Weekend Herald

Parker: I could see fear in Fury’s eyes

Fighters both claim they are in for an easy night as long wait at end

- Patrick McKendry in Manchester

Together, Joseph Parker and Hughie Fury remain respectful of each other ahead of their title fight tomorrow morning ( NZ time).

Apart, each thinks the other will be knocked out. Parker said he could see fear in Fury’s eyes in the traditiona­l post- conference staredown held at Old Trafford yesterday; Fury saying he would knock out the Kiwi in the fourth round. “I’m going to make easy work of it,” the Englishman said.

If the build- up to this fight at Manchester Arena seems interminab­le, that’s because it has been rolling since May when the fight was originally scheduled for Auckland, only for Fury to pull out late with a back injury.

It’s been hard on fans, but spare a thought for the protagonis­ts, who have been asked the same questions for more than a week now and are perhaps looking to up the ante as the night finally draws near.

“He’s a good fighter but I do believe he’s scared deep down because he knows that belt i s coming home with me,” Fury said in an interview once the main press conference was over. “He’s coming here as a champion but he’s leaving empty- handed.”

Not according to Parker. “I could see fear in his eyes,” he said. “There’s no fear in my eyes — I’m ready.”

Asked what gave him that impression, Parker said: “He took a big gulp . . . I thought, ‘ mate, you’re scared’. He should have fought me back then when I was 50 or 60 per cent [ in May]. I’m 100 per cent now so he’s in for it.”

If more tickets are sold and more tune into the fight on the back of the tough talk then so much the better for all involved. Asked about ticket sales, an issue thus far, Fury’s promoter Mick Hennessy said he expected a crowd of about 8000. Earlier in the week he expected about 10,000.

Pressed on the lacklustre sales, he doubled down on his earlier assertion that Parker, 25, and Fury, 23, are at the start of their profession­al careers and are yet to make names for themselves, ignoring per- haps the fact that Parker is the WBO world champion with probably the quickest hands in the division and a genuine heavyweigh­t force.

“That’s the way boxing is now — there’s so many events, the titles are splintered,” Hennessy said by way of mitigation. “This is a great fight, I agree with you, it’s better than other fights around at the moment but there are a lot of fights on sale and in the same area.”

Both camps agree there will be no excuses should their fighter lose. Parker has come off one of his best ever camps and looks sharp in training — his movement, flow and timing perhaps at career- best level.

“The training camp is where you do all the hard work,” Parker said “The fight i s the reward and I’m looking to get my reward.”

Fury has fully recovered from a debilitati­ng skin condition which has put a handbrake on his career to this point, although, it must be said, he has never fought a boxer of Parker’s quality.

Significan­tly, this fight will be one of the first events held at the Manchester Arena since the suicide bombing at Ariana Grande’s concert in May which killed 22, including children.

Perhaps the most truthful and respectful line of all yesterday at the home of Manchester United was delivered by Fury, who said quite unprompted about the prospect of fighting for the first time at the venue: “What’s happened there, my heart goes out to all the families. No words can be said.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand