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Tyson Fury’s cousin reveals what Gypsy King said about fighting Anthony Joshua as he gives huge update on boxer’s future

The Gypsy King announced his fifth retirement from the sport in January after losing his unbeaten record in back-to-back defeats to Oleksandr Usyk.

Fury, 36, is seemingly happy as Larry with his decision to call it quits, which will allow him to spend more time with his wife Paris and their seven children.

And, according to cousin Andy Lee, there’s no sign of Fury making yet another retirement U-turn.

The former WBO middleweight champ told iFL TV: “[It’s] just the odd message here and there and he seems vey happy.

“[He said], ‘Andy I’m not f****d.’ That’s what he said. ‘I couldn’t be f****d with it.’ He’s very happy.”

When asked if he wants to see his cousin lace them up again, Lee added: “As bad as it sounds, it depends what the figure is for Tyson.

“It has to motivate him to come out of retirement. He seems very happy.”

Boxing fans around he globe are keen for Fury and Joshua to finally settle their score, even though they’re well past their primes.

READ MORE : Anthony Joshua is under pressure as Tyson Fury’s possible return looms….

But not Lee, who said: “I don’t really care if they fight each other.

“I’d be happy to see them retire or go about their careers separately. If they do fight, I’d be backing Tyson, I think he’d win.”

AJ is refusing to give up on the Battle of Britain, telling IFL TV: “I feel like it’s the best fight [for me].

“People might say [Joseph] Parker, people might say – I don’t know.

“But I think Fury, commercially, is a great fight and it’s a great man’s fight as well. So I think it makes sense.

“You could say it’s been years in the making. But listen, the heavyweight division has been thriving.

“And the thing is, there is going to be one winner and one loser and there’s going to be bloodshed. And it ain’t gonna be mine.”

‘He’d probably get criticised’ – Eddie Hearn pours doubts on potential next fight for Anthony Joshua as five-man hit list drawn up

Eddie Hearn insists there are five names in the running to box Anthony Joshua next – but one is less likely than the others.

Anthony Joshua is set to return to the ring this summer following his devastating knockout loss to Daniel Dubois in September.

The plan was for AJ to finally square off with Tyson Fury this summer.

Saudi boxing chief Turki Alalshikh was even said to be preparing a lucrative offer for a two-fight deal.

However, the fight has been shelved as Fury announced his retirement from boxing in January following a second consecutive defeat to Oleksandr Usyk.

While Hearn is hoping Fury will reverse his retirement, he isn’t banking on it.

The Matchroom Boxing chief is planning to sit down with Joshua and his advisers imminently to discuss possible next opponents and there is no shortage of options.

Speaking exclusively to talkSPORT.com he said: “Daniel Dubois still [is the frontrunner].

“In an ideal world, he will fight Fury, if not Dubois.

“There is also Joseph Parker, who I think would be a great fight, there is Agit Kabayel and Deontay Wilder, obviously, His Excellency (Alalshikh) has stated he would love to see that fight.

“I guess the Bakole fight is still there, but he would probably get criticised if he fought Bakole, so less likely,” he added.

READ MORE : Tyson Fury could be part of something ‘really specia, Anthony Joshua wants….

The 33-year-old was in Congo with family when he received the green light from Alalshikh and embarked on a 3,800-mile journey to Saudi Arabia the next day, made up of three separate flights.

The first plane ride took him from Congo to Ethiopia, then to Dubai, before landing in Saudi Arabia in the early hours of Saturday morning.

When he made his way to the ring, Bakole was clipped on the top of the head with a clubbing right hand in the second round that sent him hurtling to the canvas.

Prior to his last outing, Bakole’s promoter Ben Shalom declared that a fight with Joshua had been signed, although this proved to be untrue.

oleksandr usyk

“It’s done. I’m hearing he’s signed and we’re off to the Congo,” Shalom told talkSPORT last month.

“The social media rumour mill is always probably 10 per cent true,” he told the Matchroom Boxing YouTube channel.

