Call & Times

Sweet as pie

- By TIM DAHLBERG AP Boxing Writer

Boxing’s new heavyweigh­t champ shows off vocal

talents

LAS VEGAS — The world has never seen a heavyweigh­t champion quite like Tyson Fury, the British behemoth who gave Deontay Wilder a beat down to win the heavyweigh­t title and then celebrated by leading his fans in a chorus of “American Pie” from the ring at the MGM Grand hotel.

He can fight, he can sing and he can talk. Oh, can he talk.

Before the fight Fury talked nonstop about how he was going to switch from boxer to puncher to take the heavyweigh­t title from Wilder. After the fight he talked about how he did just that — and will only get better as his career goes on.

“Not bad for a fat guy who can’t punch,” the 6-foot-9 Fury crowed after handing Wilder his first defeat in a fight so one-sided that Wilder’s corner finally threw in the towel at 1:39 of the seventh round of their heavyweigh­t showdown Saturday night. “I had a dream of coming to Las Vegas and taking over. Now here I am.”

It wasn’t supposed to play out like this. Not against an unbeaten heavyweigh­t champion so feared he had knocked out 41 of 43 men put in the ring against him.

Not after Fury plunged into the depths of despair a few years back when his life was spiraling out of control and cocaine and alcohol had made his weight balloon 37 pounds.

But now the Gypsy King has the heavyweigh­t title once again, five years after first winning it from Wladimir Klitschko.

And, no matter what his fellow Brit Anthony Joshua might say, he should be hailed by all in boxing as the best heavyweigh­t in the world.

“Everybody knows I’m a master boxer,” Fury said. “But that didn’t work the last time. I got a draw and a draw is a failure to me. The only way I could guarantee I was going to get a win was a knockout.”

The path to greatness in Sin City was a troubled one. Fury had to beat his demons before he could beat the best heavyweigh­ts, and then had to beat the skeptics to be considered the best of the best.

Against Wilder he proved he was just that in a fight most never saw coming. Most, that is, who thought Fury was bluffing when he said he would go after Wilder from the opening bell in the rematch of their draw from 14 months earlier.

He put on a show in a theatrical entrance, wearing a crown and carried aloft on a throne. Then he put a show on in the ring, knocking Wilder down in the third round with a right hand to the head and again in the fifth with a left to the body.

By the time Wilder’s corner threw in the towel, the outcome of the fight had long since been decided. Wilder was taking punches to the head without landing any of his own, and any thought that he might suddenly unleash a right hand to change things was long gone.

And the singing afterward? Well,

Fury might not want to quit his night job — one that made him $30-40 million for the signature win of his career.

“Were you not entertaine­d?” Fury asked afterward. “I’ve now finished off my collection. I’ve won every belt in boxing.”

Unfortunat­ely for Fury, he doesn’t hold every belt in boxing, even after putting on a spectacula­r show in the biggest heavyweigh­t fight in the U.S. since Lennox Lewis beat Mike Tyson 18 years ago in Memphis. The others belong to Joshua, who won them back in Saudi Arabia in December after being stopped by Andy Ruiz Jr. in their first fight.

But Fury has never lost and he beat a man who had made 10 title defenses and also entered the ring unbeaten. He did it in a way that not only thrilled his fans but backed up the case that he is the best heavyweigh­t around.

If any more evidence was needed, oddsmakers at the Westgate Superbook opened betting on a possible Joshua-Fury matchup with Fury a big minus-260 favorite.

First, there might be some more business with Wilder, who has a contractua­l right for a third fight that he must exercise within 30 days. But after the one-sided beating he took from Fury there would seem little appetite for a rematch, at least immediatel­y.

A Fury-Joshua fight, of course, would be massive in Britain and massively profitable to both fighters. But for now Fury is on top of the heavyweigh­t division and the decisions are all his.

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