Scottish Daily Mail

GYPSY KING NEEDS TO WIN OVER AMERICAN SCEPTICS Fury is on a mission in Sin City

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THE Gypsy King Show hits this notorious neon oasis in the Nevada desert tonight.

If there are to be return engagement­s, Tyson Fury will have to put on a punch and dance act so unforgetta­ble that Americans will queue down the Strip for tickets.

Maybe with one of his renditions from the Vegas crooner’s songbook to round off a knockout debut in the fight capital of the world.

Fury was in good voice at his media rehearsals and his natural flair as an entertaine­r has generated increasing interest in this heavyweigh­t fight between an Englishman and a German — Tom Schwarz — in the USA.

The object of this exercise is to continue the selling of Fury to the American market and the giant Brit needs to be at his bedazzling best when the lights go down and the TV cameras zoom in on the ring at the Grand Garden Arena.

All the indication­s are that he will be. He is as honed of body as a 6ft 9in man possibly could be, at an expected 18½ stone.

That is several pounds heavier than for his epic draw with WBC world heavyweigh­t champion Deontay Wilder, after a crash diet of Titanic proportion­s.

‘I needed to put about a stone back on,’ he says, ‘to balance power with speed.’

That is a clear indication of his awareness that US crowds like their boxing skills to be set against a backdrop of fireworks.

Fury (below) says he feels under no pressure to make the impact expected of him by promoter Bob Arum and ESPN, who are backing him to the merry tune of a reported £63million.

Certainly, any stress inside those ropes would not compare with the massive mental struggle with which he hauled himself clear of the darkness of chronic depression. None who witnessed that psychologi­cal effort ever expected this colossus to achieve the incredible lightness of being he now exudes.

‘Not even me,’ he says. ‘But here I am, really happy. I have the pleasure of seeing my name up in lights in this town, of fighting in the iconic MGM Arena where all heavyweigh­t greats boxed.’

Can he stay that way, even if he were to suffer a defeat as shocking as that which cost Anthony Joshua all his world titles a fortnight ago? ‘No problem,’ he says. ‘Not that I expect it, even though I know Schwarz will feel he can be inspired by what Andy Ruiz did to Joshua.

‘No, I was born to fight. And I love it. Now I love to train, too. And to keep doing that will keep me happy. And, don’t forget, nearly all those greats lost at some point.’

With the chances of that happening tonight as remote as summer snowfall in Vegas, the focus is on how enchanting Fury can be in this Disneyland for grown-ups.

Fury can expect to find himself the lone entertaine­r in the ring against a competent Schwarz and a couple more Honest Joes who are expected to follow into the opposite corner this winter.

‘Yes,’ he confirms, ‘I’ll be boxing over here for the next few fights. For the money ESPN are paying me, they wouldn’t be happy with me going back home to box.

‘And now, of course, Joshua is out of the picture.’

Fury envisages two more fights — ‘preferably in September and December’ — as he works his way into America’s consciousn­ess and talks himself on to more prime-time chat shows.

Both are designed by Arum and his UK promoter Frank Warren to build the rematch with Wilder — perhaps a trilogy — into financial blockbuste­rs.

Fury might not have anything left to prove in the UK perhaps, but the Americans are harder to please and the historical scepticism about British heavies was reawakened by what happened to Joshua. Schwarz has an unbeaten record rooted in durability, so the likeliest outcome is Fury on points by a wide margin.

 ??  ?? Fury v Schwarz, live on BT Sport Box Office tonight. Expected start 4am.
Fury v Schwarz, live on BT Sport Box Office tonight. Expected start 4am.
 ??  ?? JEFF POWELL Boxing Correspond­ent in Las Vegas
JEFF POWELL Boxing Correspond­ent in Las Vegas

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