Author: quyen1

  • Tyson Fury’s father John explains why he HEADBUTTED man during bloody scenes ahead of his Gypsy King son’s heavyweight title fight… as new footage emerges

    Tyson Fury’s father John explains why he HEADBUTTED man during bloody scenes ahead of his Gypsy King son’s heavyweight title fight… as new footage emerges

    Tyson Fury‘s father headbutted a member of Oleksandr Usyk‘s entourage after he entered his ‘space’ and disrespected his son, he has admitted.

    John Fury was left bleeding from his forehead after he launched the attack in the lobby of the Riyadh Hilton Hotel in Saudi Arabia.

    Footage that quickly circulated on social media showed Fury Snr lashing out with his head towards Stanislav Stepchuk, who was wearing Usyk’s team tracksuit. He then had to be restrained after security stepped in to prevent any further confrontation.

    Fury Snr has now revealed that he become embroiled after members of Usyk’s camp repeatedly roared their man’s name at Fury’s entourage.

    ‘I was sat there minding my own business,’ he told IFLTV, wearing a cap that covered up the mark on his head. ‘All I could hear was, “Usyk, Usyk, Usyk”.

    He described the chanting as ‘madness’ and said he launched the headbutt after ‘some little idiot came forward in my space’.

    John Fury has revealed why he headbutted a member of Oleksandr Usyk's entourage
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    John Fury has revealed why he headbutted a member of Oleksandr Usyk’s entourage

    Video footage caught the clash of heads
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    Blood was left pouring down Fury's head
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    Video footage caught a clash of heads between the two before blood poured down Fury’s head

    The moment John Fury headbutts a member of Usyk’s team

    Tempers flared after the two teams crossed paths in the hotel lobby on Monday, leading to a violent confrontation that overshadowed the pre-fight media day ahead of Saturday’s undisputed world heavyweight title fight.

    Footage of the incident shows Fury Snr touching heads with one of Usyk’s group and, having been pulled away, then appearing to headbutt another of the Ukrainian’s party.

    It was the 59-year-old father of the ‘Gypsy King’ who was cut, however, and despite his attempts to wipe the blood away it continued to flow.

    He had to be restrained repeatedly while Usyk’s camp repeatedly roared their man’s name at Fury’s entourage.

    When asked what had happened, Fury Snr said his was ‘minding his own business’ but become embroiled by how they were ‘disrespecting my son’.

    ‘All I could hear was, “Usyk, Usyk, Usyk”,’ he told the media.

    ‘Coming out with all that rubbish. He’s in my face, trying to be clever. ‘Coming into my space, “Usyk, Usyk”, nobody’s bothering with them. I was only chanting my own son’s name.’

    Fury Snr added: ‘I’m going to stand up for my son. At the end of the day, my son is the best in the world and I want people to respect him and give him the credit that he deserves.

    ‘He’s the best in the world. And when people start saying this and saying that… when I was among them, all I could hear was madness. Some little idiot came forward in my space, he got what he got and that’s the end of it.’

    He had walked away from the fracas screaming: ‘We live for blood and guts.’

    Fury Snr did issue an apology, however, telling Seconds Out: ‘Sincere apologies to everyone involved. It’s just the way we are. Emotions and tensions are running high.

    Fury Snr apologised for the incident but insisted he had been provoked into the headbutt
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    Fury Snr apologised for the incident but insisted he had been provoked into the headbutt

    Tyson Fury missed the fracas after conducting media interviews in another room at the hotel
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    Tyson Fury missed the fracas after conducting media interviews in another room at the hotel

    John Fury puts himself head-to-head with Usyk’s team

    ‘He was a very disrespectful fella. If you come close in a fighting man’s space, you’re gonna cop for something. What matters to me is respect for my son and he wasn’t showing any of it. He mentioned my son and that was it, so he had to have it.

    ‘It doesn’t bother me [bleeding], it’s what we live for, we’re fighting people.’

    Usyk’s promoter Alex Krassyuk admitted the confrontation was a bad look for the sport.

    ‘I apologised because I thought initially that one of our guys hit John, but then I saw the video and saw it was vice versa,’ Krassyuk said.

    ‘So do I take my apology back because it was his misbehaviour? He has to apologise because this does not give a good impression about us to the rest of the world. It’s up to him.

    ‘Usyk’s team and Fury’s team are fighters. It wouldn’t be good if it got out of control. Usyk would say, ‘Don’t touch my guys, they are dangerous’.’

    Tyson Fury missed the incident after speaking to the media in a side room.

    ‘I didn’t see anything, I was in the room doing interviews. But I’m not here for all that, I’m here to get the job done and go home and rest,’ the heavyweight said.

    According to Sky Sports, Saudi Arabian authorities have said no charges are being pressed and that no further action will be taken at this stage.

    However, boxing fans have called for Fury Snr to be ‘banned’ from attending Saturday’s heavyweight unification.

    Fury has made a habit for attempting to cause chaos in the build-up to big fights involving his family of fighters but has taken things to a new level with his latest violent demonstration.

    Boxing supporters are furious with the actions of Fury Snr and have called for fight organisers to discipline him severely.

    Posting on X, one boxing fan said: ‘Ban him from attending the fight.’

    Another similarly shocked viewer commented: ‘Why does John Fury have to make it about him don’t think I’ve ever seen any other boxers dad so crave the limelight, embarrassing.’

    Others described Fury Snr as an ‘absolute clown’ for his headbutt, while a different online post read: ‘He bopped the smallest guy. That tells you all you need to know about John Fury.’

    Fury previously served three years in prison for assault in England after gouging a man’s eye in a brawl.

    Tyson Fury’s dad John bloodied after clash with Usyk’s team

    Tyson (left) was stunned after seeing his father has been left with a bloodied face
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    Tyson (left) was stunned after seeing his father has been left with a bloodied face

    The unbeaten rivals meet for the first time at the Kingdom Arena, with Saturday’s clash crowning the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis in 2000 and the first of the four-belt era.

    WBC champion Lewis won the WBA and IBF titles from Evander Holyfield in 1999 and Tyson Fury feels the weight of history as he declared: ‘I can’t wait.

    Read More

    Revealed: What Tyson Fury ‘will earn from his huge unification fight against Oleksandr Usyk in Saudi Arabia’ – and the ‘rare clause’ that’s included in the purse

    article image

    ‘It’s unbelievable to be out here. Everyone is on a high. Big-time boxing in Saudi Arabia is fantastic.

    ‘I’m going to enjoy this week because it’s been many years coming. So we’ll enjoy it. I feel on top of the world and I can’t wait.’

    Usyk, the former undisputed cruiserweight king, won his WBA, IBF and WBO titles by outpointing Anthony Joshua at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in 2021 before successfully defending them against the same opponent in Jeddah a year later.

    Attempts to match him against Fury repeatedly fell through until an agreement was finally reached in September, but even then the original fight date of February 17 had to be aborted when Fury suffered a cut in training.

    Before they climb into the ring a week of promotional activity awaits, with Usyk sure to be targeted with mind games by Fury, but the Ukrainian insists he will not be paying attention.

    ‘I’m doing good, I’m happy and I’m hungry. I don’t care how Tyson will be this week. I’m ready,’ Usyk said.

    ‘For me May 18 is important, what Tyson does in the press conferences doesn’t matter.

    ‘I don’t think about Tyson Fury now. I’ve seen him in a lot of fights. I don’t know how he will box against me, we will see when we get into the ring.’

    Oleksandr Usyk (centre) arrives for a media day in Riyadh (Nick Potts/PA)
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    Oleksandr Usyk (centre) arrives for a media day in Riyadh (Nick Potts/PA)

    Tyson Fury has said he intends to become the first ‘£500 million heavyweight boxer in history’ ahead of his titanic clash against Usyk on Saturday.