“The latest one, someone sent it to me on Saturday.

Claressa Shields And Ryan Garcia Bitterly React To Controversial Gervonta Davis vs Lamont Roach Fight

Gervonta Davis vs Lamont Roach ended in a majority draw at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn because of a massively controversial moment.

Davis took a knee in the ninth round which appeared to be intentional. The referee, however, didn’t call it a knockdown. The particular moment has stirred up social media and drawn reactions from other fighters.

The judges scored the contest a majority draw, 114-114, 114-114 and 115-113 Davis. Courtesy of the draw, Davis retained his WBA lightweight title.

Ryan Garcia and Claressa Shields have reacted to the controversial moment during Davis vs Roach, with both agreeing that the referee made a terrible mistake. Shields wrote on X (formerly Twitter):

Gervonta Davis claimed that he took the knee due to having issues with his hair. He told the media after the fight:

Roach reckons the moment should have been called a knockdown, saying:

If you take a knee and the ref starts counting, it should be a knockdown. If that’s a knockdown, I win the fight. I’m not banking on that knockdown to win. I just thought I pulled it

Epic courage of boxing: I’ve written my last book on boxing. The ring is darker than it has ever been

For more than 50 years I’ve revelled in the epic courage of boxing. But deaths, gangsterism and sportswashing have made it much harder to love

When I was a boy, living in South Africa, I fell for Muhammad Ali. As graceful as he was provocative, Ali amazed me with his uncanny ability, despite apartheid, to entrance black and white South Africans. He made us laugh and dazzled us with his outrageous skill and courage. I have followed boxing ever since, often obsessively, for more than 50 years.

In 1996, after I spent five years tracking Mike Tyson, James Toney, Roy Jones Jr, Chris Eubank Sr and Naseem Hamed, my book Dark Trade allowed me to become a full-time writer. I owe this gift to boxing but our relationship is not easy. Boxing is as crooked and destructive as it is magnificent and transformative.

I have given so much of my life to thinking and writing about giants of the ring, and thousands of lesser fighters who are often as interesting. But even zealots grow weary. For a while my family and work, as well as books, movies and Arsenal, filled my head as much as boxing. There was fleeting freedom from the ring.

Then, in September 2018, my sister, Heather, died shockingly soon after my mother had been diagnosed with terminal cancer. My father would endure the same diagnosis less than a year later. I lost all three of them – and then my mother-in-law died on the first anniversary of my mother’s death.

READ MORE : Tyson Fury could be part of something ‘really specia, Anthony Joshua wants….

I have spent the past six years working on my fifth and probably final book about boxing. More than just a prop amid the grief, I wanted to remember how boxing made me feel so alive. It has always been a bleak and dirty business but, at its best, boxing is like nothing else. It can be as beautiful as it is brutal, as glorious as it is painful.

The Last Bell begins with Tyson Fury because he reminded me that boxing can offer light in the darkest stories. He was a primary reason why I turned back to it at one of the worst times of my life.

It helped that I had history with Fury. In 2011, when he was only 23, Fury gave me one of the most disturbing interviews I have ever done. He spoke about wanting to smash up the room in which we sat, and how he lived with his then undiagnosed bipolar disorder. “There is a name for what I have,” Fury said, “where one minute I’m over the moon and the next minute I feel like getting in my car and running it into a wall at a hundred miles an hour.”

After becoming the world heavyweight champion, Fury sank into a drink and drug-fuelled depression that saw him balloon to almost 400lb. He made his comeback in the summer of 2018 and, that December, he fought a ferocious Deontay Wilder for the world title. Fury boxed brilliantly before being poleaxed in the last round. He looked unconscious – only to, miraculously, rise from the canvas and dominate Wilder.

I was consumed again because boxing has a perverse way of turning every significant bout I see into something deeply personal. I fell for the gory drama once more.

But, during a calamitous four months in 2019, five boxers lost their lives after devastating fights. In December 2019 I flew to New York to meet some of those closest to Patrick Day, the 27-year-old fighter who died six weeks earlier. Pat Day did not look or talk like an ordinary boxer. His father was a doctor and his mother an administrator for the UN.

Pat was intelligent, good-looking, eloquent and charming. He could have done so much in life but his brother Jean recalled that, “my uncle Ronald asked Patrick if he would stop boxing if he offered him $1m. Patrick looked him in the eye and told him that if he offered him $20m he wouldn’t stop … boxing was one of Patrick’s true loves and yet, as faithful as he was, it betrayed him by claiming his life.”

I also became close to Isaac Chamberlain who had been an 11-year-old drug runner in Brixton, ferrying cocaine, crack and heroin. He told me how boxing saved him. Chamberlain, who dreamed of becoming a world champion, was also a secret writer. He wrote to me about his doubts and fears. “I’ve been through so much trauma that it’s a constant battle to convince myself I deserve the smallest success. I’m just a little peanut-head boy from Brixton who was never meant to be anything. Bullied at school, no father-figure, no real direction. But when dark times come I smile and think: ‘I’ve lived here many times.’”

Regis Prograis was already a world champion from New Orleans who had fled with his family to Texas after Hurricane Katrina. We bonded over our shared love of books as we railed against the misery of boxing. Prograis believed it was rife with doping. “This business is so dirty and corrupt that, if I didn’t love the sport as much as I do, I would walk away.”

I also wanted to turn away from boxing. It was riddled with gangsterism – exemplified by the close association Fury and many other fighters and promoters had with Daniel Kinahan. In April 2022 the United States government stressed that bringing the Kinahan cartel to justice had become a priority. Drew Harris, the Irish police commissioner, said anyone in boxing who worked with Kinahan was “dealing with criminals engaged in drug trafficking. They will resort to vicious actions, including murder.”

Conor Benn then tested positive twice for clomiphene but he and his promoter, Eddie Hearn, and many others, tried to proceed with his fight against Chris Eubank Jr in October 2022. That depressing scrap will finally take place in April – and this week they traded tedious insults before Eubank Jr cracked an egg against Benn’s face.

oleksandr usyk

More seriously, boxing is now controlled by Saudi Arabia. I have travelled three times to Riyadh and the interviews I have done about Saudi people jailed or on death row for mild criticism of the state affected me more than the fights I saw – even when they were as stunning as the first of two victories for Oleksandr Usyk over Fury last year.

READ MORE : Also calling for rematch as Anthony Joshua Sums Up Joseph Parker’s Chances…

I have been fortunate to talk often to Usyk and his significance in Ukraine, since the Russian invasion, restored my battered belief in the power of boxing. I feel the same about Katie Taylor who has quietly led the battle for recognition of female fighters. Her first bout against Amanda Serrano, at Madison Square Garden, was an unforgettable night of glory and valour.

Such moments sustained me – as did the fact I was with Chamberlain before and after all his fights. I will never forget everything I witnessed in the privacy of different dressing rooms when Prograis won his second world title in California and Chamberlain became the British and Commonwealth cruiserweight champion at York Hall.

I know what it is like to see joy pour out of a boxer after a great victory – and to remember how it had been so sombre an hour earlier when he walked to the ring. I know what it is like to hold a fighter’s hand while he is crying and being wheeled away on a stretcher to an ambulance after a brutal bout. I know that, at its finest, boxing transcends sport to become epic and electrifying.

But I also know that the ring is darker than it has ever been. I will keep reporting about boxing for the Guardian but, when it comes to writing books about the fight business, I think I am done. It is finally over for me.

Donald McRae’s The Last Bell: Life, Death and Boxing is published by Simon and Schuster on 13 March. To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

‘They robbed that boy’ – Terence Crawford led furious reaction to Gervonta Davis vs Lamont Roach

Terence Crawford led furious reaction as Gervonta Davis vs Lamont Roach drew up controversy.

Gervonta Davis was a big favourite to defeat former amateur rival Lamont Roach in their lightweight world title clash in Brooklyn.

But the boxing superstar was left stunned, having dropped to a knee in the ninth round of the clash, a moment which was incredibly not scored a knockdown by the referee.

And given the margins on the scorecards were so fine, a draw was awarded by the judges sparing Davis’ blushes after a tough night.

The boxing world whipped up a storm as to how the knockdown wasn’t awarded, which could have handed Roach the point he needed in a 10-8 round to claim unlikely victory.

Pound-for-pound warrior Crawford led those reactions, stirring the narrative with an angry rant on social media.

He first wrote: “Roach won and that should have been called a knock down. Let’s see what happens.”

When the verdict was announced, he continued: “They robbed that boy and it’s crazy.

“I never seen someone take a knee and they don’t count it as a knock down. Must of forgot the rules for tonight.”

READ MORE : Vergil Ortiz Jr.Unmuted silence and shows interest in fights with Terence Crawford..

“And it was called a knockdown and not from a punch either.”

Crawford was not the only one to vent his frustrations at the outcome of the night, which saw Davis keep his undefeated record and WBA lightweight world title.

He remains yet to be beaten despite his fortunes, and it appears a sequel is not on the table according to Davis.

But it wasn’t awarded, and Roach was left furious insisting he should it have been called despite it being appear to be led by Davis.

‘Tank’ claimed that he had grease in his eyes, which was what ultimately forced him to take the knee.

Roach was left bemused and insisted he was unfortunate to not have handed his rival his first career defeat.

“Look, I ain’t the ref. I ain’t and really if [Tank Davis] had to wipe sweat out of his eye, he had to wipe sweat out of his eye.

Terence Crawford

“But the rules do state if you voluntarily take a knee, then that’s an automatic eight-count.

“I was taking control. I think I was landing more shots, more power shots, and I thought I was doing my thing.

“So, I’m not really that frustrated but if that was counted as a knockdown — I’d have won a majority decision.”

I don’t Doubt Johnny Nelson says he Has No Doubt Who Would Win A Deontay Wilder vs Anthony Joshua Fight

Anthony Joshua is looking for his comeback opponent and Johnny Nelson has a view on what would happen if it were to be Deontay Wilder.

Both of these former heavyweight world champions are in the autumn of their careers. Wilder was a long-ruling WBC belt holder who, until he faced Tyson Fury, had knocked out every man put in front of him in the ring

Fury drew with the American in their first fight, then knocked him out in two further contests. Since then Wilder has also been beaten twice more, once on points by Joseph Parker, and once by KO by Zhilei Zhang. Although a return has been rumoured for almost a year, nothing has yet materialised.

Joshua is in a similar position. He was beaten twice in back-to-back fights by Oleksandr Usyk, the first in 2021 which left him without any of his belts, and the second was a rematch a year later that went the same way and ended with another points loss for ‘AJ’.

READ MORE : Tyson Fury could be part of something ‘really specia, Anthony Joshua wants….

After rebuilding with four wins over the likes of Otto Wallin and Francis Ngganou, Joshua had another shot at a world title against Daniel Dubois last September. However, he was stopped inside five rounds and hasn’t fought since.

Speaking to Daily Mail Sport in a round of winner stays on, Nelson was asked to pick between Joshua and Wilder and didn’t hesitate to name his winner.

“Anthony Joshua.”

Many hoped that Joshua and Fury would finally get it on this year but Fury’s retirement back in January put an end to that, at least for now.

Gervonta Davis vs. Lamont Roach live updates, results, highlights for 2025 boxing event

Who will walk out the Barclays Center the WBA lightweight champion on March 1 when Gervonta Davis defends his title against Lamont Roach? The fight airs on Prime Video PPV.

A three-division champion, Davis (30-0) has held a version of the WBA title since 2019. “Tank” has won all but two fights via knockout, always packing a punch and leaving a mark on his opponents. He hopes the fight against Roach ends the same way.

