Fury wins on boxing comeback
MANCHESTER: Former world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury declared himself completely happy with his four-round comeback win on Saturday night, despite a lack of action.
Fury only got going in the fourth round and his brief exhibition of power convinced Sefer Seferi’s corner to pull out the Switzerland-based Albanian before the start of the fifth round.Fury, 29, did not take his task totally seriously early on and was told off by referee Phil Edwards for playing to the crowd, but the English boxer was pleased it was not a short fight after two years and seven months out of action.
“He didn’t come to fight, he came to run around the ring,” Fury told a press conference.“The opponent was small and light. But he took me a few rounds, which I was happy with.“I wouldn’t change a thing, and we move on to the next one. I will go back home and have pizza and then get back on it tomorrow.
“I could have knocked him out in the first round but what good would that have done me? I got four rounds in and TV exposure.“He took a couple of hard punches and didn’t want to know. I learned two and a half years is a long time to be out. I’ll take my career very seriously this time and enjoy every moment.”
Seferi, who was nearly five stones lighter and seven inches smaller, did show some ambition early on but Fury’s height and movement ensured there was never going to be an upset at Manchester Arena.
It was always comfortable for Fury in his first fight since winning the World Boxing Association (WBA), International Boxing Federation (IBF) and World Boxing Organisation (WBO) titles from Ukraine’s Wladimir Klitschko on points in November 2015.
But Fury’s reign was brief with rematches twice cancelled against Klitschko before he admitted to problems with depression, drink and drugs. Fury then piled on the pounds — he claimed to have lost eight stones in preparation for Seferi — and served a backdated drugs ban for testing positive for a banned steroid in February 2015.
Fury’s titles are now in the hands of English rival Anthony Joshua, but promoter Frank Warren said fights against Joshua and Deontay Wilder, the World Boxing Council (WBC) champion from American, are a way off yet.
Joshua and Wilder are in talks to face each other in early 2019, while Warren plans on keeping Fury active until a world title shot happens, with his next bout scheduled to be at Belfast’s Windsor Park, Northern Ireland on August 18.
“Tyson will step up each time,” Warren said at a press conference.“I’ve been realistic from the beginning that we’re not going to put him in with big names early on. He needs to get the ring rust off. We picked Seferi because he had gone ten rounds with Manuel Charr.
“The objective is to get him ready to fight for the world title as soon as possible.“I think Anthony Joshua is fighting Alexander Povetkin in September so he will not fight until next year now and I think Wilder has got a mandatory. In the meantime we have to get Tyson more competitive fights.”
-
Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Likely To Attend Super Bowl Halftime Show 2026 -
AI Next Big Trial: Elon Musk Calls For ‘Galileo Test’ To Prove True Intelligence -
US Appeals Court Affirms Trump’s Immigration Detention Policy -
Bella Hadid, Adan Banuelos Rekindle Romance After Brief Separation -
Jay-Z Shares Bold Advice With Bad Bunny For NFL Super Bowl Halftime Show Appearance -
Epstein Probe: Bill, Hillary Clinton Call For Public Testimony Hearing -
Brooklyn Beckham Considers Adoption As Nicola Peltz Can't Carry A Baby -
Expert Discusses 'complications' Of Measles Outbreak -
Kaley Cuoco Recalls Her Divorce With Karl Cook: 'I Was Gonna Die' -
Celine Dion Reveals Music She's Listening To Lately -
HR Exec Kristin Cabot To Speak At Crisis PR Conference After Coldplay Incident -
Why Travis Kelce Says Taylor Swift Has Made Him 'so Much Better'? -
Halle Berry Credits This Hairstyle With Launching Her Acting Career -
Hailee Steinfeld Spills Her 'no-phone' Rule With Husband Josh Allen -
Bowen Yang Gets Honest About Post SNL Life: 'It’s An Adjustment' -
Charlize Theron Delivers Strong Message At 2026 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony