Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
It pretty much sums up this Jake-Paul-era race ro the bottom that the fate of a Fury v Joshua match is reliant on Dua Lipa.
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Cojimar 1946
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Why would anyone want to see Fury Joshua after the Dubois loss. That loss heavily damaged Joshuas reputation and suggests Dubois may well be better than him. So what would Fury prove in beating him?Thomastearns wrote: ↑27 Apr 2026, 13:51 It's a very sensible option for AJ to take on as safe as possible return to the ring after that tragic accident in Lagos last December that left 2 men dead, AJs personal trainer, Latif Ayodele, and strength and conditioning coach Sina Ghami, and one other, Adeniyi Mobolaji, the alleged driver, still on trial, 4th adjournment notwithstanding.
As of 27th April 2026, the events of that incident in Nigeria remain shrouded in mystery as there doesn't appear to be any dashcam footage either from the Lexus that was carrying Joshua or from the convoy vehicle, a Pajero SUV that was travelling in tandem.
The Fury camp must believe that Anthony Joshua is now damaged goods, probably past their sell-by damaged goods, and that this is the best possible time to cash in.
Fury also understands, being the ruthless businessman he is, that the sands of time on his boxing career are also disappearing fast.
One last gigantic payday, and he can finally retire for good. No more pesky inconvenient drug testing to avoid.
Here's hoping he's also made one gigantic mistake.
I'd love to see Joshua continuing his contact with the Usyk camp and somehow hone his skills back to a peak for the showdown every HW boxing fan wants to see, whether they care to admit it or not.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
‘It is going to stop the country’: Eddie Hearn looks forward to Anthony Joshua vs Tyson Fury
Eddie Hearn says Anthony Joshua vs Tyson Fury will be the biggest fight in British boxing history.
Check out some excerpts of what he had to say below.
Hearn on Joshua vs Fury being set for later this year
“I was always convinced we’d get there. I can’t tell you I thought we’d take this long. But just really pleased. I mean, obviously we have to take care of business in July, which we expect to do, and you’re just going to see the biggest fight in boxing. It still makes me laugh people say ‘well, I’m just not that interested in it’ — it’s like, shut up! It is going to be huge. It is going to stop the country, it’s going to stop the boxing and sporting world by the time this comes around.
“And, again, ‘I’m not interested in it anymore’ — shut up. Trust me, you’ll be interested in this. Both guys will be firing for this and it’ll be a megafight and it’s a delight to get it over the line. Can’t wait.
“AJ’s in a great place. He’s really excited, he’s training hard. He’s got a real clear schedule now, from now ‘til end of the year and I think it’s a good road map to push into 2027 and try to fight for a world heavyweight championship, because that’s what he wants.”
On who chose Kristian Prenga as AJ’s next opponent
“No one really wanted [AJ] to fight a 50/50 fight for many reasons. Number one, because he’s coming back from injury and that incident. And two, I don’t think Turki Alalshikh really wanted him to be in that kind of fight given what’s at stake for the Tyson Fury fight. So we wanted someone who’s game, who would cause a little bit of a threat. I don’t think Pregna’s an elite heavyweight but he’s a decent heavyweight, got a massive knockout percentage record, he’ll be coming to win.
“So we got to do a job on him. And if you don’t do a job on someone like Prenga, you’re not going to be beating Tyson Fury. And that’s the aim, to go out there and do a job on Pregna and get the momentum to go back into another camp to beat Tyson Fury.”
On if he knows where AJ vs Fury will take place for certain
“No. We kind of left our meetings with the understanding that Wembley would be the place. And Wembley should be the place. But also, availability is not always perfect. But that’s down to the man paying the bills, and that’s Turki Alalshikh for this one. So we signed up for a contract which basically says ‘it is where it is.’ But I know Turki will want to bring this fight to the UK because it’s that historic, and obviously he’ll be tremendously thanked for that, and hopefully that’s where it will be.”
