The Borneo Post

Fury vows to make ‘lemonade out of lemon’ Wilder

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LONDON: Britain’s Tyson Fury denied he was the “challenger” to heavyweigh­t world champion Deontay Wilder as he tried to rile the American by promising to make “lemonade out of a lemon” on Monday.

The two unbeaten boxers will meet for Wilder’s World Boxing Council version of the title in Los Angeles on December 1.

Fury ,30, is the former Internatio­nal Boxing Federation, World Boxing Associatio­n and World Boxing Organisati­on heavyweigh­t champion and remains undefeated in 27 fights.

During a press conference peppered with obscene language at broadcaste­r BT Sport’s studios, Fury rose from his seat to challenge Wilder to a “body spar” before the pair were separated by security staff.

“I am no challenger for no man. I’m the lineal heavyweigh­t champion of the world, the best of the best,” Fury said.

“This is two champions colliding, equal rights.”

Fury thinks of himself as a world champion because he never lost his titles in the ring.

But he lost all his belts, for a variety of reasons, during a twoand-a-half-year absence from the ring after his shock win over former champion Wladimir Klitschko in November 2015.

Fury, who struggled with mental health issues, returned to boxing with a farcical stoppage of Sefer Seferi in Manchester in June.

Having once turned up to a prefight conference with Klitschko dressed as Batman, Fury was more soberly attired in a threepiece suit on Monday.

But the colourful language that has been a feature of his career was in evidence as he tried to goad Wilder, who has won 39 of his 40 fights by way of knockout.

Fury, asked if he considered having more fights before taking on Wilder, said: “It’s no concern at all. If you area fighting man, you are a fighting man. If you can fight, you can fight.

“I could have fought 10 bums if I wanted to. He ( Wilder) is a lemon, I’m going to squeeze him. I’m going to make lemonade out of this lemon.”

But Wilder countered: “When I say I am the best, the baddest man of the planet, I believe every word I say.

“When it comes to Tyson Fury, I am all about devastatin­g knockouts. He knows he’s going to get knocked out.” “He can whoop, he can holler, but he needs to meditate on his situation because he is going to feel pain like he never felt before,” the 32-year- old added.

Fury suggested Wilder’s camp had only taken the fight because “I’ve had two fights in three years, they think I’m done”.

But Wilder’s managers were adamant they had nothing but admiration for Fury, contrastin­g his position with their failure to agree a deal with fellow British heavyweigh­t Anthony Joshua.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Wilder (left), Fury (right) attend a press conference in London ahead of their scheduled title fight on Dec 1.
— AFP photo Wilder (left), Fury (right) attend a press conference in London ahead of their scheduled title fight on Dec 1.

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