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Wilder feels the Fury in brooding bout buildup

Sparks fly in news conference ahead of heavyweigh­t title showdown

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LAS VEGAS — Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder were prevented from a face-off as insults and expletives filled the air at an ill-tempered final news conference on Wednesday for their heavyweigh­t worldtitle fight.

Fury puts his World Boxing Council heavyweigh­t belt on the line in Las Vegas on Saturday when he meets Wilder for the third time, 20 months after knocking out the American in their second fight.

Wednesday’s news conference — broadcast live on US television — saw profanitie­s and sparks fly as Fury taunted Wilder over the circumstan­ces of his defeat to the selfstyled “Gypsy King” last year.

As the barbs escalated, the host of the media conference sought to bring both fighters together for a traditiona­l face-to-face staredown — only for Fury’s promoter, Bob Arum, to veto the confrontat­ion.

Fury and Wilder — who clashed at a news conference ahead of their first fight in Los Angeles in 2018 — were hustled off the stage shortly afterward.

It brought an end to a fractious encounter at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, which turned ugly when Fury confronted Wilder over the American’s accusation­s of cheating by Fury during the last

fight. Wilder has accused Fury of tampering with his gloves for the second fight — where Fury dominated to score a seventh-round knockout — to inflict more damage.

Wilder had also accused former trainer Mark Breland of spiking his own water, as well as blaming a heavy costume used during his ring walk for making him tired.

Wilder stood by his various cheating claims when quizzed about them on Wednesday.

“I will go to my grave believing in what I believe in,” Wilder said.

“I know things for a fact. I have confirmati­on and clarity over a lot

of things. Men lie, women lie, but your eyes don’t lie what they see.”

‘Unwell person’

But Wilder’s comments were dismissed by Fury as the words of an “unwell person”.

“He accused me of everything, accused his team, his trainer, the suit, injuries,” said Fury (30-0-1, with 21 knockouts).

“Who else did he accuse — oh yeah, the Nevada State Athletic Commission, they were in on it as well. And the referee.

“Maybe if he’d come out with one of these excuses it would have been believable — but not 15, come on.

“He can believe what he wants. But what it tells me is that he’s a weak mental person, who I will knock spark out on Saturday night.”

Asked for his final comments, Wilder replied: “I just tell you guys to prepare yourselves for the battlefiel­d and get ready for war.”

Fury, meanwhile, returned to his earlier theme, zeroing in on Wilder’s comments about the circumstan­ces of his loss in the second fight.

“Wilder said I only won the second fight because I cheated,” Fury said.

“But then he goes and changes his whole team and training, says he’s training as hard as ever.

“So I have to ask the question ‘If I only won because I cheated, what was the point of changing everything?’ Can anyone answer that question? I know he can’t because he doesn’t have the brains to,” Fury said, gesturing at Wilder.

“He says he wants to do bad things to me, and hurt me and he’s got all this anger and malice and aggression. I don’t want to hurt Deontay Wilder. I just want to beat him in a fight.

“He knows what he’s saying is lies. And deep down in his soul, he knows that he lost. He lost the first time, he lost the second time and he’s going to lose the third time. And afterward he’ll be back working in that fast-food chain that he was working at earlier in his career — retired.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Tyson Fury gestures toward Deontay Wilder during a pre-fight news conference at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Wednesday.
REUTERS Tyson Fury gestures toward Deontay Wilder during a pre-fight news conference at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Wednesday.

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