December. Only then would Fury turn his attention to Joshua, who is the WBA, IBF and WBO titleholde­r, Arum said.

Fury also has a mandatory title defence against Dillian Whyte. Joshua is also set to fight this year, against mandatory IBF challenger Kubrat Pulev.

Hearn said Joshua-Fury would be “the biggest fight ever in British boxing”.

“It doesn’t get bigger, and there will never be a bigger fight in our generation,” Hearn said.

Both camps will be keen to hold the fights in packed venues, which is not possible today because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. The FuryWilder rematch drew a sell-out crowd in Las Vegas that set a record of more than US$17 million (J$2.3 billion) for the live gate, which is separate from pay-per-view.

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