    The two fighters will go head-to-head in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia this weekend in a bid to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the world since Lennox Lewis.

    Fury sustained a nasty gash above his eye during a sparring session, causing the original February date to be pushed back to May 18.

    With his 36th birthday quickly approaching and a historic achievement just one win away, many would be forgiven for expecting the Gypsy King to finally make good on a retirement announcement in the near future.

    But ahead of the clash, Fury stated his intention to fight another ‘eight to 10 more times to the age of 40’ and revealed his ultimate driver.

    ‘Happy days, with those fights I’ll become the first £500 million heavyweight boxer in history.’ He told The Telegraph. ‘Some legacy that would be.’

    ‘This is an important fight but again, I hate to say it because the boxing fans and the boxing purists and all them w******, they don’t want to hear it, but why do you think I box? For the money.

    ‘If anybody in this building, or anybody in professional boxing, tells me they don’t do this game for money, they’re lying to you, and I speak from the heart.

    Tyson Fury revealed that his motivation is to keep racking in the large sums on offer in blockbuster fights
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    Tyson Fury revealed that his motivation is to keep racking in the large sums on offer in blockbuster fights

    The Gypsy King will take on Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk (middle) in Riyadh on Saturday night
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    The Gypsy King will take on Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk (middle) in Riyadh on Saturday night

    The victor of the bout will become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the world in 24 years
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    The victor of the bout will become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the world in 24 years

    ‘I do it for the dough. The bigger the deal, the better. I’m a prize-fighting pugilist specialist. That’s what I do. I fight for the prize, whether it be gold bars, gold coins, cash, transfers, cars, whatever you want to pay me, pay me in bags of sand for all I care, as long as I can make a drink on it, deal done.’

    The monetary might of the Gulf State and the passion of the Saudi minister Turki Alalshikh, make Fury’s ambition a realistic one.

    According to the Independent, contracted to earn 70 per cent of the the total purse. And that purse is bulging at a value of £116million, meaning Fury is due to take home £81.2m.

    However, he will have to donate £1m of his earnings to Ukraine, Usyk’s homeland, amid the invasion of Russia. That requirement is stipulated in his fight contract.

    Fury has also admitted that he knows the Usyk showdown could take years off his life, but says he is ‘living for today’.

    That is the price the Gypsy King knows he pays every time he takes one of his giant strides over the ropes into what is being promoted here in the Arabian desert as the Ring Of Fire. At 35 he is acutely aware that the debilitating effects of a gruelling battle worsen with age.

    Nor is he in any doubt that the plunging of his own WBC crown into the furnace of Ukrainian war hero Usyk’s WBA, IBF and WBO world titles will be as scorching as they come.

    When Fury sits back after acting up on the promotional stage as boxing’s showman supreme, so the parallel success of retrieving his mental health from bi-polar depression reveals itself.

    Of this occasion he says: ‘I do believe that every time you enter the ring, you will leave with less than you had when you went in. Each (big) fight takes a little bit more out of you. It’s a good job that I live for today. If I thought about the future I’d be screwed. As Apollo Creed said to Rocky (in the movie) there is no tomorrow.

    Tyson Fury admitted that he believes every time he leaves the ring he returns 'with less' than when he went in
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    Tyson Fury admitted that he believes every time he leaves the ring he returns ‘with less’ than when he went in

    He takes on Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday in Saudi Arabia in one of the biggest fights of the century
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    It will be the biggest bout of both fighters' careers
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    He takes on Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday in Saudi Arabia in one of the biggest fights of the century

    Fury and Usyk will face off against one another for the right to be called the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world
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    Fury and Usyk will face off against one another for the right to be called the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world

    ‘In my faith (Catholic) there is no tomorrow, either. Jesus said that when he comes back it will be like a thief in the night. No time, date or hour announced. So be prepared for it at all times and live for the day. Because tomorrow ain’t promised.’

    Fury emphasised that philosophy as he recalled lost friends and family: ‘There are a few people I’ve known who went to bed one night and didn’t wake up in the morning.

    ‘So I greet every day as a blessing. I enjoy every day. And whenever people ask me how I am I just say ‘’I’m alive.’’ That’s a good start to any day.’

    Fury has a legion of supporters against judgemental critics of his ticket-selling exhibitionism and if he defeats Usyk he is expected to be favourite for the first time to become BBC Sports Personality it the Year.

    As for taking huge bucks to bring this biggest of all fights thousands of miles away from his home fans, he references departed followers by saying: ‘If any of the people around my career are missing it means they’re dead. Because those not physically here can watch it live on TV.

    ‘I’m sure the dead have better things to think about than a boxing match. If they’re up there in heaven they’re doing heavenly things. If they’re in hell they’re burning.’


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    Fury, 35, claimed he has to rely on the experience he has gathered throughout his career if he’s to beat Usyk

    Conscious of his own mortality, he goes on: ‘For myself, it’s always one fight at a time. The last five years have passed like that. 2019 feels like yesterday. But my daughter was a little girl then and now she’s massive. When you’re doing your thing the years pass quickly. There’s talk of me having ten more fights. If so, I want them quickly. Ten fights in no longer than five years. Let’s rack ‘em up.

    ‘If you look back at the greats, at 35 they were told they were finished. Over the hill. Alright, I was probably a better fighter in my early 20s. Now, in my mid-30s, the fountain of youth has left me. Now I’m no spring chicken but I have the wisdom. I have to put youth to one side and use my experience and mentality.’

    Starting this Saturday night if he is to make history by becoming boxing’s first undisputed world heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis.

    Ironically against a rival title holder who is a year older than himself. Albeit that Usyk is generally perceived to have taken better care of himself down the long, hard decades.

  • Fury by name, fury by nature: Inside tough traveller childhood of Gypsy King’s father John who was banned from America for gouging out a man’s eye after starting bare-knuckle fighting aged 5 – as he kicks off AGAIN by headbutting member of rival camp

    Fury by name, fury by nature: Inside tough traveller childhood of Gypsy King’s father John who was banned from America for gouging out a man’s eye after starting bare-knuckle fighting aged 5 – as he kicks off AGAIN by headbutting member of rival camp

    Bare-knuckle boxing in the park from the age of five, selling carpets door-to-door, working as debt ‘enforcer’ and gouging out a man’s eye for a bottle of beer – just a few of the events in John Fury’s life that have made him the wild man he is today.

    Tyson Fury‘s father, 59, has lived a hard and violent life and has once more made the news for the wrong reasons after losing his cool yet again in a bust up with his son’s latest opponent Oleksandr Usyk.

    As the two teams crossed paths in the lobby of the palatial Riyadh Hilton Hotel  in the build up to the Gypsy King and Ukrainian war hero squaring off, harsh words were exchanged and Fury Snr. saw red.

    Turning on the provocateur, Fury headbutted him and stepped back with blood flowing from his forehead leading for calls for him to be banned from his son’s entourage.

    The flashpoint is just the latest sorry setback to John’s battered public persona which has forever been associated with criminality, prison time and shocking acts of violence.

    Ahead of Tyson’s undisputed world heavyweight clash with Usyk at the weekend, MailOnline examines the life and trials of his father John, the man who Tyson described as ‘the clan leader.’

    The moment John Fury headbutts a member of Usyk’s team

    Tyson Fury 's father, 59, has lived a hard and violent life and has once more made the news for the wrong reasons following his Saudi Arabia headbutt
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    Tyson Fury ‘s father, 59, has lived a hard and violent life and has once more made the news for the wrong reasons following his Saudi Arabia headbutt

    John Fury, left, pictured with his his son Tyson Fury in 2006 before rising to become the two-time heavyweight boxing champion of the world
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    John Fury, left, pictured with his his son Tyson Fury in 2006 before rising to become the two-time heavyweight boxing champion of the world

    John also revealed how he had to 'integrate and learn the settled people's ways over time', facing discrimination as a young gypsy growing up (John pictured on October 12, 2023)
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    John also revealed how he had to ‘integrate and learn the settled people’s ways over time’, facing discrimination as a young gypsy growing up (John pictured on October 12, 2023)

    Former professional boxer John, 59, said his family's fearsome fighting prowess stemmed from his tough-as-nails mother, Cissy, a 'natural southpaw'.
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    Former professional boxer John, 59, said his family’s fearsome fighting prowess stemmed from his tough-as-nails mother, Cissy, a ‘natural southpaw’.

    Beginnings

    Tyson Fury‘s father, who was once jailed for gouging out a fellow Traveller’s eye in a savage feud, has always insisted fighting has ‘always been in our family’.

    John, was jailed for 11 years for the ‘cold-blooded’ 2011 attack, which left his victim half-blind.

    Read More

    Boxing fans want John Fury ‘BANNED’ from attending Tyson’s heavyweight title fight against Oleksandr Usyk after 59-year-old headbutted a member of the Ukrainian’s camp

    article image

    He was eventually released in February 2015, after serving less than half his sentence – and later said: ‘He’s lost an eye and I’ve lost five years of my life.’

    But, speaking out once more about his past, the former professional boxer, 59, said his family’s fearsome fighting prowess stemmed from his tough-as-nails mother, Cissy, a ‘natural southpaw’.

    ‘Fighting has always been in our family – it’s our second nature,’ the 6ft 3ins bruiser – who once claimed to have won £100,000 in a bare-knuckle boxing fight – told The Sun.

    The father-of-six previously revealed how he had to ‘integrate and learn the settled people’s ways over time’, facing discrimination as a young gypsy growing up, and would go door-to-door selling carpets from the age of seven.

    Born in Tuam, Galway, into a family rich in Traveller heritage, from a young age John trained as a boxer, making his professional debut in April 1987 against rugby player Adam Fogerty.

    One of four boys, John is the son of Irish traveller Hughie and English Romany gypsy Patience, known as Cissy, who toured Britain in their caravan.

    Growing up was tough, with John and his family facing discrimination, being ‘stagmatised as thieves and vagabonds’, he said.

    ‘Over the years we’ve had to ­integrate and learn the settled ­people’s ways,’ added Fury.

    Traveller children traditionally leave education after primary school. But John said he ‘never bothered’ with school, saying as a gypsy lad in the early seventies you ‘weren’t going to learn anything because you got battered from pillar to post’.

    Instead, John’s father encouraged him to ‘learn to get your living’ by going out working from a young age, which meant ‘hawking’ – selling carpets door-to-door or surfacing roads.

    John (far right) with son and Love Island star Tommy Fury (front) after he defeated social media rival Jake Paul in February 2023. Tyson Fury is pictured top left
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    John (far right) with son and Love Island star Tommy Fury (front) after he defeated social media rival Jake Paul in February 2023. Tyson Fury is pictured top left

    KSI - who went toe-to-toe with Tommy at the AO Arena in Manchester on Saturday, October 14 - was heard mocking the Furys during an earlier press conference
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    KSI – who went toe-to-toe with Tommy at the AO Arena in Manchester on Saturday, October 14 – was heard mocking the Furys during an earlier press conference

    Netflix release trailer for Tyson Fury doc ‘At Home With the Furys’

    John's autobiography documents his life as a boxer and father to Tyson and Tommy Fury
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    John’s autobiography documents his life as a boxer and father to Tyson and Tommy Fury

    ‘I hawked at my first house when I was about seven years old,’ he recounted, adding he would often spend half-an-hour at people’s doors trying to get them to buy his goods.

    ‘Half the time they bought carpets off me just to get rid of me,’ the 59-year-old told The Sun.

    Trouble with the law at an early age

    Behind John’s skill with his fists was an explosive fury that would get him in trouble with the law on more than one occasion.

    Read More

    BREAKING NEWS

     Shocking moment John Fury is left with a bloodied face after HEADBUTTING member of Oleksandr Usyk’s camp in Saudi Arabia ahead of son Tyson’s World Heavyweight title showdown

    article image

    When he was 15, he had a scrap with a man in his 30s who called him a ‘gyppo’ after John brawled with his son.

    A teenage John smashed the man ‘with a left and a right’, dropping him to the floor where Fury then ‘kicked him full in the face with the instep of my hobnail boots’.

    Later, John found himself in a Nottinghamshire borstal, where violent fights with other young offenders were a way of life.

    On one occasion, John claimed he squared up against two bullies, hitting one ‘weasel’ so hard ‘his nose shattered’.

    Terrified he would have his sentence in the lock-up – which John likened to the 1979 film Scum, starring Ray Winstone – he leapt from a third-storey window to escape.

    The teenager spent three years on the run, during which time he met his first traveller wife Amber, having their first child, John Boy, when Fury was 18.

    John was later arrested and dragged back to a young offenders’ institute to serve the remained of his sentence.

    'I could hold him in the palm of my hand. He had to be a fighter to survive,' said John. John is pictured with a young Tyson Fury
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    ‘I could hold him in the palm of my hand. He had to be a fighter to survive,’ said John. John is pictured with a young Tyson Fury

    Boxing and the birth of the Gypsy King

    As an adult, John became a professional boxer in a career that lasted eight years, during which time he fought in 13 bouts, winning against opponents including Michael Murray, a future British title challenger and Cesare Di Benedetto, a future Italian title challenger.

    The 6ft 3in bruiser, who later helped guide his son on his way to world domination in the ring, ended his career with eight wins, four losses and one draw, saying his tactic was simple: ‘Throw a lot more punches… [and] get the job done as soon as possible’.

    ‘I weren’t an especially big puncher, but, once I got going, I’d not stop swinging until they were out cold,’ he said previously.

    ‘I’d not come up for air. I just wanted to kill. I’d hit them with fists, elbows, head, teeth and feet until they dropped.’

    In 1988, Amber gave birth to Tyson Luke Fury. The future boxing superstar arrived three months premature, weighing just 1lb.

    ‘I could hold him in the palm of my hand. He had to be a fighter to survive,’ John told The Sun.

    Fury went on to have three more children with Amber, sons Shane and Hughie and daughter Ramona, who tragically died four days after being born.

    After the couple split, John found love once more with his second wife Chantal, becoming a father to two more boys, Roman, and Love Island star Tommy – who like his bigger brother Tyson is also a boxer.

    John  has now become his son's biggest promoter - although he is not allowed to enter the US due to his criminal record
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    John  has now become his son’s biggest promoter – although he is not allowed to enter the US due to his criminal record

    Odd jobs and eye-gouging

    Later, aged 30, John embarked on a five-year stint as an ‘enforcer’, where people would call on him to collect debts.

    But in February 2011, John was jailed for 11 years for gouging the eye out of fellow Traveller Oathie Sykes in a savage fight a car auction, which proved to be the bloody end to a 12-year feud over a bottle of beer.

    Manchester Crown Court heard during his trial that the then-46-year-old declared himself the country’s toughest man before pouncing on his victim, who was left half-blind as a result of the attack.

    Fearing for his son, Tyson’s future boxing career, John wept in court as he begged for leniency.

    Speaking of the victim, he added: ‘If I could give my own eye to him to get back to my children I would do – I’m begging you for my life.’

    Mr Sykes told court he believed Fury wanted to completely blind him in the attack. He added: ‘It was like he was trying to pull his finger into my brains through my socket. I was screaming, “Please stop, you’re hurting me”.

    ‘After that he tried to take my other eye – he tried to blind me, sir, not once he tried to blind me, twice.’

    Fury Snr was jailed in February 2011 after being found guilty of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm
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    Fury Snr was jailed in February 2011 after being found guilty of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm

    John was jailed for 11 years for gouging the eye out of fellow Traveller Oathie Sykes in a savage fight at a car auction, which proved to be the bloody end to a 12-year feud over a bottle of beer
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    John was jailed for 11 years for gouging the eye out of fellow Traveller Oathie Sykes in a savage fight at a car auction, which proved to be the bloody end to a 12-year feud over a bottle of beer

    Tyson Fury admits he wanted to cancel his Netflix show

    Tyson, who was trained by his father at the time, supported John from the public gallery.

    Despite being Tyson’s trainer, Fury then missed crucial career-building fights before his eventual release in February 2015, just four years into his 11-year sentence.

    Speaking to The Sun, John said his stint behind bars ‘didn’t bother’ him, saying he was a ‘big believer in Jesus Christ and thought ‘if this is my destiny, I’ll come out a better man’.’

    Release and partial reformation

    Two months after his release, Fury saw his son Tyson becoming heavyweight champion of the world after beating Wladimir Klitschko in Germany.

    He is said to have had a far more calming influence over his son since his release, and recently he has become a media pundit, advertising his son’s fights to the world. However he is unable to travel to the US due to his criminal record.

    Seeking to contain his furious temper, John avoids large gatherings. But despite this, the ‘red mist’ can still descend for boxing bruiser.

    This anger came to a head last October when John was promoting the fight of his younger son, Tommy against social media star, KSI.

    Tommy was the calmest of all four fighters when the fight kicked off - which comes as no surprise considering he is used to the chaos associated with fighting YouTubers
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    Tommy was the calmest of all four fighters when the fight kicked off – which comes as no surprise considering he is used to the chaos associated with fighting YouTubers

    John's 'red mist' was revealed once more during a press conference between his son Tommy and KSI (left) in August. John, Tommy and KSI are pictured, later, in October 12 in Manchester
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    John’s ‘red mist’ was revealed once more during a press conference between his son Tommy and KSI (left) in August. John, Tommy and KSI are pictured, later, in October 12 in Manchester

    Tyson and Paris Fury, pictured with their children, during At Home with the Furys
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    Tyson and Paris Fury, pictured with their children, during At Home with the Furys

    KSI, who later lost the fight to Tommy, was heard mocking the Gypsy family, promoting the furious display from Fury Snr.

    John rose from his chair and shouted ‘the Fury’s are the best fighters in the world’ to cut KSI’s business partner and fellow social media star Logan Paul off mid-way through his speech.

    John snapped during a press conference between the two fighters, flipping a table during an angry outburst.

    He continued: ‘The Fury’s dominate. We are the best men in the world. We will fight anybody in our way’.

    John finished by knocking the microphones over and flipping his table before kicking KSI’s table over too.

    It comes after fans received a new, calmer insight into the ex-boxer’s life with his beloved children in At Home with the Furys, an instant online hit which has shown a softer side to the notorious fighter.

    Despite retiring decades ago, John has now found new fame thanks to the hit Netflix series At Home with the Furys, a documentary which follows Tyson and his family navigate the ups and downs of their celebrity lifestyle.

    However his actions in Saudi Arabia have led to calls for John to be banned from the ring for good.

    Tyson (left) was stunned after seeing his father has been left with a bloodied face
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    Tyson (left) was stunned after seeing his father has been left with a bloodied face

    Video footage caught a clash of heads between the two
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    Blood was left sheeting down Fury's head
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    Video footage caught a clash of heads before blood was left pouring down Fury’s head

    Tyson Fury’s dad John bloodied after clash with Usyk’s team

    Fury has made a habit for attempting to cause chaos in the build-up to big fights involving his family of fighters but has taken things to a new level with his latest violent demonstration.

    Boxing supporters are furious with the actions of Fury Snr and have called for fight organisers to discipline him severely.

    Posting on X, one boxing fan said: ‘Ban him from attending the fight.’

    Another similarly shocked viewer commented: ‘Why does John Fury have to make it about him don’t think I’ve ever seen any other boxers dad so crave the limelight, embarrassing.’

    Others described Fury Snr as an ‘absolute clown’ for his headbutt, while a different online post read: ‘He bopped the smallest guy. That tells you all you need to know about John Fury.’

    Tyson didn’t see the confrontation between his father and Usyk’s team and was later surprised when he saw his dad has been left with a bloody face.

    When he was told, Tyson said: ‘It is what it is. Not interested. Doesn’t affect anything. I’ve seen a lot worse.’

    Fury Snr later attempted to explain his actions, telling IFLTV: ‘I’m going to stand up for my son. At the end of the day, my son is the best in the world and I want people to respect him and give him the credit that he deserves.

    ‘He’s the best in the world. And when people start saying this and saying that… when I was among them, all I could hear was madness. Some little idiot came forward in my space, he got what he got and that’s the end of it.’

  • Tyson Fury leads the tributes to boxer who has died aged 29 after collapsing in the ring during his first professional fight

    Tyson Fury leads the tributes to boxer who has died aged 29 after collapsing in the ring during his first professional fight

    Tyson Fury has led the tributes to boxer Sherif Lawal, who died after collapsing in the ring in his first professional fight.

    The middleweight lost consciousness during the bout against Malam Varela at Harrow Leisure Centre in London yesterday after being struck on the temple.

    Referee Lee Every began his knockout count but called an immediate end to the fight after realising the seriousness of the 29-year-old’s condition.

    Lawal was treated by ringside doctors and paramedics inside the ring. According to BoxingScene, CPR was administered and a defibrillator was used.

    He was then taken to Northwick Park Hospital but was tragically pronounced dead.

    Boxer Sherif Lawal died after collapsing in the ring during his first professional fight
    +2

    Boxer Sherif Lawal died after collapsing in the ring during his first professional fight

    World champion Tyson Fury paid tribute to Lawal ahead of his bout with Oleksandr Usyk this weekend
    +2

    World champion Tyson Fury paid tribute to Lawal ahead of his bout with Oleksandr Usyk this weekend

    The remainder of the card was cancelled.

    Fury, who is fighting Oleksandr Usyk in their undisputed heavyweight title bout in Saudi Arabia this weekend, paid tribute to Lawal today.

    The Gypsy King said ‘Rest in peace. poor fella. We all know the dangers of getting in the ring. The dangers of having our brains knocked out.

    ‘We’re not in there to tickle each other to death. We are there to do serious damage to each other. It’s what we’re paid for.

    ‘I’ve known the risks all my life. You know that if it’s your time to die it’s destiny.’

    A witness told The Sun: ‘It’s unbelievably sad. This was his pro debut – he has died while chasing his dream.

    ‘His fight was first on the card, but the event was cancelled and the remaining three fights scrapped after Sherif was taken to hospital. That tells you how serious it was.

    ‘He was hurt at the end of round three. He then came out for the fourth and final round with his guard up, and took a right to the temple.

    ‘He dropped to his haunches and the referee started a count to ten – but then stopped and waved it off because he could see Sherif was in a bad way.

    ‘Doctors arrived and worked on him in the ring for about 20 minutes, including CPR and the use of a defibrillator.

    ‘This was in front of a packed house, and everyone was in total shock.

    ‘Sherif was then taken away on a stretcher before news came through later that he had passed away.’

    The Islington-based Lawal had been boxing since 2018. Last year, he competed in the National Elite Championships and turned professional earlier this year.

    In a statement, Warren Boxing Management said: ‘Last night, Sherif Lawal was making his debut at a show at Harrow Leisure Centre, in which our boxer Courtney Bennett was scheduled to fight.

    ‘Unfortunately during Sherif’s fight, he collapsed and despite the best efforts of the paramedics, he was later pronounced dead.

    ‘Warren Boxing Management would like to send our condolences to all of Sherif’s family, friends, coaches and all those close to him at this tragic time.’

    Costakis Evangelou, the promoter of the Clash of the Titans event, told The Sun: ‘This was a tragic incident and my profound sympathies go out to Sherif’s family.

    ‘It’s a difficult time for everyone involved in the boxing fraternity and we’re trying to absorb what’s happened. No one wants to see something like this in any sport.

    ‘Sherif was a great boxer and man. It’s now in the hands of the Board and they’re going to assess the incident.’

    Writing on X, fellow boxer Denzel Bentley paid tribute to Lawal, writing: ‘Went to a boxing show last night and a young man making his debut lost his life.’

  • Bizarre moment Mike Tyson and Jake Paul’s press conference is interrupted by a SWEARING KID, 14, in New York – and asks who has the higher body count

    Bizarre moment Mike Tyson and Jake Paul’s press conference is interrupted by a SWEARING KID, 14, in New York – and asks who has the higher body count

    Mike Tyson and Jake Paul‘s pre-fight press conference was bizarrely interrupted by a swearing 14-year-old kid asking who between the pair had the ‘higher body count.’

    Kayo Martin – a teen influencer and prankster from New York with 123,000 followers on Instagram – crashed the event at the Apollo Theatre in the Big Apple on Monday while the two fighters were taking questions from the crowd in an open mic’ format.

    ‘So you think he has bigger balls? Who do you think has a bigger body count? What’s your body count Jake?’ Martin asked the 27-year-old, YouTuber-turned-boxer.

    Shocked by what he had just heard, Paul buried his head in his hands, while Tyson had an emphatic response for the minor.

    ‘Where is this kid’s mother?’ the 57-year-old boxing legend asked the crowd.

    Viral teen influencer Kayo Martin, 14, stunned the crowd at the Apollo Theater in NYC on Mon.
    +3

    Viral teen influencer Kayo Martin, 14, stunned the crowd at the Apollo Theater in NYC on Mon.

    Mike Tyson asked for the kid's mom after Martin challenged him and Paul to answer who had the 'higher body count' in between them
    +3

    Mike Tyson asked for the kid’s mom after Martin challenged him and Paul to answer who had the ‘higher body count’ in between them

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    But the teen didn’t stop there, as he continued to push Paul for answer.

    ‘Jake, you think yours is higher?’ Martin asked before spitting some slang.

    ‘Type s**t. We outside! Gaw Gaw. Boom b***h. Ahhh,’ he said, adding: ‘I love you guys motherf***er.’

    After the press conference, Paul was seen with his brother and WWE wrestler Logan Paul, as they were both utterly dumbfounded by Martin’s language and audacity.

    ‘That was kid was hoot,’ Logan pointed out before Jake asked him. ‘What was up with that kid?’

    Martin, whose linktree bio says ‘skateboarding, boxing, Day in the Life, Hoodrat shii,’ provides a variety of content on his Instagram page, ranging from deli visits in New York to riding electric Citi bikes that are too tall for him.

    Tyson and Paul are set to box in front of 120,000 fans at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX, in July
    +3

    Tyson and Paul are set to box in front of 120,000 fans at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX, in July

    He even dangerously climbed onto a subway platform from train tracks once while narrowly avoiding a subway car passing by.

    Tyson and Paul’s fight is set for July 20 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

    An impressive 120,000 boxing fans already signed up for presale access, according to SeatGeek.com.

    Ahead of the fight, Tyson made a worrying admission about his body ahead of his first boxing match since an exhibition fight in 2020.

  • Fury by name, fury by nature: Inside tough traveller childhood of Gypsy King’s father John who was banned from America for gouging out a man’s eye after starting bare-knuckle fighting aged 5 – as he kicks off AGAIN by headbutting member of rival camp (VIDEO)

    Fury by name, fury by nature: Inside tough traveller childhood of Gypsy King’s father John who was banned from America for gouging out a man’s eye after starting bare-knuckle fighting aged 5 – as he kicks off AGAIN by headbutting member of rival camp (VIDEO)

    Bare-knuckle boxing in the park from the age of five, selling carpets door-to-door, working as debt ‘enforcer’ and gouging out a man’s eye for a bottle of beer – just a few of the events in John Fury’s life that have made him the wild man he is today.

    Tyson Fury’s father, 59, has lived a hard and violent life and has once more made the news for the wrong reasons after losing his cool yet again in a bust up with his son’s latest opponent Oleksandr Usyk.

    As the two two teams crossed paths in the lobby of the palatial Riyadh Hilton Hotel  in the build up to the Gypsy King and Ukrainian war hero squaring off, harsh words were exchanged and Fury Snr. saw red.

    Turning on the provocateur, Fury headbutted him and stepped back with blood flowing from his forehead leading for calls for him to be banned from his son’s entourage.

    The flashpoint is just the latest sorry setback to John Fury’s battered public persona which has forever been associated with criminality, prison time and shocking acts of violence.

    Ahead of Tyson Fury’s undisputed world heavyweight clash with Usyk at the weekend, MailOnline examines the life and trials of his father John Fury, the man who Tyson described as ‘the clan leader.’

    The moment John Fury headbutts a member of Usyk’s team

    Tyson Fury 's father, 59, has lived a hard and violent life and has once more made the news for the wrong reasons following his Saudi Arabia headbutt
    +21

    Tyson Fury ‘s father, 59, has lived a hard and violent life and has once more made the news for the wrong reasons following his Saudi Arabia headbutt

    John Fury, left, pictured with his his son Tyson Fury in 2006 before rising to become the two-time heavyweight boxing champion of the world
    +21

    John Fury, left, pictured with his his son Tyson Fury in 2006 before rising to become the two-time heavyweight boxing champion of the world

    John Fury, coach and father of Tyson Fury, also revealed how he had to 'integrate and learn the settled people's ways over time', facing discrimination as a young gypsy growing up (John pictured on October 12, 2023)
    +21

    John Fury, coach and father of Tyson Fury, also revealed how he had to ‘integrate and learn the settled people’s ways over time’, facing discrimination as a young gypsy growing up (John pictured on October 12, 2023)

    Former professional boxer John, 59, said his family's fearsome fighting prowess stemmed from his tough-as-nails mother, Cissy, a 'natural southpaw'.
    +21

    Former professional boxer John, 59, said his family’s fearsome fighting prowess stemmed from his tough-as-nails mother, Cissy, a ‘natural southpaw’.

    Beginnings

    Tyson Fury’s father, who was once jailed for gouging out a fellow Traveller’s eye in a savage feud, has always insisted fighting has ‘always been in our family’.

    John Fury, whose son Tyson is the two-time heavyweight boxing champion of the world, was jailed for 11 years for the ‘cold-blooded’ 2011 attack, which left his victim half-blind.

    Read More

    Boxing fans want John Fury ‘BANNED’ from attending Tyson’s heavyweight title fight against Oleksandr Usyk after 59-year-old headbutted a member of the Ukrainian’s camp

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    He was eventually released in February 2015, after serving less than half his sentence – and later said: ‘He’s lost an eye and I’ve lost five years of my life.’

    But, speaking out once more about his past, the former professional boxer, 59, said his family’s fearsome fighting prowess stemmed from his tough-as-nails mother, Cissy, a ‘natural southpaw’.

    ‘Fighting has always been in our family – it’s our second nature,’ the 6ft 3ins bruiser – who once claimed to have won £100,000 in a bare-knuckle boxing fight – told The Sun.

    The father-of-six previously revealed how he had to ‘integrate and learn the settled people’s ways over time’, facing discrimination as a young gypsy growing up, and would go door-to-door selling carpets from the age of seven.

    Born in Tuam, Galway, into a family rich in Traveller heritage, from a young age John trained as a boxer, making his professional debut in April 1987 against rugby player Adam Fogerty.

    One of four boys, John is the son of Irish traveller Hughie and English Romany gypsy Patience, known as Cissy, who toured Britain in their caravan.

    Growing up was tough, with John and his family facing discrimination, being ‘stagmatised as thieves and vagabonds’, he said.

    ‘Over the years we’ve had to ­integrate and learn the settled ­people’s ways,’ added Fury.

    Traveller children traditionally leave education after primary school. But John said he ‘never bothered’ with school, saying as a gypsy lad in the early seventies you ‘weren’t going to learn anything because you got battered from pillar to post’.

    Instead, John’s father encouraged him to ‘learn to get your living’ by going out working from a young age, which meant ‘hawking’ – selling carpets door-to-door or surfacing roads.

    John Fury (far right) with son and Love Island star Tommy Fury (front) after he defeated social media rival Jake Paul in February 2023. Tyson Fury is pictured top left
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    John Fury (far right) with son and Love Island star Tommy Fury (front) after he defeated social media rival Jake Paul in February 2023. Tyson Fury is pictured top left

    KSI - who went toe-to-toe with Tommy at the AO Arena in Manchester on Saturday, October 14 - was heard mocking the Furys during an earlier press conference
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    KSI – who went toe-to-toe with Tommy at the AO Arena in Manchester on Saturday, October 14 – was heard mocking the Furys during an earlier press conference

    Netflix release trailer for Tyson Fury doc ‘At Home With the Furys’

    John's autobiography documents his life as a boxer and father to Tyson and Tommy Fury
    +21

    John’s autobiography documents his life as a boxer and father to Tyson and Tommy Fury

    ‘I hawked at my first house when I was about seven years old,’ he recounted, adding he would often spend half-an-hour at people’s doors trying to get them to buy his goods.

    ‘Half the time they bought carpets off me just to get rid of me,’ the 59-year-old told The Sun.

    Trouble with the law at an early age

    Behind John’s skill with his fists was an explosive fury that would get him in trouble with the law on more than one occasion.

    Read More

    BREAKING NEWS

     Shocking moment John Fury is left with a bloodied face after HEADBUTTING member of Oleksandr Usyk’s camp in Saudi Arabia ahead of son Tyson’s World Heavyweight title showdown

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    When he was 15, he had a scrap with a man in his 30s who called him a ‘gyppo’ after John brawled with his son.

    A teenage John smashed the man ‘with a left and a right’, dropping him to the floor where Fury then ‘kicked him full in the face with the instep of my hobnail boots’.

    Later, John found himself in a Nottinghamshire borstal, where violent fights with other young offenders were a way of life.

    On one occasion, John claimed he squared up against two bullies, hitting one ‘weasel’ so hard ‘his nose shattered’.

    Terrified he would have his sentence in the lock-up – which John likened to the 1979 film Scum, starring Ray Winstone – he leapt from a third-storey window to escape.

    The teenager spent three years on the run, during which time he met his first traveller wife Amber, having their first child, John Boy, when Fury was 18.

    John was later arrested and dragged back to a young offenders’ institute to serve the remained of his sentence.

    'I could hold him in the palm of my hand. He had to be a fighter to survive,' said John. John is pictured with a young Tyson Fury
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    ‘I could hold him in the palm of my hand. He had to be a fighter to survive,’ said John. John is pictured with a young Tyson Fury

    Boxing and the birth of the Gypsy King

    As an adult, John became a professional boxer in a career that lasted eight years, during which time he fought in 13 bouts, winning against opponents including Michael Murray, a future British title challenger and Cesare Di Benedetto, a future Italian title challenger.

    The 6ft 3in bruiser, who later helped guide his son on his way to world domination in the ring, ended his career with eight wins, four losses and one draw, saying his tactic was simple: ‘Throw a lot more punches… [and] get the job done as soon as possible’.

    ‘I weren’t an especially big puncher, but, once I got going, I’d not stop swinging until they were out cold,’ he said previously.

    ‘I’d not come up for air. I just wanted to kill. I’d hit them with fists, elbows, head, teeth and feet until they dropped.’

    In 1988, Amber gave birth to Tyson Luke Fury. The future boxing superstar arrived three months premature, weighing just 1lb.

    ‘I could hold him in the palm of my hand. He had to be a fighter to survive,’ John told The Sun.

    Fury went on to have three more children with Amber, sons Shane and Hughie and daughter Ramona, who tragically died four days after being born.

    After the couple split, John found love once more with his second wife Chantal, becoming a father to two more boys, Roman, and Love Island star Tommy – who like his bigger brother Tyson is also a boxer.

    John Fury has now become his son's biggest promoter - although he is not allowed to enter the US due to his criminal record
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    John Fury has now become his son’s biggest promoter – although he is not allowed to enter the US due to his criminal record

    Odd jobs and eye-gouging

    Later, aged 30, John embarked on a five-year stint as an ‘enforcer’, where people would call on him to collect debts.

    But in February 2011, John was jailed for 11 years for gouging the eye out of fellow Traveller Oathie Sykes in a savage fight a car auction, which proved to be the bloody end to a 12-year feud over a bottle of beer.

    Manchester Crown Court heard during his trial that the then-46-year-old declared himself the country’s toughest man before pouncing on his victim, who was left half-blind as a result of the attack.

    Fearing for his son, Tyson’s future boxing career, John wept in court as he begged for leniency.

    Speaking of the victim, he added: ‘If I could give my own eye to him to get back to my children I would do – I’m begging you for my life.’

    Mr Sykes told court he believed Fury wanted to completely blind him in the attack. He added: ‘It was like he was trying to pull his finger into my brains through my socket. I was screaming, “Please stop, you’re hurting me”.

    ‘After that he tried to take my other eye – he tried to blind me, sir, not once he tried to blind me, twice.’

    Fury Snr was jailed in February 2011 after being found guilty of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm
    +21

    Fury Snr was jailed in February 2011 after being found guilty of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm

    John was jailed for 11 years for gouging the eye out of fellow Traveller Oathie Sykes in a savage fight at a car auction, which proved to be the bloody end to a 12-year feud over a bottle of beer
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    John was jailed for 11 years for gouging the eye out of fellow Traveller Oathie Sykes in a savage fight at a car auction, which proved to be the bloody end to a 12-year feud over a bottle of beer

    Tyson Fury admits he wanted to cancel his Netflix show

    Tyson, who was trained by his father at the time, supported John from the public gallery.

    Despite being Tyson’s trainer, Fury then missed crucial career-building fights before his eventual release in February 2015, just four years into his 11-year sentence.

    Speaking to The Sun, John said his stint behind bars ‘didn’t bother’ him, saying he was a ‘big believer in Jesus Christ and thought ‘if this is my destiny, I’ll come out a better man’.’

    Release and partial reformation

    Two months after his release, Fury saw his son Tyson becoming heavyweight champion of the world after beating Wladimir Klitschko in Germany.

    He is said to have had a far more calming influence over his son since his release, and recently he has become a media pundit, advertising his son’s fights to the world. However he is unable to travel to the US due to his criminal record.

    Seeking to contain his furious temper, John avoids large gatherings. But despite this, the ‘red mist’ can still descend for boxing bruiser.

    This anger came to a head last October when John was promoting the fight of his younger son, Tommy against social media star, KSI.

    Tommy was the calmest of all four fighters when the fight kicked off - which comes as no surprise considering he is used to the chaos associated with fighting YouTubers
    +21

    Tommy was the calmest of all four fighters when the fight kicked off – which comes as no surprise considering he is used to the chaos associated with fighting YouTubers

    John's 'red mist' was revealed once more during a press conference between his son Tommy and KSI (left) in August. John, Tommy and KSI are pictured, later, in October 12 in Manchester
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    John’s ‘red mist’ was revealed once more during a press conference between his son Tommy and KSI (left) in August. John, Tommy and KSI are pictured, later, in October 12 in Manchester

    Tyson and Paris Fury, pictured with their children, during At Home with the Furys
    +21

    Tyson and Paris Fury, pictured with their children, during At Home with the Furys

    KSI, who later lost the fight to Tommy, was heard mocking the Gypsy family, promoting the furious display from Fury Snr.

    John rose from his chair and shouted ‘the Fury’s are the best fighters in the world’ to cut KSI’s business partner and fellow social media star Logan Paul off mid-way through his speech.

    John snapped during a press conference between the two fighters, flipping a table during an angry outburst.

    He continued: ‘The Fury’s dominate. We are the best men in the world. We will fight anybody in our way’.

    John finished by knocking the microphones over and flipping his table before kicking KSI’s table over too.

    It comes after fans received a new, calmer insight into the ex-boxer’s life with his beloved children in At Home with the Furys, an instant online hit which has shown a softer side to the notorious fighter.

    Despite retiring decades ago, John has now found new fame thanks to the hit Netflix series At Home with the Furys, a documentary which follows Tyson and his family navigate the ups and downs of their celebrity lifestyle.

    However his actions in Saudi Arabia have led to calls for John to be banned from the ring for good.

    Tyson (left) was stunned after seeing his father has been left with a bloodied face
    +21

    Tyson (left) was stunned after seeing his father has been left with a bloodied face

    Video footage caught a clash of heads between the two
    +21

    Blood was left sheeting down Fury's head
    +21

    Video footage caught a clash of heads before blood was left pouring down Fury’s head

    Tyson Fury’s dad John bloodied after clash with Usyk’s team

    Fury has made a habit for attempting to cause chaos in the build-up to big fights involving his family of fighters but has taken things to a new level with his latest violent demonstration.

    Boxing supporters are furious with the actions of Fury Snr and have called for fight organisers to discipline him severely.

    Posting on X, one boxing fan said: ‘Ban him from attending the fight.

    Another similarly shocked viewer commented: ‘Why does John Fury have to make it about him don’t think I’ve ever seen any other boxers dad so crave the limelight, embarrassing.’

    Others described Fury Snr as an ‘absolute clown’ for his headbutt, while a different online post read: ‘He bopped the smallest guy. That tells you all you need to know about John Fury.’

    Tyson didn’t see the confrontation between his father and Usyk’s team and was later surprised when he saw his dad has been left with a bloody face.

    When he was told, Tyson said: ‘It is what it is. Not interested. Doesn’t affect anything. I’ve seen a lot worse.’

    Fury Snr later attempted to explain his actions, telling IFLTV: ‘I’m going to stand up for my son. At the end of the day, my son is the best in the world and I want people to respect him and give him the credit that he deserves.

    ‘He’s the best in the world. And when people start saying this and saying that… when I was among them, all I could hear was madness. Some little idiot came forward in my space, he got what he got and that’s the end of it.’

  • Tyson Fury calls Jake Paul’s shock fight with Mike Tyson ‘FANTASTIC for boxing’… and predicts both fighters

    Tyson Fury calls Jake Paul’s shock fight with Mike Tyson ‘FANTASTIC for boxing’… and predicts both fighters

    Tyson Fury has described the controversial upcoming fight between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson as ‘fantastic for boxing’ – despite a number of his peers criticising the surprising match-up.

    The fight – which will take place on July 20 and be broadcast on streaming service Netflix – will see the 27-year-old YouTuber turned fighter go up against an opponent 30 years his senior, who has not fought since his exhibition bout against Roy Jones Jr in 2020.

    Paul’s promoters are claimed to be pushing for the fight itself to be made a professional contest, despite the fact that Tyson has not been seen in a professional ring since 2005.

    By contrast, Paul has compiled a record of nine wins and one defeat over the last four years, with six of his victories ending in a knockout to highlight his punching power, despite his lack of experience.

    While some are excited to see the return of Iron Mike to the ring, many have raised eyebrows about the unlikely pairing.

    Tyson Fury has applauded the proposed July meeting between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson

    There is a 30-year age difference between the rivals, with Tyson set to turn 58 before the bout

    The contest will take place at the A&T Arena in Arlington, Texas and stream live on Netflix

    But Fury was more energised about the prospect, as he stressed that it wasn’t his place to judge whether the fight should go ahead or not.

    ‘I think it’s fantastic for boxing,’ Fury said on The Stomping Ground. ‘You’ve got a legend in Mike Tyson, you’ve got a YouTube boxer who’s come into the game and blew it up and has got millions of followers and millions of views and millions of eyes – good, bad or indifferent.

    ‘Some people love (Paul), some people hate him.

    ‘So, I think it’s a really good spectacle for boxing, brings a lot of people to the game. Listen, who am I to say Mike Tyson shouldn’t be boxing, or Jake Paul shouldn’t be boxing?

    ‘Good luck to them, they’re both gonna make what I call “a s***-ton of money” out of it, so isn’t that what it’s about?’

    The heavyweight champion also had high praise for the stadium the pair will meet in, the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

    ‘I’ve been to that stadium, when Billy Joe (Saunders) fought Canelo (Saul Alvarez),’ Fury continued. ‘It’s a great stadium, it’ll be fantastic for the guys.

    ‘Both are getting paid, both are gonna put on a show. I just don’t know what’s not to like.

    ‘Okay, (one) guy is 57 years old, but he’s a former undisputed world heavyweight king.

    ‘(Paul has gone) from being a kid on the Disney channel to fighting Mike Tyson, who wouldn’t want to do that? You’ve got to admire them both.’

    Tyson has not fought a professional bout since 2005 and hasn’t stepped in the ring since 2020

    By contrast the YouTuber has won nine times and been defeated once over the past four years

    Fury – who is due to contest his own big-money match-up when he meets Oleksandr Usyk in their delayed undisputed heavyweight champion clash on May 8 – suggested that the contest itself will be’pretty even’.

    But the Gypsy King also hinted at the real reason both Paul and Tyson might have agreed to face off against one another in July.

    ‘People say, “Ah, it’s s***,’”and this, that and the other,’ Fury suggested. ‘But I bet they still watch it.

    ‘Who’s not intrigued?’

  • Jake Paul slams ‘jealous’ Conor McGregor as he responds to UFC legend’s criticism of Mike Tyson fight

    Jake Paul slams ‘jealous’ Conor McGregor as he responds to UFC legend’s criticism of Mike Tyson fight

    JAKE PAUL has hit back at “jealous” Conor McGregor’s criticism of his fight with Mike Tyson.

    YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul faces heavyweight boxing icon Tyson in a controversial clash on July 20 in Texas.

    2Jake Paul and Mike Tyson facing offCredit: @jakepaul

    By the time the fight for the ages comes around, Tyson will be 58 and have a 31-year age gap with 27-year-old Paul.

    It has led the likes of McGregor to blast the bout but Paul was quick to hit back on his podcast.

    He said: “So Conor, you’re saying the interest is low for the fight, but the last fight you announced, there was a thousand articles written in a multi-day span, people talking about your last fight.

    “In that same multiple-day span, there were ten thousand articles written about this.

    “No fight ever has done these numbers in terms of face-off views and Instagram reels.

    “Just on our main pages alone, it’s like 50 or 60 million Instagram views on both of our posts.

    “Not to mention every single other sports page posting it. This is, in my mind, the biggest fight the world will ever see.

