Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua still expect to face each other at some point down the line
WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury (30-0-1, 21KOs) has admitted that he was not optimistic when a deal was in place to face Anthony Joshua (24-1, 22KOs) in an undisputed title clash.
There had been a deal in position to fight Joshua – who holds the IBF, IBO, WBA, WBO titles – on a date in August in Saudi Arabia.
Before the deal could get finalised, an arbitrator ordered Fury to honor a rematch clause due to Deontay Wilder.
Fury will face Wilder in a trilogy fight on October 9th at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Joshua will make a mandatory defense against Oleksandr Usyk on September 25 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
While Fury always had doubts about the contest coming off, he does expect to face Joshua at some point down the line.
“I have never been optimistic about this fight happening, even when the fight was agreed initially and we were set to go at it in Saudi Arabia,” Fury told The Overlap.
“But I still wasn’t optimistic about it, and guess what? it never happened, but I do feel this fight will happen eventually. I do think sooner or later it will happen, even if we have to go completely AWOL and bin all the belts to make the fight happen between us for whatever reason. I'm willing to do that, I'm not sure about him."
In a prior interview, Joshua explained that he would be on board with dropping world titles in order to secure a showdown with Fury.
"Without the belts? I rate that. That's what I'm talking about. We'll fight, 100 percent, let's do it," Joshua said to Sky Sports. I'll smoke that guy, I will, it's annoying.
"He's been doing it for years, however, I just know on my end, and my management team and my promoter – we done everything we can to make this happen and as long as I'm champion, I'll compete with anyone. I've got a tough challenger coming up now; a great fighter."
BBN Editor Tim Rickson added, "All of the great fights in history, such as Corrales-Castillo, Hagler-Hearns, Ali-Frazier… I could go on, but the point I want to make is that I don't remember what titles were on the line in many of them and it doesn't matter, because all that matters is the fight, the titles are secondary. If the fight between AJ and Fury doesn't get made because of the titles and the mandatories attached to them and just the general boxing politics then that would be criminal and the fans are the losers in all of this. Bin the belts to get the fight on!"
Fury and Wilder settle their trilogy on October 9 in Vegas, while Joshua meets Oleksandr Usyk on September 25 in London.
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