Boston Herald

Paul takes next step in journey with Fury fight

- By Steve Douglas

Jake Paul’s unorthodox career in boxing might just be about to get serious.

The YouTube influencer­turned-prize fighter will be coming up against a recognized profession­al boxer for the first time Sunday when he takes on Tommy Fury, the half-brother of world heavyweigh­t champion Tyson Fury.

Since venturing into boxing in 2018, Paul has fought a fellow influencer, a former NBA basketball player and three MMA fighters. He has won each time, building up his already-sturdy brand in the process.

Fighting Fury is widely regarded as a step up and the WBC, which is sanctionin­g the fight, recognizes it. Indeed, if the 26-year-old Paul — a blond, bearded social-media phenomenon — wins, he will be granted a place in the WBC’s world rankings at cruiserwei­ght.

“Jake has dedication and respect to the sport,” the sanctionin­g body said, “and the WBC will not tolerate discrimina­tion against anyone. He deserves the opportunit­ies that any other boxer has.”

It’s hardly a move that will be popular with boxing traditiona­lists.

Then again, Paul is not exactly operating in those circles or attempting to please that demographi­c. He has forged a very different path into the boxing world and is making a success of it, given the fight against Fury has gotten pay-per-view status and is deemed big enough to be hosted for big money out in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia.

Paul rose to fame a decade ago by posting Vine videos and then as an actor on Disney Channel show Bizaardvar­k. His rise as an influencer has not been without controvers­y, including accusation­s of sexual assault by two women in 2021 — he wasn’t charged with either — and his apparent use of racial slurs while rapping in some videos in 2018. He was also charged with criminal trespass and unlawful assembly in 2020 following a riot at a mall outside Phoenix.

Boxing is his most recent passion. He joined the pro ranks in 2019 and said he is “as serious as it gets” about the sport. He says he has a 30-person team supporting his training, which is largely done at the Cleveland native’s base in Puerto Rico.

“Because my life’s on the line,” he told British newspaper The Independen­t ahead of the Fury fight, “so

I’m not going to take that lightly.”

Becoming a world champion boxer is his ultimate aim, even if that goal appeared even more remote with the news in January that Paul has signed a deal with the Profession­al Fighters League in mixed martial arts.

Certainly Fury doesn’t take his opponent seriously as a boxer.

“That’s like saying a pig is going to fly, isn’t it?” Fury said of Paul’s ambitions of becoming a world titleholde­r.

“I’m going to teach Jake Paul a lesson … I’m going to show him he can’t just pick up a pair of gloves and say, ‘I’m going to be a world champion.’”

Fury has an interestin­g back-story, too, and not just because he is the halfbrothe­r of one of the most famous boxers in the world and comes from a family of bare-knuckle fighters.

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Jake Paul speaks during a news conference Monday, Sept. 12, 2022, in Los Angeles. Jake Paul’s unorthodox career in boxing might just be about to get serious. The YouTube megastar influencer-turned-prizefight­er will be coming up against a recognized profession­al boxer for the first time Sunday when he takes on Tommy Fury.
ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Jake Paul speaks during a news conference Monday, Sept. 12, 2022, in Los Angeles. Jake Paul’s unorthodox career in boxing might just be about to get serious. The YouTube megastar influencer-turned-prizefight­er will be coming up against a recognized profession­al boxer for the first time Sunday when he takes on Tommy Fury.

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