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Tyson Fury was on the wrong end of a gutting defeat by Oleksandr Usyk last month in Saudi Arabia and was left on his haunches after a particularly heavy night out on the town back in the UK

Tyson Fury was left floored after being kicked out of a pub just weeks after being downed by Oleksandr Usyk.

The Gypsy King fell to a split decision defeat in Saudi Arabia against the Ukrainian. It saw Usyk condemn Fury, 35, to the first defeat of his career.

A rematch is already scheduled for December 21 but in the time being, Fury has fully immersed himself in life back in the UK. Just days after the fight, he was pictured at the rubbish tip with his wife Paris, a visit that he had promised.

But he has now been treated to Usyk-like treatment following a trip to the pub that got slightly out of hand. Videos showed the former heavyweight champion of the world looking worse for wear in Nowhere bar in his hometown of Morecambe.

Two security staff were pictured encouraging him to leave the venue, where Fury was partying with friends and family on Friday evening, before helping him to the door. Having left the bar, more footage from outside showed Fury attempting to deal with the after-effects of his heavy evening in town.

He stumbled around, eventually falling to his hands and knees and appearing to hit his head on a nearby lamppost. Fury’s brother Tommy had recently given an update on him.

Speaking to iFLTV, he said: “He’s alright, all good, all good. Listen, at the end of the day it was a close fight, I did think Tyson did enough to win it.

“I thought the first half of the fight was a shutout and they picked up a couple of rounds after that, so I thought he won the fight. At the end of the day it’s boxing, decisions happen and he’ll be back for the rematch.”

Tyson Fury out in Leeds with his family 

Image:

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Will Tyson Fury beat Oleksandr Usyk in their rematch? Share your predictions in the comments below

Asked about the rematch, Tommy backed Tyson for victory. He added: “One hundred per cent he’ll win the rematch. There’s not a doubt in my mind that when the rematch happens he’ll right that wrong and get the victory back and move on to the next.”

Away from his heavy night in Morecambe, Fury also chose to travel to Leeds to spend time with his wife Paris and his sister-in-law Montana. The former heavyweight champion had a grin on his face whilst posing alongside his family.

Meanwhile, Fury’s upcoming opponent Usyk has spoken out having compared him with Anthony Joshua. Speaking on the Three Knockdown Rule, he said: “Anthony Joshua has classy boxing.

“Greedy Belly, my friend Tyson Fury. It’s like sparkling water; when you open it without shaking, it’s good. If you shake it, it [blows]. Sparkling water is Tyson Fury, and still water is Anthony Joshua. Tyson’s arms are like two meters, like a rope.”

Asked if Fury was the toughest fight of his career, he replied: “I would say toughest fight, yes, but I think biggest punch, no. Derek Chisora, very tough guy. With Derek, I don’t remember which hand it was, left or right, but I would block it and it would be like a baseball bat. It was very dangerous.”

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Friends of Tyson Fury have told of their concern over how the heavyweight boxer is coping with his first ever defeat, after he was filmed being escorted out a bar before collapsing on the street.

The Gypsy King, 35, sparked fresh concern over his welfare on Friday evening after the boozy night in his hometown of Morecambe, Lancashire, which took place three weeks after losing his undisputed world heavyweight title to Oleksandr Usyk.

Tyson – worth a reported £300million – has previously turned to alcohol in a bid to drown out negative thoughts and cope with the baggage which comes with being a high-profile sportsman.

His fans will be hoping the incident inside the town’s Nowhere Bar is an innocent one-off, playing to an admission made during his Netflix reality series At Home with the Furys that it only takes ‘two or three pints’ to make him ‘senseless, speechless and drunk.’

But a friend told MailOnline that given the bender took place in the wake of such a hard-hitting defeat – the first of his career – there is extra concern for his well-being.

Regardless of concerns for his welfare, Fury appeared to shrug off the incident today as he took a seaside stroll along the promenade in Morecambe Bay with his father, John, 59.

Friends of Tyson Fury (pictured today) have told of their concern over how the heavyweight boxer is coping with his first ever defeat

A friend told MailOnline that given the bender took place in the wake of such a hard-hitting defeat – the first of his career – there is extra concern for his well-being

A friend of the boxer said: ‘Tyson and alcohol do not mix well.

‘He’s previously used booze as a coping mechanism, which for any sufferer of ADHD is never a good idea.

Paris wrote: ‘Once the post-fight euphoria had worn off, within days of returning home to Morecambe, Tyson had sunk into a black hole of darkness and despair.

‘It was as if that glorious night in Düsseldorf, and those gleaming world title belts, meant absolutely nothing to him.’

As his mental health spiralled, he turned to drink and drugs.

He was famously seen downing shots and sinking beers with England football fans in France during Euro 2016 – famously racking up a €1,000 bar bill after buying 200 jagerbombs – and when back on home turf, he was regularly seen ‘trashed’ in Morecambe pubs. He’s been banned from his local, The Hest Bank in nearby Lancaster, three times.

He continued to pile on the pounds and was so out of shape, Tyson was deemed ‘medically unfit’ to take on Klitschko in their planned rematch.

In October 2016 he tested positive for cocaine during a random anti-doping test, which not only threatened to derail his career, but also his marriage.

Paris wrote: ‘I’d never felt so let down in my life – it truly felt like the final straw – and I wondered whether our marriage could survive this huge setback. But, like I’d done so many times before, I told myself to sit tight and ride the storm.’

Now without his rematch, Tyson hit all-time low when he considered attempting to take his own life by driving into a wall at high speed.

Thankfully a voice in his head stopped him from ending it all.

Speaking to Joe Rogan, Tyson explained: ‘I hit the drink, I hit the drugs and I was out all night with the women of the night.

‘But when the drink wears off it just leaves you with a bad hangover and even worse depression.

‘When you have a goal in mind from being a child and you achieve it… I was lost, I didn’t know what to do.

‘I was waking up and didn’t want to be alive, I was making everyone’s life a misery; no-one could talk any sense into me at all. I would get very, very low at times and start thinking these crazy thoughts.

‘I bought a brand new Ferrari convertible in the summer of 2016.

‘I was in it on the highway and I got the car up to 190mph and was heading towards a bridge.

‘I didn’t care about nothing, I just wanted to die so bad.

‘I gave up on life but as I was heading to the bridge I heard a voice saying, ‘Don’t do this Tyson; think about your kids, your family, your sons and daughter growing up without a dad.

‘Before I turned into the bridge I pulled on to the motorway. I didn’t know what to do, I was shaking, I was so afraid.

‘I said I’d never think about taking my own life again.’

Hitting rock bottom appeared to inspire Tyson to turn his life around, proved by the boxer completing one of sport’s most remarkable ever comebacks when he transformed his body shape – losing an incredible ten stone – for his return to the ring against Albanian fighter Sefer Seferi in Manchester in June 2018.

After his fourth round victory, he then secured another win, via points, two months later against German boxer Francesco Pianeta at Windsor Park, Belfast, to earn a shot at WBC champion Deontay Wilder.

He drew the first of the epic trilogy in December 2018 in LA, before victories in Feb 2020 and October 2021 – both in Las Vegas – which saw him crowned the undisputed World Heavyweight Champion.

Despite his recent loss to Usyk, and his unconvincing win over UFC fighter Francis Ngannou in October last year, Tyson is still regarded as one of boxing’s biggest names with plenty of fights left in him.

His legions of fans will be hoping his latest blip does not trigger another lengthy boxing hiatus.

Tyson Fury was left floored after being kicked out of a pub just weeks after being downed by Oleksandr Usyk.

The Gypsy King fell to a split decision defeat in Saudi Arabia against the Ukrainian. It saw Usyk condemn Fury, 35, to the first defeat of his career.

A rematch is already scheduled for December 21 but in the time being, Fury has fully immersed himself in life back in the UK. Just days after the fight, he was pictured at the rubbish tip with his wife Paris, a visit that he had promised.

But he has now been treated to Usyk-like treatment following a trip to the pub that got slightly out of hand. Videos showed the former heavyweight champion of the world looking worse for wear in Nowhere bar in his hometown of Morecambe.

Two security staff were pictured encouraging him to leave the venue, where Fury was partying with friends and family on Friday evening, before helping him to the door. Having left the bar, more footage from outside showed Fury attempting to deal with the after-effects of his heavy evening in town.

He stumbled around, eventually falling to his hands and knees and appearing to hit his head on a nearby lamppost. Fury’s brother Tommy had recently given an update on him.

Speaking to iFLTV, he said: “He’s alright, all good, all good. Listen, at the end of the day it was a close fight, I did think Tyson did enough to win it.

“I thought the first half of the fight was a shutout and they picked up a couple of rounds after that, so I thought he won the fight. At the end of the day it’s boxing, decisions happen and he’ll be back for the rematch.”

Will Tyson Fury beat Oleksandr Usyk in their rematch? Share your predictions in the comments below

Asked about the rematch, Tommy backed Tyson for victory. He added: “One hundred per cent he’ll win the rematch. There’s not a doubt in my mind that when the rematch happens he’ll right that wrong and get the victory back and move on to the next.”

Away from his heavy night in Morecambe, Fury also chose to travel to Leeds to spend time with his wife Paris and his sister-in-law Montana. The former heavyweight champion had a grin on his face whilst posing alongside his family.

Meanwhile, Fury’s upcoming opponent Usyk has spoken out having compared him with Anthony Joshua. Speaking on the Three Knockdown Rule, he said: “Anthony Joshua has classy boxing.

“Greedy Belly, my friend Tyson Fury. It’s like sparkling water; when you open it without shaking, it’s good. If you shake it, it [blows]. Sparkling water is Tyson Fury, and still water is Anthony Joshua. Tyson’s arms are like two meters, like a rope.”

Asked if Fury was the toughest fight of his career, he replied: “I would say toughest fight, yes, but I think biggest punch, no. Derek Chisora, very tough guy. With Derek, I don’t remember which hand it was, left or right, but I would block it and it would be like a baseball bat. It was very dangerous.”

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Friends of Tyson Fury have told of their concern over how the heavyweight boxer is coping with his first ever defeat, after he was filmed being escorted out a bar before collapsing on the street.

The Gypsy King, 35, sparked fresh concern over his welfare on Friday evening after the boozy night in his hometown of Morecambe, Lancashire, which took place three weeks after losing his undisputed world heavyweight title to Oleksandr Usyk.

Tyson – worth a reported £300million – has previously turned to alcohol in a bid to drown out negative thoughts and cope with the baggage which comes with being a high-profile sportsman.

His fans will be hoping the incident inside the town’s Nowhere Bar is an innocent one-off, playing to an admission made during his Netflix reality series At Home with the Furys that it only takes ‘two or three pints’ to make him ‘senseless, speechless and drunk.’

But a friend told MailOnline that given the bender took place in the wake of such a hard-hitting defeat – the first of his career – there is extra concern for his well-being.

Regardless of concerns for his welfare, Fury appeared to shrug off the incident today as he took a seaside stroll along the promenade in Morecambe Bay with his father, John, 59.

‘But given he’s been drinking again after such a high-profile defeat, there is a fear within his camp that more than ever, his support network needs to be ready to safeguard him through what could be a particularly testing stage of his life.’

‘He has never lost a professional boxing match before so they’re in uncharted territory in regards to anticipating how he’ll deal with it.’

Seen today chatting with his father, it was the first time the 6ft 9in fighter had been spotted since he was escorted out the town’s Nowhere bar after having one too many drinks. Tyson was later pictured slumped outside the boozer.

An onlooker said: ‘He looked to have recovered from his Friday night session.

‘His dad looked to have a bit of a sweat on so they might have been for a run or done a bit of light training.’

The Gypsy King suffered a well-publicised fall from grace in 2015 following his shock victory over Wladimir Klitschko, which saw him balloon to 28 stone and sparked a three-year absence from the ring.

He sunk into a drink and drug fuelled depression as he struggled to deal with the fame and fortune the shock victory bestowed on him.

According to his wife Paris, the mother of his seven children, the signs had set in the previous year when she noticed his behaviour became erratic when binge drinking, on this occasion sparked by the double cancellation of his planned fight with David Haye in Manchester.

Speaking in her book Love and Fury: The Magic and Mayhem of Life with Tyson, Paris, 34, wrote: ‘Looking back, it was probably his first serious bout of depression.

‘As the disappointment of the Manchester non-event sank in, his mood darkened and he seemed to lose all his focus and motivation. Tyson also developed a drinking habit, which was totally out of character.’

Fury beat Derek Chisora, a late replacement for Haye, before his career-defining win over Klitschko in Germany.

Paris wrote: ‘Once the post-fight euphoria had worn off, within days of returning home to Morecambe, Tyson had sunk into a black hole of darkness and despair.

‘It was as if that glorious night in Düsseldorf, and those gleaming world title belts, meant absolutely nothing to him.’

As his mental health spiralled, he turned to drink and drugs.

He was famously seen downing shots and sinking beers with England football fans in France during Euro 2016 – famously racking up a €1,000 bar bill after buying 200 jagerbombs – and when back on home turf, he was regularly seen ‘trashed’ in Morecambe pubs. He’s been banned from his local, The Hest Bank in nearby Lancaster, three times.

He continued to pile on the pounds and was so out of shape, Tyson was deemed ‘medically unfit’ to take on Klitschko in their planned rematch.

In October 2016 he tested positive for cocaine during a random anti-doping test, which not only threatened to derail his career, but also his marriage.

Paris wrote: ‘I’d never felt so let down in my life – it truly felt like the final straw – and I wondered whether our marriage could survive this huge setback. But, like I’d done so many times before, I told myself to sit tight and ride the storm.’

Now without his rematch, Tyson hit all-time low when he considered attempting to take his own life by driving into a wall at high speed.

Thankfully a voice in his head stopped him from ending it all.

Speaking to Joe Rogan, Tyson explained: ‘I hit the drink, I hit the drugs and I was out all night with the women of the night.

‘I just wanted to die and I wanted to have fun doing it.

‘But when the drink wears off it just leaves you with a bad hangover and even worse depression.

‘When you have a goal in mind from being a child and you achieve it… I was lost, I didn’t know what to do.

‘I was waking up and didn’t want to be alive, I was making everyone’s life a misery; no-one could talk any sense into me at all. I would get very, very low at times and start thinking these crazy thoughts.

‘I bought a brand new Ferrari convertible in the summer of 2016.

‘I was in it on the highway and I got the car up to 190mph and was heading towards a bridge.

‘I didn’t care about nothing, I just wanted to die so bad.

‘I gave up on life but as I was heading to the bridge I heard a voice saying, ‘Don’t do this Tyson; think about your kids, your family, your sons and daughter growing up without a dad.

‘Before I turned into the bridge I pulled on to the motorway. I didn’t know what to do, I was shaking, I was so afraid.

‘I said I’d never think about taking my own life again.’

Hitting rock bottom appeared to inspire Tyson to turn his life around, proved by the boxer completing one of sport’s most remarkable ever comebacks when he transformed his body shape – losing an incredible ten stone – for his return to the ring against Albanian fighter Sefer Seferi in Manchester in June 2018.

After his fourth round victory, he then secured another win, via points, two months later against German boxer Francesco Pianeta at Windsor Park, Belfast, to earn a shot at WBC champion Deontay Wilder.

He drew the first of the epic trilogy in December 2018 in LA, before victories in Feb 2020 and October 2021 – both in Las Vegas – which saw him crowned the undisputed World Heavyweight Champion.

Despite his recent loss to Usyk, and his unconvincing win over UFC fighter Francis Ngannou in October last year, Tyson is still regarded as one of boxing’s biggest names with plenty of fights left in him.

His legions of fans will be hoping his latest blip does not trigger another lengthy boxing hiatus.

Tyson Fury's inner circle 'concerned' over how Gypsy King is dealing with his first professional defeat after footage emerges of heavyweight star, 35, collapsing outside Morecambe bar

 

Tyson Fury was carried out of a bar by bouncers before falling down in the street after a heavy night out back home in Morecambe.

‘The Gypsy King’ recently fought Oleksandr Usyk in the biggest heavyweight boxing fight in a quarter of a decade, losing his WBC heavyweight title after a split decision defeat to the Ukrainian in Saudi Arabia. It was the first defeat of his professional career.

Fury will have the chance to become world champion for a third time with a rematch between the two already confirmed and scheduled for 21 December.

But before preparations begin for that fight, Fury enjoyed a night out in his hometown last Friday at Nowhere bar that left him a little worse for wear.

Footage circulating on social media shows the 35-year-old being escorted off the premises by two members of security staff.

As he reaches the entrance, Fury is then seen collapsing to his knees, appearing to hit his head off the pavement in the process.

The Sun report Fury was partying with friends and fans at the venue before security staff were forced to intervene and tell the former world champion to call it a night.

With their fight date originally scheduled for February, Fury travelled to Saudi Arabia days after Christmas to begin training.

A nasty cut suffered in sparring saw that date pushed back to May, with the former champion staying in camp as the wound healed.

Fury’s future in the ring briefly looked uncertain following his defeat in Saudi but any talk of retirement soon disappeared with their rematch now locked in for the end of the year.

Tyson Fury was left floored after being kicked out of a pub just weeks after being downed by Oleksandr Usyk.

The Gypsy King fell to a split decision defeat in Saudi Arabia against the Ukrainian. It saw Usyk condemn Fury, 35, to the first defeat of his career.

A rematch is already scheduled for December 21 but in the time being, Fury has fully immersed himself in life back in the UK. Just days after the fight, he was pictured at the rubbish tip with his wife Paris, a visit that he had promised.

But he has now been treated to Usyk-like treatment following a trip to the pub that got slightly out of hand. Videos showed the former heavyweight champion of the world looking worse for wear in Nowhere bar in his hometown of Morecambe.

Two security staff were pictured encouraging him to leave the venue, where Fury was partying with friends and family on Friday evening, before helping him to the door. Having left the bar, more footage from outside showed Fury attempting to deal with the after-effects of his heavy evening in town.

He stumbled around, eventually falling to his hands and knees and appearing to hit his head on a nearby lamppost. Fury’s brother Tommy had recently given an update on him.

Speaking to iFLTV, he said: “He’s alright, all good, all good. Listen, at the end of the day it was a close fight, I did think Tyson did enough to win it.

“I thought the first half of the fight was a shutout and they picked up a couple of rounds after that, so I thought he won the fight. At the end of the day it’s boxing, decisions happen and he’ll be back for the rematch.”

Will Tyson Fury beat Oleksandr Usyk in their rematch? Share your predictions in the comments below

Asked about the rematch, Tommy backed Tyson for victory. He added: “One hundred per cent he’ll win the rematch. There’s not a doubt in my mind that when the rematch happens he’ll right that wrong and get the victory back and move on to the next.”

Away from his heavy night in Morecambe, Fury also chose to travel to Leeds to spend time with his wife Paris and his sister-in-law Montana. The former heavyweight champion had a grin on his face whilst posing alongside his family.

Meanwhile, Fury’s upcoming opponent Usyk has spoken out having compared him with Anthony Joshua. Speaking on the Three Knockdown Rule, he said: “Anthony Joshua has classy boxing.

“Greedy Belly, my friend Tyson Fury. It’s like sparkling water; when you open it without shaking, it’s good. If you shake it, it [blows]. Sparkling water is Tyson Fury, and still water is Anthony Joshua. Tyson’s arms are like two meters, like a rope.”

Asked if Fury was the toughest fight of his career, he replied: “I would say toughest fight, yes, but I think biggest punch, no. Derek Chisora, very tough guy. With Derek, I don’t remember which hand it was, left or right, but I would block it and it would be like a baseball bat. It was very dangerous.”

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On Saturday evening in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, heavyweight boxing’s bureaucracy and politics will fizzle into insignificance.

Tyson Fury v Oleksandr Usyk is pugilism’s World Cup final. The best versus the best. A cliffhanger episode to draw the eyes of the world.

Barring a draw, for the first time in almost a quarter of a century one man will stand tall as the undisputed champion of boxing’s glamour division.

For Fury, a man born into a fighting traveller family and named after former champion Mike Tyson, it could be his crowning moment as arguably Briton’s greatest export to the sport.

A Netflix reality show and appearances in the scripted world of wrestling entertainment – combined with a compelling comeback story after battling addiction and depression – have long since established Fury as a mainstream figure.

His rise, however, has been far from meteoric.

From a leisure centre in Wigan to a Norfolk showground, the slow-burning superstar has worked his way through smaller venues into the starkest of spotlights.

Over a 16-year-professional career, the only predictable thing about Fury has been his unpredictability.

Could Saturday be the climax of a career that has produced the good, the bad and, on occasions, the ugly?

Fury’s first coach, Steve Egan, knew he was on to a winner the moment he first laid eyes on a young Gypsy King.

At just 14 – standing 6ft 4in tall and weighing 14st – Fury towered over almost every adult in Egan’s gym in Wythenshawe, Manchester.

“This guy is going to be champion of the world someday,” Egan prophesied in 2006.

Gold medals at the 2007 European Junior Championships and the 2008 English Nationals signalled Fury’s potential as Great Britain’s Olympic selectors began to take notice.

Liverpudlian David Price, who would later become a fierce rival, recalls meeting an 18-year-old Fury for the first time.

“I had just won gold at the Commonwealth Games and was in a training camp in Sheffield before the European Championships,” Price tells BBC Sport.

“My team-mate Frankie Gavin came into my hotel room and said there’s a young kid here saying he’s here to take your place in the Olympics. He says his name is Tyson Fury.

“I was like ‘what?’ – I’d never heard that type of talk in the amateurs. It was always so respectful, never had I come across someone that brash.”

When Price sparred Fury just a few weeks later, he saw signs that his fellow Briton had the bite to back up his bark.

“He was really young, just a raw novice, so I can’t say I knew he’d go on to become a two-time world champion,” Price says.

“But I’d sparred with other upstarts at the time and you could always land big shots to let them know but it wasn’t as easy to do so on Tyson. He was always switched on.”

A few months later the pair faced each other in the north-west finals of the Amateur Boxing Association finals. Price noticed considerable improvements in such a short space of time, but his experience, pride and a burning desire to shut Fury up prevailed.

“Fury had written a letter to the Boxing News magazine that he was going to knock me out in the ABA Championships,” Price explains. “As soon as I heard that I had a bit between my teeth and wanted to teach him a lesson.”

Price won their bout on points and would go on to take bronze for Great Britain at Beijing 2008.

After a failed attempt at making the Ireland team, Fury’s Olympic dream was over.

His amateur career ended with an impressive 31 wins from 35 fights. However, without the profile of an Olympic podium, it was Price who turned professional amid hype of being Britain’s next big heavyweight hope.

On size alone, Fury should be a clear favourite against former cruiserweight king Usyk, but a lacklustre performance and controversial points win against boxing debutant Francis Ngannou in October has tightened the odds.

Fury has been here before though. His ability has consistently been questioned and each time he has come up with answers.

It wasn’t seven straight stoppage wins that attracted attention in the early part of his career. Instead an uppercut that glanced off journeyman Lee Swaby’s guard and into Fury’s own face became an unwanted viral moment.

In his eighth bout, Fury was fortunate to be awarded a points win over John McDermott – who Price later knocked out in the first round – for the British title.

“McDermott definitely should have won,” Price says.

“After that performance people were leaning towards me as the Brit to go on and do better things. Tyson just didn’t appear to be very technically well-rounded. He seemed a bit clumsy.”

Fury’s unbeaten run continued but his credentials to challenge at the very top appeared lacking when he was dropped by the unknown Neven Pajkic in 2011 and by blown-up cruiserweight Steve Cunningham two years later.

“Nobody back then thought Tyson could win a world title,” says Northern Ireland’s Carl Frampton – who knew Fury from the amateurs and was well on his way to winning the first of his two world titles at the time.

But Fury’s defensive skills, elusive agility and remarkable power of recovery have kept him rising and his record running. He has 34 wins from 35 professional fights, with a 2018 draw against Deontay Wilder the only slight hiccup.

When Ngannou’s overhand left sent Fury crashing to the canvas for the seventh time as a professional in October, he rose to his feet, regrouped and did the job.

Just as he did against Pakjic, Cunningham and on four occasions, across three fights, against Wilder.

Price believes Fury performs best when his back is up against the wall.

“That close call against Ngannou was probably the best thing that could have happened to Fury at this stage,” Price says.

“He has that chip on his shoulder again. The one he had early on his career when he wanted to prove people – including me – wrong.”

Fury’s two wins over Wilder have defined his second coming, following two and a half years out of the ring to deal with his mental health, drugs and alcohol struggles.

For purists though, his greatest achievement was the win that immediately preceded him stepping away from boxing – a November 2015 success over Wladimir Klitschko in Dusseldorf.

“People forget about the Klitschko fight,” Frampton says. “For me that is one of – if not the – greatest wins for a British fighter ever.”

Fury’s showmanship stepped up in the build-up. Dressed as Batman in a news conference, he told Klitschko that he had “as much charisma as my underpants”.

World champion Klitschko was a clear favourite, unbeaten in 11 years and fighting with home advantage in his adopted Germany.

But Fury’s unrelenting mind games continued right up to fight night.

Just hours before the opening bell, Fury complained about the softness of the ring canvas, arguing it would hinder his footwork and that Klitschko had begun wrapping his hands without a member of Fury’s team present.

A layer of foam was removed from the surface, Klitschko rewrapped his hands, and, having had his demands met, Fury shone in the ring.

“He boxed Klitschko’s head off. He took him to school,” says Fury’s promoter Frank Warren.

The victory handed Fury the IBF, WBA and WBO world titles – three of the belts that Usyk is putting on the line in Riyadh this weekend.

“Tyson changed the landscape of the heavyweight division,” Warren adds. “And if he hadn’t vacated the belts because of his personal problems after the Klitschko fight, he would still have all those belts today.”

Aesthetically, Fury does not resemble a typical elite-level athlete.

“You couldn’t beat a fat man,” he mocked Klitschko before a scheduled rematch that never happened.

Taking his top off and proudly parading his paunch is a regular occurrence in Fury’s news conferences.

In many ways the lack of bulging muscles or six-pack has endeared him to the British public.

He has been lauded as the peoples’ champion, taking phone calls from fans when his mobile number was leaked online by his wife or buying shots for England football fans at Euro 2016.

But not everyone wants to be represented by him. Controversy and, occasionally, apologies have been a constant throughout Fury’s career.

Fury has made disparaging comments towards women, the Jewish community and homosexuals during his career.

After beating Klitschko he tested positive for a banned steroid, blaming it on consuming uncastrated wild boar.

He has links to suspected Irish gangster Daniel Kinahan, who had been a personal adviser to the boxer.

But Fury has been nimble outside the ring as well as inside it, slipping on to the next thing.

A Christmas single with Robbie Williams and numerous appearances on prime-time talk shows have kept him front and centre as one of boxing’s biggest stars.

“I think people identify with him because of the ups and downs of his life,” Warren says.

“He’s gone through a lot of what other people go through. Everybody knows somebody who’s had problems in their life. Everybody knows someone who’s had a drug problem, or a booze problem.

“They have seen how he’s dealt with it, come back from it.”

With his global fame, Fury has become less open with the media – but he has found other avenues for his trash talk.

Fury has directed expletive-laden social media posts at Usyk before their meeting, repeatedly describing his fellow champion as a “foreigner”.

Price, who has seen Fury slowly back up all his teenage bravado, sees a common thread.

“Deep down he is probably the same Tyson he has always been,” Price says.

“If he’s got it in for someone, the old, nasty mouth will come out.

“He gets personal. If he’s threatened by someone, he will get a bit nasty.”

Fury may not be able to break the iron-willed Usyk – a man who defended his native Ukraine against the Russian invasion five months after becoming champion.

If he does, securing a career-defining win and a full house of heavyweight belts, some have suggested the 35-year-old may retire.

But the man himself has suggested otherwise, promising at least a rematch against Usyk, plus two fights against Anthony Joshua before another meeting with Ngannou before he hangs up his gloves.

Predicting Fury’s next move is as tricky as ever. However long he has left in the sport, though, the blend of good, bad and ugly is sure to continue.

John Fury, father of Tyson Fury, has issued an apology following an altercation with a member of Oleksandr Usyk’s team on Monday, just five days before the highly anticipated heavyweight title bout.

The confrontation, which occurred in Saudi Arabia and resulted in John sustaining a bloody forehead, was widely captured on camera.

Footage shared by iFL TV and Usyk’s nutritionist, Mykola Tkachenko documented the incident, which involved John headbutting Stanislav Stepchuk, a member of Usyk’s camp.

Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk are scheduled to fight in Riyadh on May 18, aiming to determine the first undisputed heavyweight champion in 24 years, provided the match doesn’t end in a draw.

Both fighters are unbeaten, with Fury holding the WBC title and Usyk being the unified champion.

John Fury, a former boxer and bare-knuckle fighter, is involved in the coaching teams for both Tyson and his half-brother Tommy Fury.

Known for his outspoken nature during fight weeks, John has often made headlines in recent years.

Following the incident, John expressed his remorse in an interview with Seconds Out: “Sincere apologies to everybody involved, to be honest with you. It’s just the way we are. Emotions and tensions are running high.”

He added, “He was a very disrespectful fella, wasn’t he? Everybody knows, if you come close in a fighting man’s space, you’re gonna ‘cop for something’, aren’t you?

 

Oleksandr Usyk did enough to earn a split decision victory in his fight with Tyson Fury on Sunday.

Two judges scored in his favour – 115-113 and 114-113 with the other giving it to Fury at 114-113.

Usyk’s victory is boxing’s first undisputed world heavyweight championship in 25 years, an unprecedented feat in the four-belt era.

Britain’s Fury was the early aggressor but Usyk gradually took charge and the staggered “Gypsy King” was saved by the bell in the ninth round before recovering.

Usyk was undisputed at cruiserweight and he is now undisputed at heavyweight.

Tyson Fury who feels he won the fight says he is ready for a rematch in October.

Oleksandr Usyk wants that rematch too.

Usyk in reaction to the victory said: “Thank you so much to my team. It’s a big opportunity for my family, for me, for my country. It’s a great time, it’s a great day.

“Yes, of course. I am ready for a rematch.”

The Ukranian joins the likes of Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis and Mike Tyson as undisputed heavyweight champion, the first since boxing recognised four major belts in the 2000s.

With the win, the former undisputed cruiserweight champion can legitimately claim to be the best of this era.

has accomplished a staggering amount during his 35 pro-fight career, enough to cement himself among the all-time greats. The heavyweight championship division Fury rules over today is part of perhaps the most-storied lineage in all of sports, one that dates back to 1885.

That’s when John L. Sullivan, once the bare-knuckle champion, became boxing’s first-ever heavyweight champion under the Marquess of Queensberry rules. He held that distinction until his landmark fight with James “Gentleman Jim” Corbett in 1892. Following Corbett’s 21st-round KO victory in New Orleans, the championship lineage that extends to today was established. As pro-wrestling legend Ric Flair says, “To be the man, you have to beat the man.”

Now more than ever, with four titles in each weight class, the lineal championship helps to identify who is “the man.” This Saturday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Fury defends the lineal championship against Oleksandr Usyk in boxing’s first undisputed heavyweight championship fight since Lennox Lewis-Evander Holyfield in 1999

Through 139 years of heavyweight boxing history, just 38 men have had the honor of calling themselves the lineal champion in the sport’s glamor division, the title that bestows each individual “baddest man on the planet” status. Four of those fighters were two-time lineal champions — Floyd Patterson, George Foreman, Holyfield and Lewis — and only one won the title three times: Muhammad Ali.

Even former cruiserweight lineal champ Usyk (21-0, 14 KOs), 37, of Ukraine, who defeated Anthony Joshua twice and currently holds three of the four heavyweight titles, nor Joshua, despite his lengthy run as unified champion, have ever possessed the heavyweight lineal championship. Though lineages can always be debated.

After Fury upset Wladimir Klitschko in 2015 to win the lineal heavyweight championship, he didn’t fight for another 2½ years as he battled substance abuse and depression. During that time, Anthony Joshua collected the three belts Fury vacated and produced a string of impressive defenses. His second reign was ended by Usyk, who defeated Joshua twice.

Fury, 35, ESPN’s No. 10 pound-for-pound fighter, knows all of this, of course. His historical knowledge of the division gives much-needed context toward exactly what he’s looking to accomplish, and how this monumental fight with No. 3 ranked Usyk might impact his legacy.

“You gotta understand the game you’re in, the division you’re in,” Fury told ESPN, “the people who came before you so you can understand who you are and where you’ve come from and what journey you’re on. I believe that.

“You’re just talking about elite, elite, elite men. That’s why not all of these champions can be on that list as lineal champions. Only the best of the best of the best can be lineal champions. That’s why this fight, it means a lot to me, because if Usyk can beat me, puts his name on that list. If he can’t beat me, he’s not even gonna be on the list of lineal champions ever.”

Fury will look to gatekeep Usyk from that hollowed list of great fighting big men in a bout that’s nearly deadlocked per ESPN BET (Usyk at -105, Fury at -115). Turki Alalshikh, the chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, told ESPN last month that the rematch is planned for Oct. 12 or 13 in Riyadh. Fury’s goal across these two upcoming fights with Usyk: “Keep ’em off that list.”

“Only way that they get on that list is if I retire before them and then they get a chance to do it,” Fury said. “While I am the gatekeeper, no one shall pass.”

“Do you know who has a lot of knowledge like this, though? Mike Tyson,” Fury added. “Mike is the historian. I trust myself as I know a lot about heavyweight boxing. But Mike can go back to like 1845. Mike is incredible.”

Ahead of the summit meeting to crown boxing’s first undisputed heavyweight champion in the four-belt era, “The Gypsy King” showed off his immense knowledge of the heavyweight division with his thoughts on many of those 37 other lineal champions who came before him.

Regarded as boxing’s first-ever superstar, Sullivan was a cultural icon of late 19th century America. He was bestowed the championship on Aug. 8, 1887 in Boston, though his 75th-round KO victory over Jake Kilrain in Mississippi is largely recognized as the first-ever heavyweight championship fight. That was the final heavyweight title bout contested under the bare-knuckle, London Prize Ring Rules. It was also one of the first sporting events in the United States to gain national news coverage. Sullivan’s first defense of the recognized championship was his final fight, a 21st-round KO loss at the hands of Corbett. Both men wore five-ounce gloves.

“John L. Sullivan was a pioneer in this game,” Fury said, “and he made it possible for all of us people after him and even today to be able to do what we’re doing.”

There are some, including Fury, who believe Sullivan wasn’t the first champion at all. Fury credits James “Jem” Mace as the inaugural heavyweight champion. And there is a legitimate claim. Mace had defeated Tom Allen in 1870 in Louisiana, but anti-British entailment led many to disregard him as champion in the bare-knuckle days.

“Mace was a gypsy like me,” Fury said. “He had to be, he was brilliant. He was a three-time world champion. Three different divisions: middleweight, welterweight, heavyweight. Before Queensberry rules. It’s actually debated [who was the first champion]. Some people don’t say it’s John L. Sullivan. … I’m not gonna go into it, that’s a topic for another day.”

 

James Corbett | 11-4, 2 NC, 3 KOs) | 1892-97

Corbett fought just 20 times, but nine of his opponents ended up in the International Boxing Hall of Fame just like him. Prizefighting was still illegal in 21 states during his title reign, which included just one successful defense. A 14th-round KO loss to Bob Fitzsimmons in 1897 in Carson City, Nevada, ended Corbett’s run. He challenged twice more for the heavyweight championship in a pair of stoppage defeats to James J. Jeffries.

“Corbett was a good guy. Corbett and Jeffries, all of these guys, they were all good guys back in the day,” Fury said. “They had a very weird style, what we’d say today. They were sort of like men who just punched each other to pieces. They were good, tough men back in the day. Different, different era, different time of boxing, but all good men.”

Bob Fitzsimmons | 61-8-4, 6 NC, 57 KOs | 1897-99

No. 8 on The Ring Magazine’s list of the top 100 punchers, Fitzimmons was boxing’s first three-division champion. He weighed just 167 pounds when he defeated Corbett and lost the title in his first defense, an 11th-round KO loss to Jeffries in Brooklyn.


James J. Jeffries | 19-1-2, 2 NC | 1899-1905

Best known as the “Great White Hope” who came out of retirement to lose to Jack Johnson in a second heavyweight title bid, Jeffries went on a tour of exhibition bouts around the U.K., ahead of his first defense. That came against Tom Sharkey in a rematch. Jeffries made seven more successful defenses before he retired in 1905. Five years later, in 1910, he returned to fight one last time, a 15th-round TKO defeat to Johnson in what was promoted as the “fight of the century.”


Marvin Hart | 28-7-4, 20 KOs | 1905-06

Following Jeffries’ retirement, Hart won the vacant title in July 1905 with a KO win over Jack Root in Reno. Before that win, Hart had already defeated Johnson on points. Hart was knocked off in his first defense, a 20-round decision defeat to Tommy Burns.


Tommy Burns | 47-4-8, 35 KOs | 1906-08

The Canadian Burns made 13 defenses before he met Johnson, who scored a 14th-round TKO victory in Sydney, Australia, when the police stopped the bout.

With that landmark victory, Johnson became boxing’s first Black heavyweight champion. Johnson made seven defenses before a 26th-round KO loss to Jess Willard in Havana, Cuba. Johnson is regarded as one of the 10 best heavyweights ever and among the most important figures in sports history.