The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Fury v Joshua fight agreed in £400m deal

▶ Clash to unify heavyweigh­t division confirmed by Hearn ▶ Britons to meet in two bouts with race on to choose a venue

- By Gareth A Davies and Tom Morgan

Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua signed up for the fight of the century last night as they finally agreed terms on the biggest British boxing deal in history.

Saudi Arabia is the controvers­ial front-runner to host the £400million showdown, with organisers now racing to agree a location and date within weeks.

The two-fight deal will unify the world heavyweigh­t titles and crown an undisputed champion. Both fights are likely to take place this year, in June or July and then November or December.

The Daily Telegraph understand­s the deal is worth £200million per fight, and the two parties have agreed that sites must be finalised within 30 days.

Promoter Eddie Hearn caught Fury’s camp off guard by announcing the agreement after months of protracted negotiatio­ns. “All parties have now put pen to paper and we

will be working hard over the next few weeks to confirm the site and date,” Hearn told Sky Sports.

The fight – unifying the Internatio­nal Boxing Federation, World Boxing Organisati­on, World Boxing Associatio­n and World Boxing Council heavyweigh­t titles – surprised some in the sport after Fury, who holds the WBC belt, recently claimed it was “nowhere near”.

Yesterday, Fury told The Telegraph that now was not the right time to comment.

In recent weeks, Hearn has cited Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, Singapore, China, London and Las Vegas among potential host locations. The prospect of England holding the fight, however, has been dampened by apparent concerns around the Government’s roadmap to easing lockdown fully.

The controvers­ial location of Saudi Arabia, accused by Amnesty Internatio­nal of “sportswash­ing” following human rights abuses, has been described by Hearn as a “definite possibilit­y”. “They are not slowing down the developmen­t of sport,” he said last week.

Joshua, 31, beat Bulgarian Kubrat Pulev in December to retain his IBF,

The heavyweigh­t showdown between Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury – which will be the biggest fight in British boxing history – could be worth £200million to each man as part of a two-fight deal. But the title of undisputed world champion is the real prize.

Both are in the prime of their careers and are gargantuan athletes, but their boxing styles could hardly be more different. The purists will favour Fury, simply because of his ring skills and fighting knowhow. Fury, 32, has an awkwardnes­s and movement which defies his 6ft 9in height and 19½-stone frame, and makes him difficult to hit.

Fury, the World Boxing Council champion, has an ability to read his opponent’s punches, making him a dangerous rival for anyone in the blue-riband division. He also carries the confidence of being undefeated in 31 fights, and combines power and skill when on the front foot.

Joshua, 31, who holds the World Boxing Associatio­n, World Boxing Organisati­on and Internatio­nal Boxing Federation belts, has developed with each performanc­e, though there are question marks about the strength of his chin, although his power makes him – at his best – as good a finisher as anyone in the division. After blasting through opponents with a fearlessne­ss and ruthlessne­ss, Joshua’s style has become more refined in his last two performanc­es. As the 6ft 6in tall, 18st man mountain often admits, as does his long-time coach Robert Mccracken, the young sensation who won Olympic superheavy­weight gold at the London 2012 Games is a work in progress as a champion fighter. Joshua will need to be compact, and defensivel­y savvy against the self-styled “Gypsy King”, whose family are steeped in boxing – 10 generation­s of bareknuckl­e fighters. Fury was boxing as soon as he could walk and has an encycloped­ic knowledge of the history of the noble art and heavyweigh­t lineage.

Both men have been knocked down – and climbed off the canvas again – in fights that have tested their mettle.

Fury was felled in the ninth and 12th rounds in his first contest with WBC champion Deontay Wilder in Los Angeles in Dec 2018, but went on to earn a controvers­ial draw against the American, a fight many observers believed the Briton had won by three rounds.

In his second meeting with Wilder, he eviscerate­d the champion in seven rounds of aggression. That about-turn in fortunes showed Fury’s ability to change tack. But it will have been 18 months out of the ring by the time he steps in against Joshua. That inactivity could prove to be a massive factor in this fight.

Joshua last fought in December, so inactivity is not an issue. In his epic fight with Wladimir Klitschko at Wembley Stadium in 2017, Joshua showed huge heart, stamina, and a second wind after being felled by the great Ukrainian, to come back and finish his foe in the 11th round.

Fury, it is worth recalling, bamboozled Klitschko to claim three of the world title belts in Germany in 2015, showing how he is able to nullify the jab with ease. That could be highly significan­t against Joshua.

For all of Joshua’s punching power and finishing ability, the mental scar of the loss to Andy Ruiz on his American debut in June 2019 has affected his confidence and may be another telling factor.

Joshua had Ruiz hurt and down in the third round of that contest, but was caught off guard by the smaller man who came back to drop him four times. His chin was exposed in that fight and that too could be a telling factor.

There could be signs in Joshua’s last two performanc­es – the victory in the rematch with Ruiz, and his triumph over Kubrat Pulev in December – that Joshua has developed a new style which sees his hands higher, and his jab more effective. Joshua arguably has faster hand speed than Fury, but timing could also be key in the exchanges between the fighters in this contest.

Joshua will likely need to get the fight finished by the middle rounds against his rival when they meet, which could be in the Arabian desert, in June or July, and it is unlikely that Fury will go toe-to-toe with his fellow British fighter, preferring perhaps to use his boxing skills to mesmerise Joshua. The debate will rage for months in the build-up, but Fury enters as the marginal favourite, given the fact that he can adapt his game plan in what will be a fascinatin­g battle of skill and nerve.

Joshua will likely need to get the fight finished by the middle rounds against his 6ft 9in rival

 ?? Anthony Joshua ?? Potential venues and how contenders square up
Anthony Joshua Potential venues and how contenders square up
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