Nelson Mail

The bloody and the Fury

- Duncan Johnstone

Agrowing Kiwi connection helped British heavyweigh­t Tyson Fury retain his unbeaten record in his bloodbath with Otto Wallin.

Taylor Barry, a son of Joseph Parker’s trainer Kevin Barry and a regular in the training setup of the Kiwi boxing star, got an unexpected opportunit­y to work the corner of the Gypsy King in Las Vegas last Sunday.

It literally turned into a bloody hard night’s work as Fury suffered horrendous double cuts above his right eye that later required 47 stitches but held on for a unanimous points decision.

Barry, 24, is a good friend of Fury’s trainer Ben Davison, 26, and when he got the invite, he jumped at it with the encouragem­ent of his father.

Like Fury, he didn’t know what he was in for.

‘‘Going into it, everyone thought it was going to be the same result as his last fight, two or three rounds and easy work for the corner,’’ Barry said.

Initially Barry was to look after Fury’s seat and mouthguard, ice his neck and provide water between rounds, working alongside Davison’s tactical call and with cut man Jorge Capetillo ever-present.

‘‘But after Tyson got cut the whole corner changed. The cut man had to jump into the ring and we had to adjust,’’ Barry said.

‘‘It made it a really hard night for Tyson. He had a lot of blood, he lost vision after round seven or eight, so he was getting hit and every time he got hit he was getting hurt because he didn’t see it coming.’’

Barry suddenly had the extra responsibi­lity of cleaning Fury up in the frantic minute’s break between rounds. That in itself was quite a job.

‘‘There was a lot of blood . . . all over his ear, the back of his head and his back. I was trying to get all that off him. It was a hard night’s work, that’s for sure.’’

Fury didn’t know the extent of the injury and it was best it stayed that way.

‘‘Ben and I were saying we have to stay composed and relaxed because if we panic, he panics. So we stay nice and composed and Tyson, when the blood was dripping, he says: ‘I live for this shit’.’’

Davison offered similar sentiments as the adrenalin flowed and they saw out the fight until the final bell.

Barry got a big thank-you from Davison and Fury for his efforts on a difficult night.

He’s unsure if he’ll get another chance to work with Fury but the friendship and blossoming relationsh­ip with Team Parker means they will certainly cross paths regularly.

When Fury signed his huge deal with Las Vegas-based Top Rank, Barry, who has been brought up in the desert city, offered to help Davison organise training facilities and assist any way he could.

‘‘It’s a good relationsh­ip. Tyson is very nice to Joe and he comes into our gym when he comes to Vegas, we all mingle. He’s a good person to rub shoulders with. He’s going to go down as one of the best of our era

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? New Zealand heavyweigh­t Joseph Parker was in Tyson Fury’s dressing room before the fight.
New Zealand heavyweigh­t Joseph Parker was in Tyson Fury’s dressing room before the fight.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand