The Day

Fury-Wilder III appears on course for fall pending an end to pandemic

- By GENE WANG

The third installmen­t of one of the boxing's most entertaini­ng and intriguing rivalries between heavyweigh­ts Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder is on course for the fall, assuming the cessation of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, according to people with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns, although the exact date remains uncertain.

A recent report in the Athletic indicated the fight would take place Oct. 3 in Las Vegas in a move unrelated to covid-19, with organizers saying they simply preferred the fall amid previous reports citing July 18 as the original target date.

But people speaking on the condition of anonymity because the negotiatio­ns are ongoing said that while Oct. 3 has been discussed, the coronaviru­s pandemic indeed remains a considerat­ion in the final decision for the pay-per-view event on the heels of Fury defeating Wilder in their Feb. 22 rematch.

"Oct. 3 is a possible date, but there are many variables that must be considered before that date can be locked in," a person at Top Rank, which promotes Fury, said before adding that the sides are awaiting a resolution to the pandemic. "An official announceme­nt regarding specific details will be in due course."

The spread of the coronaviru­s has compelled profession­al and college sports officials to place their seasons either on indefinite hiatus or to cancel major events, such as the NCAA men's and women's basketball tournament­s, altogether.

Premier Boxing Champions, in a release earlier this week, canceled all events scheduled for March and April out of an abundance of caution in the wake of a surge in covid-19 cases. Informatio­n regarding the rescheduli­ng of those cards was not immediatel­y available, according to the announceme­nt.

"The pandemic is certainly a factor" in scheduling Fury-Wilder III, one person said. "To say it's not is straining credulity."

In the heavyweigh­ts' previous fight at T-Mobile Arena — which generated nearly $17 million in gate revenue, making it the highest-grossing heavyweigh­t fight in Nevada history, and drew a reported 800,000-plus in pay-per-view buys — Fury battered his injured opponent throughout on the way to a seventh-round TKO.

Fury claimed the World Boxing Council belt, the only major title the lineal champion had not won, when referee Kenny Bayless stopped the fight at 1:39 at the request of Wilder's corner, leaving no doubt after the first meeting between the fighters two years ago ended in a split draw.

"The king has returned to the top of the throne," said Fury, nicknamed the Gypsy King, before the Englishman urged the crowd to join him in a rendition of Don McLean's "American Pie."

Fury (30-0-1, 21 knockouts) recorded two knockdowns, including in Round 3, when he landed a right to the head that had Wilder (42-11, 41 KOs) bleeding profusely from his ear.

That blow left Wilder wobbly through the remainder of the fight, and Fury, who weighed in at 273 pounds — nearly 20 pounds heavier than when the two first fought at Staples Center on Dec. 1, 2018 — capitalize­d again with a fifth-round knockdown in front of a star-studded crowd.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States