On how much bigger AJ vs Fury is compared to other British events like Eubank Jr vs Benn and Froch vs Groves
“10x bigger. By a mile. Tell me a bigger fight in UK history than Fury vs AJ? You’re talking about two generational — arguably #1 and #2 in terms of biggest names in the sport, certainly the biggest names in British boxing and have been for years and years. It is absolutely monstrous. Everybody in the country knows who AJ and Fury are, every kid, every grandma, every auntie, every uncle. It’s just a massive, massive event.”
Eddie Hearn says Anthony Joshua vs Tyson Fury will be the biggest fight in British boxing history.
Check out some excerpts of what he had to say below.
Hearn on Joshua vs Fury being set for later this year
“I was always convinced we’d get there. I can’t tell you I thought we’d take this long. But just really pleased. I mean, obviously we have to take care of business in July, which we expect to do, and you’re just going to see the biggest fight in boxing. It still makes me laugh people say ‘well, I’m just not that interested in it’ — it’s like, shut up! It is going to be huge. It is going to stop the country, it’s going to stop the boxing and sporting world by the time this comes around.
“And, again, ‘I’m not interested in it anymore’ — shut up. Trust me, you’ll be interested in this. Both guys will be firing for this and it’ll be a megafight and it’s a delight to get it over the line. Can’t wait.
“AJ’s in a great place. He’s really excited, he’s training hard. He’s got a real clear schedule now, from now ‘til end of the year and I think it’s a good road map to push into 2027 and try to fight for a world heavyweight championship, because that’s what he wants.”
On who chose Kristian Prenga as AJ’s next opponent
“No one really wanted [AJ] to fight a 50/50 fight for many reasons. Number one, because he’s coming back from injury and that incident. And two, I don’t think Turki Alalshikh really wanted him to be in that kind of fight given what’s at stake for the Tyson Fury fight. So we wanted someone who’s game, who would cause a little bit of a threat. I don’t think Pregna’s an elite heavyweight but he’s a decent heavyweight, got a massive knockout percentage record, he’ll be coming to win.
“So we got to do a job on him. And if you don’t do a job on someone like Prenga, you’re not going to be beating Tyson Fury. And that’s the aim, to go out there and do a job on Pregna and get the momentum to go back into another camp to beat Tyson Fury.”
On if he knows where AJ vs Fury will take place for certain
“No. We kind of left our meetings with the understanding that Wembley would be the place. And Wembley should be the place. But also, availability is not always perfect. But that’s down to the man paying the bills, and that’s Turki Alalshikh for this one. So we signed up for a contract which basically says ‘it is where it is.’ But I know Turki will want to bring this fight to the UK because it’s that historic, and obviously he’ll be tremendously thanked for that, and hopefully that’s where it will be.”
On how much bigger AJ vs Fury is compared to other British events like Eubank Jr vs Benn and Froch vs Groves
“10x bigger. By a mile. Tell me a bigger fight in UK history than Fury vs AJ? You’re talking about two generational — arguably #1 and #2 in terms of biggest names in the sport, certainly the biggest names in British boxing and have been for years and years. It is absolutely monstrous. Everybody in the country knows who AJ and Fury are, every kid, every grandma, every auntie, every uncle. It’s just a massive, massive event.”
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Sendo Takeshi
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Just watched an Interview between Frank and Ariel Helwani. Seems like another stay busy fight for Fury is absolutely possible.. At this point I hope both of them get chinned before their fight..
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Syntax Error
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Sendo Takeshi wrote: ↑05 May 2026, 15:39 Just watched an Interview between Frank and Ariel Helwani. Seems like another stay busy fight for Fury is absolutely possible.. At this point I hope both of them get chinned before their fight..
That would actually be hilarious.
Saying that, I do believe that any talk of Fury fighting anyone else before fighting Joshua in November is piffle.
Fury only fights once or twice a year, or should that be three years, as he retires every fortnight, so he isn't suddenly going to start fighting three times a year at 38.
Fury likes to be in control of the narrative and proceedings, so he'll put out statements like this in order to achieve that.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Duke McKenzie MBE is well aware that both men are past their best, telling TalkSPORT Boxing that it may not be the best fight in the division, but that it still features two of the biggest names in the division.
The former three-weight world champion then predicted an Anthony Joshua knockout.
“This isn’t the Tyson Fury of old, this is an old Tyson Fury now … Joshua’s not the fighter that he once was. So what we’ve got now is two ex champions … But I do feel that Joshua has got just enough in the tank, because the last thing you lose as a fighter is a punch.”
“Tyson is a real fighter and he does pose a real threat to Anthony Joshua, but I don’t see Fury being able to do what he used to do. Given the fact that Joshua is a big man mountain, he’s not a little slim frame like Deontay Wilder. [Tyson] is not going to be able to do that with AJ. I just see AJ’s big right hand probably putting his lights out.”
The former three-weight world champion then predicted an Anthony Joshua knockout.
“This isn’t the Tyson Fury of old, this is an old Tyson Fury now … Joshua’s not the fighter that he once was. So what we’ve got now is two ex champions … But I do feel that Joshua has got just enough in the tank, because the last thing you lose as a fighter is a punch.”
“Tyson is a real fighter and he does pose a real threat to Anthony Joshua, but I don’t see Fury being able to do what he used to do. Given the fact that Joshua is a big man mountain, he’s not a little slim frame like Deontay Wilder. [Tyson] is not going to be able to do that with AJ. I just see AJ’s big right hand probably putting his lights out.”
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
The Ring Creates Regional Heavyweight Title for Fury vs Joshua

Heavyweight championship belts were once treated as sacred prizes reserved for the single fighter standing above the division. Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua is now set to introduce another variation after The Ring confirmed plans for a custom “Fight of Britain” prize.
The publication will reportedly create a one-off all-gold belt for the long-awaited British heavyweight showdown, turning a fight without a recognized world championship into another title event.
The move effectively creates a regional heavyweight crown attached specifically to Fury vs. Joshua, expanding a sport already crowded with interim championships, franchise belts, diamonds, commemorative trophies, and secondary versions spread across multiple sanctioning bodies.
The idea has already raised eyebrows in some quarters as Fury and Joshua are no longer viewed by many as the clear number one and two heavyweights in Britain. Daniel Dubois is a former IBF champion, Fabio Wardley holds the WBO version, and Moses Itauma is widely viewed as the division’s rising force.

Fight of Britain Belt
Will the winner defend the “Fight of Britain” crown in future bouts? Will it disappear immediately after the event as a commemorative piece? Or will boxing eventually move toward regional versions of The Ring championship appearing across multiple divisions whenever a sufficiently large promotion demands one?
The irony is difficult to ignore.
Fury and Joshua were once expected to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world. Years later, they may now compete for a newly created regional crown connected directly to the promotion itself.
For a sport that once treated heavyweight championships as the clearest measure of supremacy, the continued expansion of customized and secondary titles risks pulling the division further away from that original meaning.

Heavyweight championship belts were once treated as sacred prizes reserved for the single fighter standing above the division. Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua is now set to introduce another variation after The Ring confirmed plans for a custom “Fight of Britain” prize.
The publication will reportedly create a one-off all-gold belt for the long-awaited British heavyweight showdown, turning a fight without a recognized world championship into another title event.
The move effectively creates a regional heavyweight crown attached specifically to Fury vs. Joshua, expanding a sport already crowded with interim championships, franchise belts, diamonds, commemorative trophies, and secondary versions spread across multiple sanctioning bodies.
The idea has already raised eyebrows in some quarters as Fury and Joshua are no longer viewed by many as the clear number one and two heavyweights in Britain. Daniel Dubois is a former IBF champion, Fabio Wardley holds the WBO version, and Moses Itauma is widely viewed as the division’s rising force.

Fight of Britain Belt
Will the winner defend the “Fight of Britain” crown in future bouts? Will it disappear immediately after the event as a commemorative piece? Or will boxing eventually move toward regional versions of The Ring championship appearing across multiple divisions whenever a sufficiently large promotion demands one?
The irony is difficult to ignore.
Fury and Joshua were once expected to fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world. Years later, they may now compete for a newly created regional crown connected directly to the promotion itself.
For a sport that once treated heavyweight championships as the clearest measure of supremacy, the continued expansion of customized and secondary titles risks pulling the division further away from that original meaning.
Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Pretty cool belt. I'd imagine it's about like the commemorative belts that the WBC made for non title bouts that they considered to be "Special Events" it's just a whatever thing. Except in this case they're probably not paying a sanctioning fee for it, Turki is just buying it to be gaudy and flashy because he likes to do sh*t like that.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
yh like the undisputed belt Turki created as well.gilgamesh wrote: ↑06 May 2026, 06:19 Pretty cool belt. I'd imagine it's about like the commemorative belts that the WBC made for non title bouts that they considered to be "Special Events" it's just a whatever thing. Except in this case they're probably not paying a sanctioning fee for it, Turki is just buying it to be gaudy and flashy because he likes to do sh*t like that.
Just something to hold in the air after you win
Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
They should've made this belt somehow for the English or British belt. Obviously doesn't mean much but when it's two guys who were the best guys of the division and the same nationality but they can't fight for the world belt against each other, a novelty trinket that means something would be cool. Boxers are too ashamed to drop down a level in the belts they go for.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Fighting for the British Titke isn’t a step down. It would depend on who you’re fighting: then it would’ve considered a step down.joshj909 wrote: ↑06 May 2026, 07:04 They should've made this belt somehow for the English or British belt. Obviously doesn't mean much but when it's two guys who were the best guys of the division and the same nationality but they can't fight for the world belt against each other, a novelty trinket that means something would be cool. Boxers are too ashamed to drop down a level in the belts they go for.
Whyte fought for the commonwealth against Itauma.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
It would be cool if this fight was for the British title
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Sendo Takeshi
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
They should fight for the undisputed Zuffa world titel, so their fight would actually mean something 
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Eddie Hearn refutes Dana White's claim that he will promote Tyson Fury-Anthony Joshua
Promoter Eddie Hearn has refuted Dana White’s claims that the UFC boss will promote the heavyweight clash between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua if it happens later this year.
Hearn has promoted Joshua since he turned professional after the 2012 Olympics and the two have worked side-by-side since.
Of course, there is much to be done before Joshua and Fury do eventually meet in what has billed for the fourth quarter of the year.
It is likely that Fury will take an interim bout, and Joshua is scheduled due to fight Kristian Prenga in Saudi Arabia in July.
A clip of White, president of Zuffa Boxing, has circulated from a conversation with content creator Nina Drama, where White said: “I’m doing the Tyson Fury-AJ fight, too. I’m promoting that.”
Hearn, responding via Instagram to White’s claims, said: “Such a clout chaser. Not a chance and contractually impossible. Let me know when you find your balls.”
The last line referred to White and Hearn possibly meeting in a bout themselves. White called on a fight with Hearn, who accepted, but there is now an impasse between the pair.
Promoter Eddie Hearn has refuted Dana White’s claims that the UFC boss will promote the heavyweight clash between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua if it happens later this year.
Hearn has promoted Joshua since he turned professional after the 2012 Olympics and the two have worked side-by-side since.
Of course, there is much to be done before Joshua and Fury do eventually meet in what has billed for the fourth quarter of the year.
It is likely that Fury will take an interim bout, and Joshua is scheduled due to fight Kristian Prenga in Saudi Arabia in July.
A clip of White, president of Zuffa Boxing, has circulated from a conversation with content creator Nina Drama, where White said: “I’m doing the Tyson Fury-AJ fight, too. I’m promoting that.”
Hearn, responding via Instagram to White’s claims, said: “Such a clout chaser. Not a chance and contractually impossible. Let me know when you find your balls.”
The last line referred to White and Hearn possibly meeting in a bout themselves. White called on a fight with Hearn, who accepted, but there is now an impasse between the pair.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
When he says he'll be part of the fight, he means he's gonna hold the spit bucket.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Tyson Fury labels Anthony Joshua 'chinny' after watching Daniel Dubois beat Fabio Wardley
Tyson Fury believes Anthony Joshua is "chinny" after watching Daniel Dubois halt Fabio Wardley in 11 rounds on Saturday night. Fury's reasoning is that Joshua, unlike Wardley, got dropped several times by Dubois when they fought in 2024. Fury, of course, is expected to at last collide with Joshua later in the year should they come through warm-up bouts in the interim.
"I've just sat here thinking after Dubois' unbelievable fight," Fury said on social media.
Dubois' incredible victory is his fourth in his last five bouts. After losing to Oleksandr Usyk in 2023, Dubois went on to halt Jarrell Miller, Filip Hrgovic and Joshua before losing a return to Usyk last July. His victory over Wardley saw Dubois, 23-3 (22 KOs), claim the WBO heavyweight title.
"Dubois fought 'Big Baby' Miller, stopped him but never put him down," Fury continued. "Then he fought Hrgovic, stopped him but never put him down. He fought Wardley... an unbelievable fight, stopped him but never out him down. He hit Usyk with some bombs, never put him over.
"Yet he fights Anthony Joshua and pummels him and puts him to the floor [four] times. I'm not saying Anthony Joshua's chinless but there are the facts. Take it as you wish and as you will. Everybody else never went over, not a singular person, 'Big Baby' Miller, Hrgovic, Usyk or Wardley but Joshua goes down [four times]. Chinny!"
Fury, who is targeting a November showdown with Joshua, added the details of his next "unbelievable, exciting" fight will be revealed soon. The 37-year-old, who ended his latest hiatus with victory over Arslanbek Makhmudov in April, has suffered eight knockdowns during his 35-2-1 (24 KOs) career, beating the count every time.
Tyson Fury believes Anthony Joshua is "chinny" after watching Daniel Dubois halt Fabio Wardley in 11 rounds on Saturday night. Fury's reasoning is that Joshua, unlike Wardley, got dropped several times by Dubois when they fought in 2024. Fury, of course, is expected to at last collide with Joshua later in the year should they come through warm-up bouts in the interim.
"I've just sat here thinking after Dubois' unbelievable fight," Fury said on social media.
Dubois' incredible victory is his fourth in his last five bouts. After losing to Oleksandr Usyk in 2023, Dubois went on to halt Jarrell Miller, Filip Hrgovic and Joshua before losing a return to Usyk last July. His victory over Wardley saw Dubois, 23-3 (22 KOs), claim the WBO heavyweight title.
"Dubois fought 'Big Baby' Miller, stopped him but never put him down," Fury continued. "Then he fought Hrgovic, stopped him but never put him down. He fought Wardley... an unbelievable fight, stopped him but never out him down. He hit Usyk with some bombs, never put him over.
"Yet he fights Anthony Joshua and pummels him and puts him to the floor [four] times. I'm not saying Anthony Joshua's chinless but there are the facts. Take it as you wish and as you will. Everybody else never went over, not a singular person, 'Big Baby' Miller, Hrgovic, Usyk or Wardley but Joshua goes down [four times]. Chinny!"
