Bangkok Post

Fury, Wilder ready for showdown

Champion takes on US star for 3rd time

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LAS VEGAS: Tyson Fury defends his WBC heavyweigh­t boxing crown tomorrow morning, Thai time, when he faces Deontay Wilder for the third — and probably final — installmen­t of an acrimoniou­s three-year ring rivalry.

A tortuous build-up marked by bitter legal wrangling, a Covid-19 outbreak and profanity-laced accusation­s of cheating comes to a head when Fury and Wilder clamber through the ropes at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

If Wednesday’s ill-tempered final press conference is any guide, the stage is set for another explosive contest between the undefeated Fury, the self-styled “Gypsy King” from Britain, and Wilder, the hard-hitting “Bronze Bomber” from Alabama.

The two heavyweigh­ts fought to a bruising draw in their first fight in Los Angeles in 2018, when Fury somehow survived a crushing 12th round knockdown after outboxing Wilder for much of the contest.

Fury (30-0-1, 21KOs) then dethroned Wilder in Las Vegas in February last year, dishing out a one-sided beating en route to a seventh-round knockout that emphatical­ly ended Wilder’s fiveyear reign as WBC champion.

Neither man has fought since that fight 20 months ago, and Fury was forced to scrap plans for a money-spinning bout with former WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweigh­t champion Anthony Joshua after an independen­t arbitrator in May ruled that Wilder was entitled to a rematch for a third fight.

An outbreak of Covid-19 in Fury’s camp, which affected the British champion and several members of his entourage, forced the fight to be delayed further from July to October.

Wilder, meanwhile, insists his defeat to Fury last time was an aberration, offering a series of outlandish and unproven explanatio­ns for the loss, ranging from glove-tampering to having his water spiked by his former trainer.

Fury pounced on those comments by Wilder (42-1-1, 41KOs) when the two men shared a stage at a press conference on Wednesday.

“He knows what he’s saying is lies,” Fury said of Wilder’s cheating claims. “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.”

Wilder has replaced his trainer since last year’s loss to Fury, sacking Mark Breland — who he had accused of throwing in the towel too soon — and replacing him with Malik Scott, a 40-year-old former heavyweigh­t who suffered a first round knockout to Wilder during his own career.

Scott said he has worked on expanding Wilder’s attacking arsenal, adding weapons to a thunderous right hand that is regarded as the most fearsome in heavyweigh­t boxing. “Deontay has good fundamenta­ls, it’s just a lot of times he didn’t use them,” Scott said.

Wilder said he has been “reinvented.” “I’ve dedicated myself and I’ve devoted my time and my body,” Wilder said. “I’m ready to reintroduc­e myself to the world.”

Whether the reinvented version of Wilder is good enough to outfox Fury, whose superior size, movement and counter-punching skills proved too much for the American in their previous meetings, remains to be seen.

Fury has been unimpresse­d by talk of a new and improved version of Wilder. But he maintains that Wilder now is a more dangerous opponent given what is at stake. A repeat of last year’s knockout would nudge Wilder towards the wilderness of the heavyweigh­t division.

“This is his make-or-break fight,” Fury said. “Everyone expects me to go in there and beat him down which I will, but you can never write Deontay Wilder off because he’s at his most dangerous now.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Tyson Fury, left, in action against Deontay Wilder during their fight in Las Vegas last year.
REUTERS Tyson Fury, left, in action against Deontay Wilder during their fight in Las Vegas last year.

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