“Roach is in for a rude awakening, for sure. He’s trying to psyche himself up, but it comes down to skill. Whoever is the most skilled fighter will be the winner,” Davis said. “Knocking someone out feels like a home run, when it hits the sweet spot of the bat, and it goes far. That’s how it feels for me.”

Roach (25-1-1) moves from super featherweight to lightweight and is the current WBA champion at 130 pounds. The 29-year-old is a massive underdog in this fight. He is fully aware, especially after going 0-2 against Davis at the amateur level. Still, he believes he can pull off the upset on fight night.

READ MORE : LIVE UPDATE : All you need to know about the fight Gervonta Davis vs. Lamont…

“I have no doubt in myself, my skills, my strength, my will, whatever the case may be. We’re going to put it all together,” Roach said via DAZN. “The fight might not even look like how a lot of people expect it to look, honestly. It’s going to be a real spectacle for everyone.

“The mission never changes whether I’m the underdog or whether I’m the favorite. It’s just, I got one goal and that goal is to win.”

The Sporting News will provide results, analysis and highlights for the fight and card.

LIVE UPDATE : All you need to know about the fight Gervonta Davis vs. Lamont Roach Jr.

Gervonta Davis vs Lamont Roach Jr LIVE: Get the latest updates on the highly anticipated boxing match.

WHAT A LONG-AWAITED RETURN! Gervonta “Tank” Davis is ready to step back into the ring and defend his coveted World Boxing Association (WBA) lightweight title against the ferocious Lamont Roach Jr. The fight is scheduled to light up the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York!

Gervonta Davis has mind on different things other than Lamont Roach Jr as retirement talks continue

There aren’t too many active boxers who can walk away from the sport at this moment and have no regrets about how their career transpired. Oleksandr Usyk would certainly be one of them. Canelo Alvarez can say the same. As can Gervonta Davis.

The youngest in that bunch, “Tank” still has things left to accomplish. After all, he has never even unified in any weight division. But that isn’t really his fault, as his aura as arguably the most dangerous fighter in the sport kept him from getting truly big fights. Davis has made easy work of his competition through 30 bouts. On Saturday, he’s looking to make it 29 knockouts in 31 fights. Only Lamont Roach Jr. is standing in his way.

Gervonta Davis candidly reveals something he’s terrified of in Lamont Roach Jr. fight

With a nickname of “Tank“, one would imagine Gervonta Davis isn’t scared of anything. His boxing career has certainly justified that, as he has fought some of the best boxers his division has thrown his way. Despite that, Davis has been criticized at times, especially recently, for his opponent choices.

That’s the case at the moment as he prepares to face Lamont Roach Jr. Many fans don’t believe Roach is a caliber of fighter that Davis should be entertaining at his point in his career. Davis will have to put on a show to make it worthwhile. As has been the case for his whole career, Davis won’t be scared of Roach in the ring. But he might be scared of something else.

Gervonta Davis will defend his WBA lightweight title against Lamont Roach Jr. on Saturday, March 1st at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. The event begins at 6:00 p.m. local time with the main event expected to begin at approximately 11:00 p.m. Eastern time.

Davis comes into this fight with a perfect record of 30 wins, 28 by knockout, and is a native of Baltimore, Maryland. He will face Roach Jr. who has a record of 25 wins, one loss and one draw with 10 knockouts. Roach will be facing one of today’s top fighters, who has also hinted at a possible early retirement from boxing.

These two boxers have something personal in common from their amateur days, where ‘Tank‘ beat him twice, so it’s going to be spicy. Their press conferences have had everything from insults to serenity to sorrow. Especially when Gervonta found out that Lamont had brought his mother.

Despite Lamont Roach Jr.’s recent progress, Gervonta Davis remains the heavy favorite, highlighted by his knockout power and solid record in big fights. Expect the champion to establish his dominance and come out on top, as Davis has a beastly punch.

