Site icon Ghanaian Times

Joshua, Fury line up for ‘richest boxing fight

• Fury (left) and Joshua

• Fury (left) and Joshua

Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury will trade blows before they both hang up their gloves, it has been claimed.

British boxing fans have been crying out for the pair to fight one another for the best part of a decade.

The duo were on course to throw down before Deontay Wild­er threw a spanner into the works by winning his arbitration for a trilogy fight with Fury, which took place in October 2021.

A shock December dust-up was on the cards last year after Fury offered AJ a shock world title lifeline, but the fight failed to come to fruition.

WBC heavyweight king, Fury, 34, is seemingly no longer interest­ed in the historic Battle of Britain, but Tony Bellew reckons the pair will share the ring before it’s all said and done.

The Bomber told Virgin Radio: “Money determines everything in boxing and that’s probably the rich­est fight in boxing, so, of course, we’ll see it eventually.

“When both guys have got no­where left to run, that’s when we’ll see it.”

Former two-time unified heavyweight champion, Joshua, is currently out of the world title pic­ture following consecutive losses to pound-for-pound king, Oleksandr Usyk.

AJ will hit the comeback trail in April in a must-win showdown with Jermaine Franklin.

Fury, meanwhile, is current­ly gearing up for an undisputed heavyweight title fight with AJ conqueror Usyk.

Negotiations over the historic fight recently stalled, although Usyk’s promoter jetted into Lon­don this week to try and finalise the deal.

Fury’s co-promoter, Frank Warren, told talkSPORT this week: “We are very, very close to getting this [Fury vs Usyk] done. Very, very close.

“His people are coming in tomorrow and I’m hoping we’re gonna get some news for every­body. We’re close to getting it done.

“Tomorrow, we’re gonna meet up. Alex Krassyuk, his promoter, is coming to the Arsenal vs Man City game with me.

“I’m hoping that if I can get enough wine down him that we can do the deal.

“We’re meeting him to get an agreement on the various scenarios to make it happen.

“There’s a few more hurdles for both sides to get over. They’re not [insurmountable], at all. Location is the main thing.

“If we go abroad, then you go there for a premium, that’s the reason you do it.

“If not, then we get down to the reality of what it’ll be at Wembley, where the numbers are what they are.

“We broke the box office record with the fight vs Dillian Whyte last April.

“If we get this one on, I think that will break that record.

“I think it’s well in excess of a million [UK PPV] buys, one-and-a-half million.

“It’s not like we’ve got to go and sell Usyk, he’s beaten Anthony Joshua twice, the public know who he is. It’s not a tough sell at all.

“We’ve got a pencil on it [April 29] for obvious reasons, just in case, we’ve gotta make sure we’ve got some insurance. So there’s a pencil on the date.

“In a perverse way, I would like to see it at Wembley, because I’d like to see all the records broken and obviously see the fight in the UK.

“But from the boxers and their bank managers’ point of view, they would like to maximise what they can earn for an historic fight.” — SunSport

Exit mobile version