The New Zealand Herald

Hughie Fury’s drugs hearing puts his Parker fight at risk

- Patrick McKendry

Joseph Parker’s promoters have contingenc­ies in place should Hughie Fury receive a ban for allegedly failing a drugs test two years ago and be ruled out of his mandatory world heavyweigh­t title shot against the New Zealander.

Fury, and his heavyweigh­t cousin Tyson, allegedly failed a test for banned substance nandrolone in 2015, and Britain’s Daily Mail has reported that the pair will have their long-delayed hearing in mid-April.

The news, which Parker promoter David Higgins said he was aware of, will likely frustrate the Kiwi’s camp because, had the Furys signed their fight contract earlier, the bout for the WBO title would have been held in early April, before the hearing.

Instead, the Englishmen held off, and, unfortunat­ely for all concerned, the fight has been put back to early May. The details are expected next week, with Higgins saying no date had been confirmed but he hoped the fight would be in New Zealand.

Higgins told the Herald that should Fury be ruled out — and he and Tyson have vehemently denied taking nandrolone, a prohibited steroid — the 25-year-old Parker would fight someone else.

“The boxing business is about hedging and contingenc­ies,” Higgins said. “You’re silly to only have one option, and certainly if anything like that happened, you’d have someone solid and credible . . . on standby ready to draft in.

“We can line up an alternativ­e opponent who is at least as good as Hughie Fury. There are a lot of options, but at this point Hughie Fury is the mandatory.”

The Daily Mail said the British Boxing Board of Control had urged the United Kingdom Anti-Doping authority to process the steroid accusation­s and it is believed the hearing is pencilled in for mid-April.

Despite the allegedly positive results being reported after tests in 2015, UKAD took until last year’s British summer to impose temporary suspension­s on both men but then lifted that probation, the Mail said.

The newspaper said there had been no word on B-sample testing and Hughie and Tyson claim they may have been the accidental victims of eating contaminat­ed meat.

Tyson, the former WBO, WBA and IBF world champion, relinquish­ed his belts after admitting to a cocaine habit and mental health issues.

Robert Smith, secretary-general of the board, told the Mail: “We entrust UKAD with all our anti-doping procedures and we are very disappoint­ed this matter has still not been resolved.

“We have frequently correspond­ed with UKAD, asking them to hold the hearing and very much want them to do so now, at the earliest opportunit­y.”

Parker’s alternativ­e opponent is unlikely to be WBC champion Deontay Wilder. The American defended his title with a knockout victory against Gerald Washington in Alabama at the weekend.

Wilder called out Parker afterwards but the WBC immediatel­y installed Bermane Stiverne, the man Wilder beat to claim the title, as the mandatory challenger.

Wilder, a tall and powerful puncher with a devastatin­g right hand, could seek a dispensati­on for a unificatio­n fight against Parker, but faces a lot of red tape.

Wilder, undefeated after 38 profession­al fights, expressed fears he would soon kill an opponent.

“I’m getting more dangerous the more experience I get. I really feel that I’m going to seriously hurt someone to the point where they will end up putting a red tag on his toes.”

 ?? Picture / Getty Images ?? Hughie Fury faces a mid-April hearing over his drugs test.
Picture / Getty Images Hughie Fury faces a mid-April hearing over his drugs test.

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