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Tyson Fury

Tyson Fury

British boxer

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mrtysonfury.com
Is a
Person
Person

Person attributes

Birthdate
August 12, 1988
Birthplace
Manchester
Manchester

Other attributes

Birth Name
Tyson Luke Fury
Citizenship
Republic of Ireland
Republic of Ireland
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
Wikidata ID
Q1000592

Tyson Luke Fury (born 12 August 1988) is a British professional boxer. He is a two-time world heavyweight champion, having held the WBC and The Ring magazine titles since defeating Deontay Wilder in 2020; previously he held the unified WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO, and The Ring titles after defeating Wladimir Klitschko in 2015. With his defeat of Wilder, Fury became the third heavyweight, after Floyd Patterson and Muhammad Ali, to hold The Ring magazine title twice, and is widely considered by media outlets to be the lineal heavyweight champion.[3][4][5][6] As of November 2021, Fury is ranked as the world's best active heavyweight by ESPN,[7] the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board (TBRB),[8] and BoxRec,[9] as well as the third-best active boxer, pound for pound, by BoxRec,[10] fourth by ESPN,[11] and seventh by the TBRB[12] and the Boxing Writers Association of America.[13]

As an amateur, Fury represented both England and Ireland, as he was born in Manchester, to an Irish Traveller family. Fury's family lineage comes from Belfast and Galway; his parents emigrated to England at a young age.[14] He won the ABA super-heavyweight title in 2008 before turning professional later that year at 20 years of age. After winning the English heavyweight title twice, he became the British and Commonwealth champion in 2011 by defeating the 14–0 Derek Chisora. He then won the Irish and WBO Inter-Continental titles, before defeating Chisora again in a 2014 rematch for the European and WBO International heavyweight titles. This success, along with his 24–0 record, set up a match with the long-reigning world champion Wladimir Klitschko in Germany, which Fury won by unanimous decision.

Fury was stripped of his IBF title 10 days after the Klitschko bout as he was unable to grant a fight with the IBF's mandatory challenger, Vyacheslav Glazkov, due to a rematch clause in his contract with Klitschko. The rematch did not materialise as Fury suffered from mental health issues leading to alcoholism, recreational drug use and extreme weight gain. He was charged with anti-doping violations. In 2016, he vacated the WBA, WBO, and IBO titles; The Ring stripped him of his last remaining title in early 2018. Later that year, after more than two years of inactivity, Fury challenged for the WBC heavyweight title against Wilder. The fight was controversially scored as a draw.[15][16][17][18] Fury's strong performance against Wilder (including recovering from a heavy knockdown in the final round) earned him Comeback of the Year from The Ring and numerous other awards.[19] In the rematch in February 2020, Fury defeated Wilder by a technical knockout in the seventh round after a dominant performance, and knocked out Wilder again in a third fight in October 2021, this time in the 11th round.

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