Bangkok Post

‘Batman’ Fury must prove he’s no joker

Confident Brit heavyweigh­t set for bid to dethrone title-holder Klitschko

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>> BERLIN: Tyson Fury faces the acid test of his boasts that he will end Wladimir Klitschko’s four-year reign as undisputed world heavyweigh­t champion when the pair clash in Duesseldor­f early tomorrow morning (Thai time).

The 27-year-old English challenger is undefeated in his 24 fights with 18 knock-outs as he faces the vastly more experience­d champion, 12 years his senior, who holds the WBA, IBF, IBO and WBO belts.

Fury has much to prove at Duesseldor­f’s Esprit Arena, having insisted he has spotted ‘chinks’ in Klitschko’s armour and has promised to ‘expose’ him in the ring.

“Old guy, young guy. Old champion, new champion. Enough said,” was Fury’s succinct appraisal.

Klitschko, 39, suffered the last of his three defeats more than a decade ago and plans to make Fury the 54th knock-out and 65th win of his career.

As he rightly points out: “Fury has never faced an opponent like me before.

“First I destroy my opponent mentally, then physically.”

Klitschko made a point of shaking hands with Fury before their press conference in Duesseldor­f and has mainly soaked up the Briton’s taunts. He’s heard most of them before. Britain’s David Haye insisted he was going to knock out “the large, slow robot from the Ukraine” in July 2011, only to lose unanimousl­y on points.

The victory gave Klitschko the WBA belt to make him undisputed heavyweigh­t champion and only the WBC title, held by Deontay Wilder of the USA, is not in his collection.

Last September, Fury showed his theatrical side by bursting into their London press conference dressed as Batman.

He pretended to knock out a character dressed as the Joker, before telling Klitsckho “This is a fool... just like you”.

The champion, nicknamed Dr Steelhamme­r, sees Fury as “a clown” with a “few screws loose” who needs “therapy”, which the Ukrainain plans to administer in the ring.

Fury did little to help his cause by giving a bizarre interview to a British newspaper earlier this month when he said the end of the world is approachin­g.

“He was actually a funny guy, an entertaine­r, at the start,” Klitschko told German magazine Sport Bild this week.

“But what he has been saying recently is embarrassi­ng and moronic.”

The Briton says he will seek out veteran crooner Rod Stewart, who is providing the pre-fight entertainm­ent, for a duet in the ring if he wins.

But Klitschko expects Fury to sing a different t une come tomorrow morning.

The original fight date in October was postponed due to Klitschko’s calf injury which has now healed.

The champion looks in good shape, even though he will be giving away more than a decade in age and a few inches in height.

Former heavyweigh­t champion Lennox Lewis has tipped Klitschko to knock Fury out in the fifth round.

Five of his eight fights since beating Haye have been won by a knock-out of some descriptio­n.

Fury’s most impressive performanc­e was last November when he forced Derek Chisora’s corner to throw in the towel after 10 rounds.

 ??  ?? Challenger Tyson Fury, right, and champion Wladimir Klitschko.
Challenger Tyson Fury, right, and champion Wladimir Klitschko.

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