Tyson Fury does not chase it does not return. He says he finished. But when the name Olkesandr Usyk Appears, everything changes. The pension of the Gypsy king is not as nailed as she once looked – and he explained that he was crystal: one Fight for a return.
“If I had to come back, I would come back to Usyk. In England. This is the one I want immediately, it would be a fight I want further. Certainly in England,” Fury said Boxing scene.
This happens after two fights with the UTY in 2024 – both losses, the only failures of Fury’s career. The first Fury in May lost the heavyweight title of WBC according to a divided decision. Usyk became the undisputed heavyweight champion.
They ran him in December, and Usyk nodded again – this time a unanimous decision.
It seemed that Fury was heading to a home duel with Anthony Joshua, but instead he called until. And even now he doesn’t talk about belts, money or AJ. Only one name was replaced: Uyk.
“It would be a fight I want further.”
Speculation about the third fight with Usyk has never disappeared. Now Fury said it himself – the only one who would pull him back.
He also did not stop how he perceived their second fight.
“My last fight was clear Victory for Gypsy King. Everyone in boxing can see this. Total dog load ***
I want a fair fight, I don’t want any favor, I want a fair fight and sincere result. I know I didn’t get it. I thought I won him five rounds. I watched it 250 times. I never perceive it as a way to win in every direction. They can do what they want. “
I still train twice a day. He says he is content. But Usyk? It still bothers him. This is unfinished. And he wants him to be decided in Great Britain – without a neutral base, without politics, without BS decisions.
Fury does not beg for the lightweight of the headlights. He lives on his terms, as he put it – while eating what he wants to do what he wants. But in the next fight, in the right circumstances, he suited himself again.
“I achieved everything. Every lane. I did the money. Why would I come back?”
It turns out that revenge may be enough.
Usyk is to defend his belts this month before the IBF champion Daniel Dubois. The third fight with Fury is officially on the table – but the Ukrainian already said that it would be open to it.
“I want to fight so bad to fight 😩 I feel even more now that I have the belt. CHAMPION wants to fight. SOMEONE RUNS THE SCRAP” said Ryan Garcia on X.
Ryan probably talks a lot so as not to get stuck in a mandatory defense that pays a pittance. By demanding Conor Benn or celebrity rematches, he forces the hand of his promoters.
The reality is that Ryan holds the WBC belt, but the division is currently a waiting game. If someone like Turki Alalshikh doesn’t find Benn worth the investment despite his struggles with Regis Prograis, Ryan could be in for a close fight, which he definitely doesn’t want.
If Ryan had a “fight anyone, anywhere” mentality, he wouldn’t be in this situation. “Sugar Ray Robinson” would have already signed a contract to fight the most perilous guy available to prove his point.
Ryan’s current situation is a perfect example of a player falling into the trap of his own financial expectations. Because he has such a huge fan base, he feels like he can’t make a “normal” title defense if it wasn’t a blockbuster event.
It’s telling that Ryan’s interest in Benn increased right after Benn appeared to be the one to beat against Regis Prograis on April 11. It’s a business-first attitude. He is looking for the highest payout with the least technical risk.
Rejecting Rolly Romero as an option but going after the guy whose eyes the 37-year-old Prograis just slashed, Ryan shows his hand. He wants a name he thinks he can easily beat.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
WBO super lightweight world champion Shakur Stevenson is a fighter that many in the sport seem to want to avoid, but there is one other world champion who is hoping to make weight and secure a matchup with the undefeated southpaw from Newark.
Stevenson was expected to return to lightweight and defend the WBC belt in 2023, but the sanctioning body stripped him of his lightweight crown due to unpaid sanctioning fees. As a result, it appears the 28-year-old will remain at 140 pounds, but if he decides to drop back down, WBC super featherweight champion O’Shaquie Foster wants to meet him there.
I’m talking to Fighting the noiseFoster said facing the pound-for-pound star after his fight with Raymond Ford next month is the “first option.”
“I’m just excited to see what’s next, when we knock him down [Ford] If we lose, we’ll have the gigantic fight that Shakur and I want, and the sky is the limit.
“This [fight with Shakur] would be the first option, but if we can’t get him, maybe a Roach-Zepeda winner.
Foster – Who and Ford will collide in Houston on Saturday, May 30, while Lamont Roach Jr and William Zepeda have been ordered to fight for the vacant WBC lightweight title that Stevenson held until February.
Meanwhile, Stevenson has also been linked with a move to welterweight, but has maintained that a rehydration clause should be included in his contract for any potential 147-pound fights.
They can find a recent ponderous hitter who will knock out 15 players and call him “the next Berlanga.” They can find a hunky boxer and market him as “the next Hitchins.”
By doing it in-house, they control the narrative and, more importantly, the costs. DiBella argues that if Zuffa’s model works, the days of a fighter like Berlanga managing “overpaid” portfolios will be gone because the system will simply produce a cheaper version of the same “asset.”
“I have to be truthful with you, I don’t think it makes any difference. If that’s the case [Zuffa Boxing] doing things the right way, these guys are largely irrelevant,” DiBella said to Ariel Helwani.
“No offense to Richardson. He’s a good fighter. In five years, no one will care about Richardson Hitchins or Berlanga. It doesn’t matter.”
Berlanga faced the harshest criticism. DiBella pointed out how his early series was structured and how it shaped perceptions.
“There may be no fighter in the history of boxing, and this is a tribute to Keith Connolly, a little tribute to Berlanga, and a little tribute to Top Rank, who understood that you can take an average fighter and feed him 15 ham sandwiches and knock him out. After 15 ham sandwiches, he’s 15-0 with 15 knockouts.”
When talking about Berlanga, Dibella describes a guy whose entire reputation was built on a padded board designed to look spectacular on paper.
“So a little tribute to everyone. Berlanga is the most overpaid fighter, one of the most overpaid fighters in the history of boxing,” DiBella said.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fight landscape. His reports focus on the most essential fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
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