Tuesday, April 16

Tyson Fury retains heavyweight title with 6th-round TKO of Dillian Whyte, then hints at Francis Ngannou bout


LONDON — Tyson Fury retained his WBC heavyweight title with a sixth-round TKO of Dillian Whyte on Saturday before 94,000-plus at Wembley Stadium, a right uppercut that sent the challenger crashing to the canvas.

Whyte made it to his feet before the count of 10, but when asked to walk forward by the referee, he stumbled into the ropes and the bout was waved off with one second left in the round.

The 33-year-old Fury was making the second defense of the title he won from Deontay Wilder in 2020 via seventh-round KO. Fury followed that victory with an 11th-round KO of Wilder in October in ESPN’s Fight of the Year.

Before the fight, Fury hinted at the possibility of retirement following his title defense. Following his dismissal of Whyte, Fury suggested retirement remains a possibility.

“I promised my lovely wife, Paris, of 14 years that after the Wilder 3 fight that would be it, and I meant it,” Fury said moments after the fight. “It was a great trilogy and I meant that. …

“But I got offered to fight at Wembley, at home, a fight I deserved — I owed it to the fans… I owed it to every person in the UK to fight at Wembley. And now it’s all gone, I have to be a man of my word and think this is it. This might be the final curtain of the Gypsy King.”

Bob Arum, Top Rank chairman and co-promoter for Fury, lauded the champion’s performance Saturday.

“Tyson Fury proved his greatness once again,” Arum said. “There had never, ever been a heavyweight like ‘the Gypsy King’ and tonight was one of his best performances by him.”

Fury improved to 32-0-1 with 23 KOs. Whyte falls to 28-3 (19 KOs).

During a separate postfight interview with ESPN’s Bernardo Osuna, Fury brought current UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou, who was in the ring, over to talk on camera. The two implied they would be setting up a fight in the future. Ngannou said it would be under “hybrid rules” — for example, the two combatants would wear MMA gloves while competing in a boxing ring.

“I want to find out who is the baddest motherf—er on the planet,” Ngannou said.

Fury seemed to leave the door open for such a match. Ngannou is still under contract with the UFC, but his team believes he will become a free agent in January. Ngannou, MMA’s most feared puncher ever, has long expressed an interest in boxing.

At his postfight news conference, Fury said he also wasn’t ruling out doing exhibition fights and the possibility of getting “some of that Floyd Mayweather money.”

“I want to have fun. I’m an entertainer. … It’s what I do best,” Fury said. “Big Francis Ngannou is here today, he’s on my hit list in an exhibition fight, however he wants it: in a cage, in a boxing ring, boxing gloves, UFC gloves, we can make it happen. I think everyone wants to see it. He’s a monster of a guy, I’m a monster of a guy, so it will be a clash of the titans for sure.”

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Ngannou added in an interview with BT Sport: “Definitely sometime next year, 2023, that fight will happen, because by the end of this year we’re gonna sort it out and get settled. Ready to go. Tyson Fury vs. Francis Ngannou in Africa, that would be the best one. The Rumble in the Jungle 2.”


www.espn.com

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