The Independent on Saturday

Fury’s mission: needs to keep boxing alive

- MARK KEOHANE mark.keohane@inl.co.za

THE Gypsy King Tyson Fury has to deliver on his promise to beat Deontay Wilder in the third of their threefight battle. The world of heavyweigh­t boxing needs an unbeaten Fury, and the personalit­y that goes with an unbeaten Fury.

If Fury loses, the real business of heavyweigh­t boxing loses.

No fighter in boxing gets people talking like the Gypsy King – and after his seven-round demolition of the previously unbeaten Wilder in fight No. 2, people haven’t stopped talking about the manner in which Fury finished off Wilder.

Wilder has vowed to avenge his stunning defeat and even confessed to hating Fury.

“He is the only opponent I have ever hated. I have to control that, not get over excited, be calm within the storm. But I want to beat him up for a few rounds before I knock him out,” said Wilder.

Wilder’s distaste has only really been aired in the past week because he went into a 20-month silence post the loss, while Fury, who was preparing to initially fight Anthony Joshua, hasn’t stopped shouting his disgust for Wilder, with the latter having made excuse after excuse as to why Fury beat him.

Fury’s response has been one of fury and he has labelled Wilder a “rubbish” and “garbage“human being.

Boxing needs characters and it needs personalit­ies, especially in this age when YouTubers are cashing in on boxing showbiz exhibition fights, that make hundreds of millions of dollars because of pay per view purchases, from their vast social media followers.

Boxing is devoid of those big presence characters and none stands taller in a room than the 6-foot-9-inch (210cm) frame of Fury.

But it isn’t Fury’s charisma, his trash talk, his eccentric nature or his boxing skills that exclusivel­y make him such a marketing magnet for the sport, it is a life story that has seen him battle his inner demons of

recreation­al drug abuse and drinking, and confess to his ongoing daily fight against depression.

Fury has never been shy to open up to the world about what drives him to success, and what has the potential to drive him to destructio­n.

The Fury versus Joshua fight was projected to financiall­y be the biggest fight in the history of the sport. Then, a fortnight ago, Joshua took a boxing lesson from Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk, and lost his title.

The result surprised Fury, but the consequenc­e of the result annoyed him because of the commercial opportunit­y lost.

It also reinforced how quickly the multimilli­on-dollar mega-fight can be killed off.

Undefeated fighters remain the biggest seller because people watch to see if they can be beaten.

Fury, currently, is the only undefeated big name around, but as bullish as he has been about beating Wilder, he has also conceded that Wilder has the capacity to end the fight with one punch.

“Joshua was messing with some cruiser-weight, who was going to beat him on points if he lost. I am messing with a man who can end you, at any time of the day and time in the round, with either hand. My task is much more dangerous, but I am much more capable, so I welcome it,” said Fury.

Fury’s trainer SugarHill Steward, who mastermind­ed the strategy in Fury versus Wilder 2, this week declared his fighter as superior to Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson, Lennox Lewis, and Wladimir Klitschko.

The UK-based Daily Mail, who reported the story, described the claim as extraordin­ary.

Steward was insistent in his statement: “Fury has all their characteri­stics and the mental toughness. He has everything they had, and more. Fury is a special boxer and he will have a special place in boxing history.”

Wilder, despite the shambles of the defeat against Fury, possesses the most lethal right in heavyweigh­t boxing, possibly ever, and it is this sledgehamm­er that saved him in fights against Eric Molina, Artur Szpika, and Luis

Ortiz, who were all outboxing him .

Then, BOOM, the right hand struck and Wilder sent all three into orbit.

Wilder also landed the most crushing blow to Fury in their first fight, and it is a miracle that Fury got up, beat the count, and survived the final round.

Wilder has a punch that has to be respected, but Fury, to quote his trainer, has it all – in being able to box, throw a punch, and certainly take one.

Joshua has predicted that an “obsessed’ Wilder will knock out Fury, but the bookies don’t agree, with Fury so heavily favoured that there is nothing to make from betting on a Fury win.

The Ring Magazine/RingTV.com also agrees with the bookies and, of the 20 experts interviewe­d for the fight, 19 favour Fury to end Wilder’s night – and possibly his career.

Fast Fact: Wilder won his first 41 fights by knockout, before drawing to Fury and being knocked down twice, and losing by TKO in the seventh round, again by Fury.

 ?? | ETIENNE LAURENT EPA-EFE ?? TYSON Fury stands on stage after the Wilder v Fury III joint press conference prior to their World Heavyweigh­t Championsh­ip fight which takes place tomorrow morning South African time.
| ETIENNE LAURENT EPA-EFE TYSON Fury stands on stage after the Wilder v Fury III joint press conference prior to their World Heavyweigh­t Championsh­ip fight which takes place tomorrow morning South African time.

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