Western Morning News (Saturday)

Fury focused on the task of beating Wilder

- DANNY KEELEY Boxing correspond­ent

TYSON Fury is unconcerne­d about the chaotic build-up to the first defence of his WBC heavyweigh­t title as Deontay Wilder promised “redemption, retaliatio­n, retributio­n” in Las Vegas tonight.

Fury is an overwhelmi­ng favourite to have his hand raised, as he did 20 months ago when confoundin­g many observers with aggressive tactics to give a bloodied and broken Wilder the first defeat of his profession­al career.

Wilder made several peculiar excuses in the aftermath, from the weight of his ring walk costume to the completely unfounded accusation Fury had loaded gloves, and sacked trainer Mark Breland, replacing him with Malik Scott.

But his appeal for Fury to honour his contractua­l obligation for a third fight found favour with a United States arbitrator, scuppering the Briton’s hopes of a much-anticipate­d domestic showdown with Anthony Joshua this summer.

A July date was put back after Fury contracted Covid-19 while the 33-year-old delayed his latest training camp to be with wife Paris as she gave birth to daughter Athena, who then had a number of days in an intensive care unit.

Fury stepped up his preparatio­ns for Wilder last month after revealing his sixth child was at full health and is now fully focused on extending his unbeaten profession­al record at the T-Mobile Arena.

“All these fights are exactly the same to me: I’ve got some guy trying to take my head off with punches, no matter whether it is Deontay Wilder or whoever it may be,” Fury said.

“It doesn’t really matter to me because it’s a Tyson Fury roadshow which has been continuing for 13 years. I train every day in my life, twice a day mostly, I eat, sleep, train, repeat.

“I’ve had a few personal problems at home but there’s always going to be some type of problem or hurdle to get over in life.

“I had a little baby girl who was born seven and a half weeks ago and she was very unwell for a minute or two and I was there for two weeks in the hospital with her.

“I knew that if I got that hurdle out the way, things would be good and I could concentrat­e on the fight. That’s exactly what I did. The baby is 100 per cent at home, the family’s good so daddy’s just got to do his job now.”

The 6ft 9in Fury (30-0-1, 21KOs) possesses marginal height and reach advantages over Wilder but outweighed the Alabaman by 43lbs in the pair’s last fight in February last year.

Tension between the combatants has been steadily building in recent months and erupted in Wednesday’s final press conference, leading to a slanging match and the cancellati­on of the normal practice of a face-to-face staredown.

Fury’s co-promoter Bob Arum insisted there will be no head-to-head at the weighin either, saying: “I will not have these fighters being treated like they are fighting dogs or fighting cocks. The fighters will not face off, both promotiona­l companies agree.”

While Fury is expected to stick with a similar strategy that saw him become world champion for a second time, all eyes will be on whether Wilder (42-1-1, 41KOs) has made any adjustment­s.

Wilder said: “I don’t have nothing to prove, I’m in a great place, a great state of mind, a lot of great people around me that have been covering me all this time. It’s nothing to prove at all.

“This right here is redemption, retaliatio­n, retributio­n.”

 ?? Erik Verduzco ?? > Tyson Fury poses during a news conference in advance of his heavyweigh­t title boxing bout against Deontay Wilder
Erik Verduzco > Tyson Fury poses during a news conference in advance of his heavyweigh­t title boxing bout against Deontay Wilder

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