    “There’s no reason for them to be jealous; I get people are jealous, but when the old heads like Conor are trying to hate, it’s like, why are you trying to pull people down?”Credit: The Sun

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    Paul is 9-1 as a boxer, suffering his only defeat last year to Tommy Fury, 24, before bouncing back with three straight wins.

    Tyson meanwhile retired in 2005 officially but did return in 2020 to draw over eight exhibition rounds with fellow great Roy Jones Jr.

    Jake Paul fumes ‘we live in a f***ed up world’ over shock claims Mike Tyson fight has an ‘agreed’ ending

    McGregor, 35, who has not fought since July 2021 but looks set for a summer return, has been probed on Tyson’s comeback of late.

    And he said: “Oh, jeez. It’s a bit strange. The interest is low. I don’t know. I don’t understand it. I wish well for Mike.”

    2Conor McGregor slammed Jake Paul’s fight with Mike Tyson

  • Sparring Session Between ‘Britain’s Mike Tyson’ and Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury Reveals Contrasting Strengths: One Hits Harder, but the Other Demonstrates Superiority

    Sparring Session Between ‘Britain’s Mike Tyson’ and Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury Reveals Contrasting Strengths: One Hits Harder, but the Other Demonstrates Superiority

    Teenage heavyweight Moses Itauma could be boxing’s next superstar – but the Brit has already taken a shot at the current kings.

    The 19-year-old recently moved to 8-0 with another brutal knockout, seeing off Dan Garber in the first round last Friday night.

    3Fury is one of Itauma’s biggest fans

    WBC champion Tyson Fury has called Itauma the ‘future of the division’, while pundits have likened him to heavyweight legend Mike Tyson due to his explosive power.

    Fury knows all about Itauma’s talent after a recent sparring session between the two big-hitters.

    A 16-year-old Itauma also sparred with two-time world champion Anthony Joshua back in 2021.

    When talkSPORT asked the young prodigy whether Fury hits hardest, Itauma responded: “No, but he’s so unique. Joshua hit me very hard.

    “I sparred him [Joshua] when I was 16. I only did a couple of rounds, but that was enough.”

    Opinions have shifted on Fury and Joshua following their respective victories over MMA-champion-turned-boxer Francis Ngannou.

    Fury was knocked down and got an unconvincing majority decision, while Joshua delivered a brutal knockout in the second round.

    The heavyweight division will crown its first unified king in more than two decades when Fury meets IBF, WBA and WBO champion Oleksandr Usyk on May 18.

    Itauma has been learning from the best and many expect him to take the heavyweight division by storm

    Itauma hopes to reach those heights one day, but for now, he still believes Fury is the best around.

    The heavyweight said: “He [Fury] gave me loads of advice. Currently, I think he is No.1. There are so many factors people don’t take into account.

    “Joshua had something to learn off [before fighting Ngannou], Fury never did. Fury was the first person to do that crossover.

    “It was great entertainment. Whether he took it seriously is another thing.”

    Itauma insisted neither fighter made him wobble, but also explained the complicated nature of sparring big men before lucrative fights.

    He said: “I haven’t wobbled. We’re big guys. All of us have the capability to knock each other out and it only takes one shot.

    “Let’s say, I go in there and I knock someone out in sparring, they can’t spar for six weeks and I’m going to struggle to get a sparring partner.

    “You don’t really learn from knocking people out in sparring.”

    Itauma continued: “If I go in there, he’s just tapping and I’m trying to knock him out, I’ll look like a… you know.

    Joshua’s power left a lasting impression on ItaumaCredit: Getty

    “If he goes in there and tries to knock me out, but I’m going easy, it doesn’t make sense. So you have an unspoken agreement.

    “You feel out what the first minute is like and you gauge it from there.”

  • Criticism Directed at Jake Paul for Making a “Disrespectful” Remark about Mike Tyson, while Tyson Fury Advised to Reflect on Himself

    Criticism Directed at Jake Paul for Making a “Disrespectful” Remark about Mike Tyson, while Tyson Fury Advised to Reflect on Himself

    Carl Froch has slammed both Jake Paul and Tyson Fury following comments made in the build-up to Paul’s controversial fight with Mike Tyson.

    Mike Tyson is getting too old to fight against younger fighters, like Jake  Paul or Tommy Fury. Mike Tyson is not in his prime anymore, but I could be  wrong. What do

    The fight is scheduled for the 20th of July at the AT&T stadium, with Netflix making its first foray into live combat sports by exclusively streaming the event.

    Many have been quick to criticise the boat, with UFC boss Dana White quick to call out the 31-age difference between the two fighters.

    Another who has made his feelings on the fight very clear is former professional boxer Carl Froch. With a highly commendable professional record of 33 wins and 2 losses, Foch retired from the sport in 2015 but still makes his voice heard in the boxing world.

    In a recent interview with Instant Casinos, Froch called out Tyson Fury for his defense of Paul with Fury having stated influencer boxing is a good thing for the sport.

    “No, it’s not good for boxing. For Tyson Fury to say that it’s good for boxing…he needs to look in the mirror, have a look at what he’s done, have a look at what professional fighters do and what they go through, and then think to himself, this is Jake Paul, a performing clown jumping in there with a 57-year-old man, who is a legend and an icon in professional boxing,” Froch explained.

    The 46-year-old continued to pull no punches and admitted he would love to see Tyson knock the YouTuber out.

    “He’s an absolute f**king idiot for fighting Mike Tyson. It’s wrong. It should be stopped. Listen, I hope Tyson goes in there for 30 seconds, unleashes hell on Jake Paul, flattens him, and does boxing proud. Jake Paul’s been dead disrespectful as well in his build-up,” Froch admitted.

    Jake Paul- Getty image

    Froch also personally called Paul out for a potential fight in the future.

    “He’s been biting ears off and trying to mimic Mike Tyson and copy him. I just don’t find it funny. If he had any bollocks about him, he’d fight me, wouldn’t he? I’d love to punch his teeth down the back of his throat,” Froch firmly stated.

  • Unveiling the Unspoken: ‘British Mike Tyson’s’ Unique Connection with Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua through Sparring.

    Unveiling the Unspoken: ‘British Mike Tyson’s’ Unique Connection with Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua through Sparring.

    Which heavyweight has the strongest punch was disclosed by Itauma.

    After being compared to Mike Tyson, MOSES ITAUMA is considered the heavyweight boxing champion of the future.

    The 19-year-old defeated Dan Garber last week to improve his record to 8-0.

    Tyson Fury has touted Moses Itauma for greatness.

    He and Anthony Joshua have also fought.

    Having previously trained under the greatest in sparring sessions with Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua, he has a bright future ahead of him.

    When asked if the Gypsy King strikes harder than Joshua, Itauma had a surprising answer, despite the fact that she thinks the Gypsy King is the superior boxer.

    In response, he stated on talkSPORT: “No, but he’s so special. Joshua gave me a rather severe blow.

    “I sparred him [Joshua] when I was 16. I only did a couple of rounds, but that was enough.”

    When they sparred, Fury gave the young fighter some advice, and he thinks he held his own against the world champion.

    Itauma further disclosed that there was an unspoken understanding between the two celebrities and him not to knock each other out.

    “I haven’t wobbled,” he continued. We are large men. It just takes one shot for either of us to knock the other person out.

    “Let’s say, I go in there and I knock someone out in sparring, they can’t spar for six weeks and I’m going to struggle to get a sparring partner.

    “You don’t really learn from knocking people out in sparring.”

    Itauma continued: “If I go in there, he’s just tapping and I’m trying to knock him out, I’ll look like a… you know.

    “If he goes in there and tries to knock me out, but I’m going easy, it doesn’t make sense. So you have an unspoken agreement.

    “You feel out what the first minute is like and you gauge it from there.”