New Straits Times

Manchester attack fuels Fury’s world title bid

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MANCHESTER: Hughie Fury hopes to defy the odds after 17 months of inactivity and win a world heavyweigh­t title from Joseph Parker for the victims of the Manchester Arena bombing.

The English boxer challenges New Zealand’s Parker on Saturday for his World Boxing Organisati­on belt in the first boxing event at the indoor area since a terror attack killed 22 people — many of them children — and injured dozens more following the end of a concert by pop star Ariana Grande on May 22.

Fury, who is from the northwest city of Manchester and the cousin of former world heavyweigh­t champion Tyson Fury, wants to win the belt and dedicate victory to the victims of the attack.

“That night is going to be an important night and it means a lot to me,” Fury told reporters in a conference call.

“My heart goes out to the families and on Sept 23 I’m brining that belt back for them, bringing some pride and joy back to Manchester.

But Fury, who has a profession­al record of 20 wins and no losses with 10 knockouts, has been inactive since Apr 30 last year due to a skin disease — acne conglobata — which left him unable to train.

The 23-year-old then suffered a lower back injury which caused the fight against Parker to be postponed from taking place in New Zealand on May 6. AFP

Parker (23-0, 18 KOs), is hoping a good win will create interest in bigger match-ups in the future against Fury’s rival British heavyweigh­ts Anthony Joshua, the IBF and WBA world champion, and Tony Bellew. “The reason we took this fight is that it’s a mandatory (defence),” said Parker.

“I feel there are bigger fights out there but I can’t get to them if I look past Hughie Fury.” AFP

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