Gervonta davis

But before these two face each other in a fight, others will try to make a name for themselves on the Amazon broadcast, they will also try to steal a piece of the show with the opportunity they have, this is the complete line-up for the show in New York:

Sunisa Lee of the United States ’s fit goes missing in busy graffiti art display for fashion event

Sunisa Lee of the United States reacts after winning the bronze medal on the second day of gymnastics event finals during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Bercy Arena. / Jack Gruber-Imagn Images

Sunisa Lee has been heating up the cold New York winter with some fire fits. Her latest one disappeared, however, in an amazing display of graffiti art.

The 21-year-old had as hot of a 2024 as anyone, winning a gold and two bronze in the Summer Olympic Games in Paris, and then with her sizzling outfits. She warmed up a cold Las Vegas night for Formula 1 and melted the track with her all-black leather look, and then crushed with a cozy Christmas Eve furry hit. She certainly kept things blazing in Mexico  in her vacation bikini as well, and shook off a nasty tumble skiing in Montreal to slay before New York Fashion Week in a stunning minidress.

RELATED : Frustrated Over NCAA Absence Simone Biles’ Former Teammate Reveals….

The two-time gold medalist from St. Paul, Minnesota, was named one of Glamour’s “Women of the Year” last year. She’s certainly making a run at it in 2025 already with her latest fit blending in with the graffiti art at the Diesel 2025 Fall Winter runway event.

Lee has really embraced the New York life of fashion and sports as she’s also been seen at a New York Knicks game posing with Karl-Anthony Towns in an awkward hug, and at a New York Jets game where she got her own personal jersey she rocked.

Gymnastics has made history once again : Clemson Gymnast Lands First Biles Skill In NCAA Gymnastics History

In its second year as an accredited division I gymnastics program, Clemson Women’s Gymnastics has made history once again. Redshirt junior Brie Clark has been a standout for the budding ACC program. Tonight, she etched her name in the NCAA record books.

Clark successfully competed The Biles I tumbling pass, helping the Tigers secure a dominant win over Texas Women’s University and the University of New Hampshire. A highly-difficult element named after its originator – seven-time Olympic medalist Simone Biles – The Biles is seldom competed at international meets.

In the routine seen here, Clark had no shortage of power in the tumbling pass, landing the first of its kind in women’s NCAA competition.

With her successful Biles I, Clark also becomes only the fifth woman to compete the skill successfully. Clark joins an elite club, headlined by Biles, Trinity Thomas (USA), Hillary Heron (PAN), and London Phillips (USA).

While many NCAA gymnasts compete the difficult yet popular double-layout, The Biles adds a uniquely difficult twist to the skill – quite literally. Officially recognized as a “double layout with a half twist,” The Biles requires an athlete to complete two full laid-out flips while finishing the second with a 180-degree rotation. The result? A supremely difficult blind landing. However, Clark made it look easy.

READ MORE : Simone Biles and Jonathan Owens’ Off-Season Continues as the Couple Takes…

Though the junior finished eighth on floor Friday due to a landing error, the all-ACC gymnast has been a leading contributor for the Clemson Tigers in the program’s infancy. In 2024, Clark received the first 10.0 in Clemson history (from one judge) in her win at Air Force

Prior to tonight’s competition, Clark had scored 9.90 or better on her previous five floor routines. Before transferring to join Clemson’s inaugural gymnastics program, Clark was also a star at Utah State University. In her freshman season, Clark was one of just four freshmen to be named a Women’s Collegiate Gymnastics Association All-American on floor, with a school-record National Qualifying Score (NQS) of 9.940.

In her first year as a senior international elite gymnast, the then-rookie Biles shocked the world, nailing the pass at the 2013 World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium. The rest is history – Biles would go on to compete four more eponymous skills. She would also win the all-around and floor exercise in Antwerp.

simone biles

For Clark and Clemson gymnastics, the ACC Championships loom just weeks away on March 22. After a stellar competitive debut in 2024, the No. 30 Tigers look to challenge top contenders No. 5 California and No. 14 Stanford for the coveted conference title.

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