Los Angeles Times

Fury signs with heavyweigh­t, but it’s not Wilder

Champion’s new deal with Top Rank/ESPN throws a wrinkle into hopes for a rematch.

- By Lance Pugmire

Tyson Fury on Monday veered sharply away from a rematch to fight Deontay Wilder in the spring.

The unbeaten lineal heavyweigh­t champion signed a co-promotiona­l deal with Top Rank and its broadcast partner ESPN, the companies announced.

“Fury has aligned himself with the biggest megaphone in sports,” Top Rank President Todd duBoef said.

Fury (27-0-1, 19 knockouts) and World Boxing Council champion Wilder fought to a draw Dec. 1 at Staples Center, energizing the long-lagging heavyweigh­t division.

In the weeks leading up to that bout, Fury offered chilling accounts of the depths to which he sank into alcohol and drug abuse following his 2015 title victory over Wladimir Klitschko. He made his comeback story nearly complete by lifting himself from a 12th-round knockdown by Wilder.

Both sides seemed intent on a quick rematch, and all signs seemed to point to a spring showdown, according to Wilder’s manager, Shelly Finkel, Stephen Espinoza of Showtime and WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman. But Wilder is aligned with Showtime, and now Fury’s fights will appear on ESPN’s platforms.

If the Wilder fight doesn’t happen, Fury may next fight in May or June. Top Rank has deals with unbeaten heavyweigh­t Oscar Rivas and former title challenger Kubrat Pulev.

“We envision this [rematch] can reach 1 to 2 million homes. The only way to do that is to allow the general sports fan to really get to know these guys,” promoter Bob Arum said Monday. “If that takes each of them fighting another opponent first, then rolling them into a September fight, the money on the table then would be more than they can conceive of.”

DuBoef said Top Rank’s agreement with Fury discusses future fights with Wilder and three-belt heavyweigh­t champion Anthony Joshua, “but there’s a lot more to the Tyson Fury business than just those two fights. We see him as a gem in the rough, just barely been exposed yet in the U.S.”

While a Fury-Wilder rematch may be delayed, duBoef wanted to make clear that it is not dead.

“Our involvemen­t makes [Fury-Wilder] a much bigger partnershi­p,” he said.

Since the marquee heavyweigh­ts are splintered into separate broadcast deals — Joshua with the streaming service DAZN — the momentum the division was enjoying could halt.

DuBoef says things have only changed for the better.

“They were splintered before,” duBoef said, adding that Wilder and Joshua “should look at the power of ESPN to make all of these events that much bigger.”

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