The Daily Telegraph - Sport

‘I don’t really care about my legacy – I just want to beat the silly sausage’

As Tyson Fury prepares to do battle in Saturday’s title fight with Oleksandr Usyk, he says that it is all about the money

- By Gareth A Davies in Riyadh

One moment Tyson Fury wants to become “the first £500million heavyweigh­t boxer”, the next he does not care about his legacy and simply wants “to beat the silly sausage” Oleksandr Usyk here on Saturday night. Then he veers into a detailed historical thesis on the heavyweigh­t division. It is typical Fury: a series of zig-zags, sometimes contradict­ory.

Picking a route through the changing mind of Fury has never been easy. The 6ft 9in, 19st boxer will transform into his alter ego of the “Gypsy King” this week ahead of the most important contest in his career since first becoming heavyweigh­t champion by dethroning Wladimir Klitschko nine years ago.

Up close, Fury looks in magnificen­t condition ahead of the first fight for the undisputed heavyweigh­t title for a quarter of a century. He says he is “in the same shape as when I fought Klitschko” but he is a very different boxer now, with miles on the clock: 30 punishing rounds against Deontay Wilder, a roughhouse 10 rounds against the former UFC heavyweigh­t champion Francis Ngannou last October, gashes and scar tissue around his eyes. Throw in the weight climb to 29st and the two-year period in the wilderness, and Fury – 36 in August – is surely close to calling time on his career for good.

Yet undefeated Fury, who has previously announced multiple retirement­s, declares that he will fight “eight to 10 more times to the age of 40” – at the encouragem­ent of Turki Alalshikh, a Saudi minister and his great supporter – and then adds: “Happy days, with those fights I’ll become the first £500million heavyweigh­t boxer in history.”

Yet on his legacy, Fury becomes obdurate. “Look, this is an important fight but again, I hate to say it because the boxing fans and the boxing purists and all them w------, they don’t want to hear it, but why do you think I box? For the money.

“If anybody in this building, or anybody in profession­al boxing, tells me they don’t do this game for money, they’re lying to you, and I speak from the heart. I do it for the dough. The bigger the deal, the

‘I do it for the dough. The bigger the deal, the better for me. I’m a prize-fighting specialist. That’s what I do’

better. I’m a prize-fighting pugilist specialist. That’s what I do. I fight for the prize, whether it be gold bars, gold coins, cash, transfers, cars, whatever you want to pay me, pay me in bags of sand for all I care, as long as I can make a drink on it, deal done.”

The epicentre of huge fights is now Saudi Arabia. “Saudi is amazing, very welcoming,” explains Fury, who has been out in the heat for the past two weeks. “It’s the opposite out here to what I had heard. This fight with me and Usyk was made with Turki, His Excellency, in 25 minutes. That’s all it took.

“This is a good fight, I’m not too concerned about what people are going to be saying in 100 years. The dust from our bones won’t exist in 100 years, never mind what they say about a boxing match in 100 years. We’ll all be dead, my kids will be dead, my wife will be dead, my dad will be dead, anybody I ever cared about will be gone… So I’m going in there to get paid, get laid, and come back to Morecambe Bay. I probably won’t even buy anything, because I don’t need anything. I’ll do a bit of shopping, probably be tighter than I am today. I’ll do the rematch exactly the same, get paid, get laid, come home, Morecambe Bay, still not buy anything.”

While Fury is somewhat dismissive of his own legacy, he is an astute student of the history of the heavyweigh­t division and is quick to pay tribute to previous greats over the past 150 years. He propounds on John L Sullivan, recognised as the first heavyweigh­t champion of gloved boxing, being “a pioneer”, becomes lyrical about gypsy bareknuckl­e champion Jem Mace and talks of “Gentleman” Jim Corbett (the only man to beat Sullivan) before telling stories of Gene Tunney, Jack Dempsey, Primo Carnera, Joe Louis and others. He calls Muhammad Ali “the greatest of all time” and then shares his admiration for Mike Tyson’s “knowledge of the division”.

Fury will need his cloak of invincibil­ity against two more rivals – Usyk and then Anthony Joshua – and the era will belong to him, just as previous periods are now etched with the names Lennox Lewis, Tyson, Ali, Louis, Jack Johnson. Usyk is a two-fight deal, with Joshua scheduled for March 2025.

But anything can change quickly in boxing. This contest with Usyk was delayed from Feb 17 because of Fury’s eye being cut in sparring. “I’m not concerned about the eye,” he explains. “If it gets cut, the viewing figures will go up, there will be blood everywhere and I won’t let them stop the fight.

“I’m looking to do a demolition job on him. I just want to beat the silly sausage. Yes, Usyk is fast, talented, he outboxed a big heavyweigh­t in Anthony Joshua twice but AJ is one-dimensiona­l, onepaced, and I could outbox him with a blindfold on. I’m just different.”

The outcome against Usyk may depend on which version of the Gypsy King turns up at the Kingdom Arena. Indeed, there is no shortage of respected voices in the industry picking Usyk to outbox the British heavyweigh­t.

Still, Fury has been called boxing’s “diamond” by Alalshikh. Why? “It’s because I’m charismati­c, tall, controvers­ial, good-looking, can fight… all of the above. That’s why. There’s a lack of characters in this sport today, a lot of businessme­n and cash registers, but there ain’t so many characters. I’m a dying breed in this game.

“All I can do on Saturday night is go in there, give it my best shot, and win, lose or draw, put my best foot forward and man up.”

Will he take bad intentions into his fight with Usyk? “I’ll tickle his nuts,” offers Fury with a grin. “Seriously, I’ll do the best I can, whatever that might be…”

It will need to be good, if not great, for Fury to overcome the Ukrainian known as “the Cat”.

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 ?? ?? Ready to go: Tyson Fury faces his most important fight since first becoming heavyweigh­t champion in 2015 when he takes on Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday: Fury and Usyk square up in Riyadh (left)
Ready to go: Tyson Fury faces his most important fight since first becoming heavyweigh­t champion in 2015 when he takes on Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday: Fury and Usyk square up in Riyadh (left)
 ?? ?? Knockout blow: Tyson Fury sees off Dillian Whyte at Wembley in 2022
Knockout blow: Tyson Fury sees off Dillian Whyte at Wembley in 2022
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