Darren Till has explained why Tyson Fury's retirement is similar to Conor McGregor's. Fury recently announced that he is hanging up the gloves and walking away
Tyson Fury retired from boxing for a second time, he announced Monday, Jan. 13, just after he left his wife and their seven kids for three months to dedicate himself to training.
Tyson Fury is hanging up his gloves. The former heavyweight champion announced Monday that he is retiring from boxing at the age of 36, less than a month after “The Gypsy King” lost for a second consecutive time to Oleksandr Usyk.
The boxing world was handed a shock on Monday when former heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury announced his retirement from the sport … again.
The announcement comes after Fury suffered a second defeat of his career by Oleksandr Usyk last month in Saudi Arabia.
It has been eight days since Tyson Fury's retirement from boxing announcement . The former world champion made the decision following a second successive loss to Oleksandr Usyk in December where he claimed he was robbed of a victory on the judges' scorecards.
Fury is one of the best fighters of his generation, reaching boxing's pinnacle as a heavyweight, but skeptics wonder whether this will stick
There was plenty of excitement amongst boxing fans at the start of 2025 with it looking likely that Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua would finally meet
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Instead, Joshua went on to knock out former UFC champion Francis Ngannou, while Wilder was stopped by Zhilei Zhang in his next bout. Joshua was also on the wrong end of a KO in 2024, however, as Daniel Dubois retained the IBF title against his fellow Briton in September.
The 'Gypsy King' is clearly enjoying life outside of the ring after he decided to take his family on a trip to Disneyland Paris for a getaway