Tyson Fury said he enjoys training with his son and nephew, but insists he will not encourage them to follow in his footsteps and fight professionally.
Prince Fury, Tyson’s son and nephew John, are training alongside the “Gypsy King” in Thailand in preparation for his return to fight Russian Arslanbek Makhmudov on Saturday in London.
While Fury is content to see his son fighting, he insists he won’t pressure him or his nephew into anything or force them to continue in the sport if they don’t want to.
“I think everyone should choose their own path in life,” Fury said.
“There is a great saying that ‘each man must carry his own cross life’. What I have done has nothing to do with what my children have done, all of this I will continue to do.
“I would expect them to have their own lives and their own paths and not rely on daddy and not think, ‘Oh, my dad’s a world champion so I don’t have to [be].’”
Prince, whose Instagram bio reads “future heavyweight champion,” seems eager to follow in his father’s footsteps, and while Fury won’t have any problems if he doesn’t, he’s glad his son is training at the gym.
“The boys are doing really well in boxing,” Fury said.
“It’s like a conveyor belt of Fury. Shane [Fury] he has several guys who box and do well in amateur competitions.
“The older brother has three or four sons who will probably all box, and I have three or four sons who will all box. Just like a conveyor belt.”
The former heavyweight champion said there will be no vacation in Thailand for either of them as he plans to return to the top of the heavyweight division.
“I don’t know how it’s fun because we train twice a day, six days a week,” Fury said.
“I’m having fun, though. You have to step away from something to realize how much you enjoy it and then come back. I’m really enjoying it. I’m really enjoying my time back in the spotlight.”
Former WBO president Francisco “Paco” Valcarcel has asked the Association of Boxing Commissions to take action over the WBA’s continued exploit of “regular” and “interim” world titles.
Valcarcel, one of boxing’s most experienced sanctioning body figures, has taken aim at the WBA after another period of confusion over secondary belts, stoppage rulings and title fights that have left fans in need of a flowchart.
The WBA has repeatedly promised to reduce the number of belts in circulation.
He still hasn’t cleaned up the mess.
Paco Valcarcel attacks WBA titles
“When will the Association of Boxing Commissions come to their senses and force the WBA to kill the stinking “regular” and “interim” titles?” – asked Valcarcel.
“Enact the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act now.”
Changes to the Ali Law currently proposed by TKO Group and Zuffa Boxing state only one champion per division will be allowed in the United States.
After calling for reform, Valcarcel then pointed to promises made years ago regarding the WBA belt reduction process.
“A few years ago, they promised to end the celebration of these titles, and the word was not kept,” he said.
“And this was promised not only to the fans, but also to ABC, which ordered the WBA to put an end to these titles under pain of not being able to receive sanction fees for fights held in the US.”
Confusion surrounding the WBA title is growing
WBN reported that as of November, the WBA had 38 super, lasting and interim champions in 18 boxing divisions.
The latest comments follow Paco Valcarcel’s “joking” verdict on the WBA title tussle, which comes after Seiya Tsutsumi publicly admitted he no longer knows where he stands in the WBA bantamweight title fight.
In 2013, then-WBA vice president Gilberto Mendoza told World Boxing News that the organization would review its “superchampion” system after years of criticism about too many belts.
A year later, Mendoza again informed WBN that the WBA super and interim titles “may change,” adding that officials were checking to see what would happen next.
More than a decade later, boxing still suffers from the same belt problem.
Gervonta Davis was moved to the “Champion in Recess” title before the WBA later ordered him to face Floyd Schofield.
Murat Gassiev holds the WBA Regular heavyweight title, while Tony Yoka has been included in the title fight despite spending years outside the sanctioning body’s top 15.
ABC pressure
It’s no longer just about fans mocking too many belts or fighters trying to explain their championship status. The former chairman of the sanctioning body points directly to the regulatory threat that once hung over the WBA’s secondary championships.
The WBA promised fewer belts, and the same elderly mess is back in various divisions.
Valcarcel’s question now is whether ABC will do something about it.
About the author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.
Roberto Duran believes one victory stands out even more than his triumph over Sugar Ray Leonard.
The Panamanian had a career to be proud of, earning world honors in four categories while also becoming only the second boxer in history to compete across five different decades.
In the 1980s, Duran was part of a cult group with Leonard, Thomas Hearns and Marvin Hagler known collectively as “The Four Kings”, and the legendary quartet competed against each other in epic battles.
Despite this success, Duran made it happen revealed on One On One Boxing that he considers his victory over Ken Buchanan an even better achievement.
“The greatest achievement is my first world title against the best and fastest boxer in the world, because Ken Buchanan was much faster than Leonard and took many more shots than him. That first title was the greatest for me.”
Duran met Buchanan in a WBA lightweight title fight in June 1972, securing a 13th-round TKO victory, and at the age of just 21, he won world honors for the first time, although Buchanan’s team believed the fight ended in a low blow.
This comment stood out because it reflected a broader theme running through the responses.
“I have to beat the next fight first,” one fan wrote.
“AJ is fed up,” wrote another.
“Itauma would humiliate AJ,” predicted a third commenter.
“The man is just talking nonsense, stfu and let’s see then,” wrote another fan.
Others questioned why Joshua had already spoken to Fury, Daniel Dubois, Fabio Wardley, Agit Kabayel, Moses Itauma and Deontay Wilder before joining Prengi.
This reaction shows how rapidly the opinion about the former two-time heavyweight champion has changed. Joshua still talks openly about becoming a three-time world champion and competing in the biggest fights available.
Many fans remain unconvinced.
Joshua lost twice to Oleksandr Usyk and was knocked out by Dubois in his last fight against a top heavyweight. These setbacks led some observers to doubt whether he could still compete with the most threatening fighters in the division.
Skepticism was evident throughout the reaction to Joshua’s list. Instead of debating which fight should come first, many fans focused on whether he could beat any of the opponents he mentioned.
Joshua sees Fury, Dubois, Wardley, Kabayel, Itauma and Wilder as the main options still available to him.
Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most critical fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
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