Teddy Atlas has sent a Muhammad Ali warning to Tyson Fury and has urged 'The Gypsy King' to stay retired from boxing. Fury recently announced through social media that he's calling time on his spectacular career.
Tyson Fury retired from boxing for a second time, he announced Monday, Jan. 13, just after he left his wife and their seven kids for three months to dedicate himself to training.
Tyson Fury is hanging up his gloves. The former heavyweight champion announced Monday that he is retiring from boxing at the age of 36, less than a month after “The Gypsy King” lost for a second consecutive time to Oleksandr Usyk.
The boxing world was handed a shock on Monday when former heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury announced his retirement from the sport … again.
The announcement comes after Fury suffered a second defeat of his career by Oleksandr Usyk last month in Saudi Arabia.
Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury have had parallel careers in the heavyweight division. These two British boxing greats have long been the poster boys of the sport without ever having fought each other.
The Monster” has done it again. Arguably the pound-for-pound best boxer in the sport, Naoya Inoue defended his undisputed super bantamweight
Fury is one of the best fighters of his generation, reaching boxing's pinnacle as a heavyweight, but skeptics wonder whether this will stick
"The Gypsy King" now appears to be living the good life in retirement. In a picture posted by his wife, Paris, Fury is seen visiting Disneyland Paris alongside his wife and seven kids.
Tyson Fury took to social media to surprisingly announce that he is retiring from boxing, revealing the massive news in a short video.
"Hi everybody, I'm going to make this short and sweet. I'd like to announce my retirement from boxing," Fury said. "It's been a blast, I've loved every single minute of it, and I'm going to end ...
British heavyweight Tyson Fury has retired from boxing — again — one month after losing a rematch with Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk.