Tyson Fury has received support from a man he knows very well ahead of a potential trilogy showdown with Oleksandr Usyk.
“The Gypsy King” announced last month that he would end his nearly year-long retirement following his second points defeat to Usyk in December 2024.
A few weeks later, it was confirmed that he would face Arslanbek Makhmudov on July 11 at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, which has since been named as the venue for their heavyweight competition.
In preparation for his comeback, which will be streamed live on Netflix, Fury posted several clips on social media of his training in Thailand.
However, at this stage his training situation remains largely unclear, with many wondering who his head trainer will be on fight night.
While American coach SugarHill Steward has been at the helm of his last seven assignments, some fans believe the 37-year-old’s father, John, will take on a more influential role in April.
Either way, Fury is expected to aim for a third fight with true heavyweight king Usyk if he is to prevail against Makhmudov.
That’s what Queensberry promoter Frank Warren suggested, he said Heavenly sports earlier this week, the Morecambe athlete is still keen to test himself at the highest level.
One of the people who believes that Fury can win in the third meeting with the Ukrainian is former British heavyweight champion David Price, who defeated the “Gypsy King” as an amateur.
I’m talking to Social boxingPrice believes that Fury, despite losing to Usyk twice, could potentially still exact revenge on the Ukrainian.
“Yes I know [think Fury can beat Usyk]… for two reasons. [In] there wasn’t much to it in the second fight.
“Even the first fight – beyond [Fury] get hurt [round nine]There [was] so little in it.
“[In] in the second fight he lost on points in a very close fight. They are both getting elderly – Usyk falls out of the ring [since beating Dubois in July].
“So I don’t understand why [Fury] I wouldn’t want to go to that fight. He needs a challenge, and the only one who seemed capable of challenging him – apart from the fight with Francis Ngannou – is Usyk.
“Stylistically, it’s not a hard, grueling fight for Tyson Fury. It’s a chess match.”
Fury lost his first meeting with Usyk by split decision in May 2024, and although the rematch ended in a unanimous verdict, many felt it was a more competitive fight.