Fury, who is targeting a November showdown with Joshua, added the details of his next "unbelievable, exciting" fight will be revealed soon. The 37-year-old, who ended his latest hiatus with victory over Arslanbek Makhmudov in April, has suffered eight knockdowns during his 35-2-1 (24 KOs) career, beating the count every time.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Say what you like about fork tongued Fury, when it comes to shrewd careful matchmaking and manipulation he's up there with Livia, the dangerously devious wife of Augustus Caesar.
He's carefully and skilfully navigated his career on the way to making over $200 million.
He's never been averse to using every legal and often illegal means to get there, and importantly, stubbornly refused to put himself at any undue risk.
Of course, now he's 37, it's getting increasingly more difficult for him to find older fighters on their way down-the time and tested career path in boxing as practiced by almost everyone who gets to make the most money.
His only real rival, amongst actual boxers, might be Conor Benn, who's career seems to be following exactly the same path as Fury's.
Although he's actually a year older than AJ, I suspect Fury firmly believes AJ is now shot, or very near to it.
And he's not the only one.
He's carefully and skilfully navigated his career on the way to making over $200 million.
He's never been averse to using every legal and often illegal means to get there, and importantly, stubbornly refused to put himself at any undue risk.
Of course, now he's 37, it's getting increasingly more difficult for him to find older fighters on their way down-the time and tested career path in boxing as practiced by almost everyone who gets to make the most money.
His only real rival, amongst actual boxers, might be Conor Benn, who's career seems to be following exactly the same path as Fury's.
Although he's actually a year older than AJ, I suspect Fury firmly believes AJ is now shot, or very near to it.
And he's not the only one.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
‘If either fighter loses, you cannot do the fight’: Eddie Hearn says Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury cannot afford a slip up
Matchroom’s promoter says a Tyson Fury vs Anthony Joshua fight is one the line in interim bouts.
British heavyweights Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are on a collision course for the end of the year, but neither man can afford a slip up as both intend to take interim fights that lead into that much bigger one later. Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn tells Sky Sports that should either man come up short in their tune-ups, it will completely derail their fight, so far as he’s concerned.
Joshua is currently scheduled for a July 25th fight against little-known Kristian Prenga and Fury is expected to take a summer fight as well before meeting Joshua this fall, although no specific opponent has been formally mentioned at this time.
“In my opinion if either fighter loses, you cannot do the fight,” Hearn told Sky Sports. “I will feel sick at the ringwalk on July 25. Especially with what AJ’s come back from. I mean there is that worry. Will he be the same? Everything we see in camp and in sparring lends us to suggest yes. But there’s a lot to overcome. That’s the importance of this fight as well in July.”
Fury most recently fought Arslanbek Makhmudov, but Hearn expects Fury to take a softer touch than that for his summer outing, and should everything come through clear British fans should be well suited for a fight they’ve long awaited.
Matchroom’s promoter says a Tyson Fury vs Anthony Joshua fight is one the line in interim bouts.
British heavyweights Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are on a collision course for the end of the year, but neither man can afford a slip up as both intend to take interim fights that lead into that much bigger one later. Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn tells Sky Sports that should either man come up short in their tune-ups, it will completely derail their fight, so far as he’s concerned.
Joshua is currently scheduled for a July 25th fight against little-known Kristian Prenga and Fury is expected to take a summer fight as well before meeting Joshua this fall, although no specific opponent has been formally mentioned at this time.
“In my opinion if either fighter loses, you cannot do the fight,” Hearn told Sky Sports. “I will feel sick at the ringwalk on July 25. Especially with what AJ’s come back from. I mean there is that worry. Will he be the same? Everything we see in camp and in sparring lends us to suggest yes. But there’s a lot to overcome. That’s the importance of this fight as well in July.”
Fury most recently fought Arslanbek Makhmudov, but Hearn expects Fury to take a softer touch than that for his summer outing, and should everything come through clear British fans should be well suited for a fight they’ve long awaited.
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Tyson Fury lifts lid on first spar with amateur Anthony Joshua: “He gave me a beating, I’m not going to deny it”
Tyson Fury looked back on his firs-ever sparring session with Anthony Joshua when he was an unknown amateur
Back when Tyson Fury was just 22-years-old, he visited Finchley ABC in London for sparring and was introduced to an unknown amateur in Anthony Joshua, who ultimately gave him a “beating” in sparring, he admitted.
Keen on being tested, Fury had offered the boxers in the gym his Rolex watch if anyone could knock him out.
The Gypsy King reflected on the experience not long after it happened, “I went down to Finchley Boxing Club and I sparred with the ABA champion, Anthony Joshua.
“He’s red hot, him, he’s very good. To be honest with you, I thought to myself, ‘I’m only going to take it easy as he’s an amateur and we probably won’t spar again if I go mad.’
“He’s rushed out at me, he threw a one-two and a left hook and I slipped. I thought, ‘He’s not that good, I’m going to take my time.’
“Then bash, he gives me a big uppercut right on the point of the chin. If I’d have had a bit of a weak chin like David Price, I’d have been knocked out for a month.
“He’s very, very good and he’s only young, 20, watch out for that name Anthony Joshua he is one prospect for the future.
“He came out at me for three rounds and he gave me a beating – I’m not going to deny it, he gave me hell for leather for three rounds.
“I thought ‘Oh my god, an amateur is killing me.’”
Tyson Fury looked back on his firs-ever sparring session with Anthony Joshua when he was an unknown amateur
Back when Tyson Fury was just 22-years-old, he visited Finchley ABC in London for sparring and was introduced to an unknown amateur in Anthony Joshua, who ultimately gave him a “beating” in sparring, he admitted.
Keen on being tested, Fury had offered the boxers in the gym his Rolex watch if anyone could knock him out.
The Gypsy King reflected on the experience not long after it happened, “I went down to Finchley Boxing Club and I sparred with the ABA champion, Anthony Joshua.
“He’s red hot, him, he’s very good. To be honest with you, I thought to myself, ‘I’m only going to take it easy as he’s an amateur and we probably won’t spar again if I go mad.’
“He’s rushed out at me, he threw a one-two and a left hook and I slipped. I thought, ‘He’s not that good, I’m going to take my time.’
“Then bash, he gives me a big uppercut right on the point of the chin. If I’d have had a bit of a weak chin like David Price, I’d have been knocked out for a month.
“He’s very, very good and he’s only young, 20, watch out for that name Anthony Joshua he is one prospect for the future.
“He came out at me for three rounds and he gave me a beating – I’m not going to deny it, he gave me hell for leather for three rounds.
“I thought ‘Oh my god, an amateur is killing me.’”
Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
This interview was 15 years ago wasn't it?Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑21 May 2026, 05:32 Tyson Fury lifts lid on first spar with amateur Anthony Joshua: “He gave me a beating, I’m not going to deny it”
Tyson Fury looked back on his firs-ever sparring session with Anthony Joshua when he was an unknown amateur
Back when Tyson Fury was just 22-years-old, he visited Finchley ABC in London for sparring and was introduced to an unknown amateur in Anthony Joshua, who ultimately gave him a “beating” in sparring, he admitted.
Keen on being tested, Fury had offered the boxers in the gym his Rolex watch if anyone could knock him out.
The Gypsy King reflected on the experience not long after it happened, “I went down to Finchley Boxing Club and I sparred with the ABA champion, Anthony Joshua.
“He’s red hot, him, he’s very good. To be honest with you, I thought to myself, ‘I’m only going to take it easy as he’s an amateur and we probably won’t spar again if I go mad.’
“He’s rushed out at me, he threw a one-two and a left hook and I slipped. I thought, ‘He’s not that good, I’m going to take my time.’
“Then bash, he gives me a big uppercut right on the point of the chin. If I’d have had a bit of a weak chin like David Price, I’d have been knocked out for a month.
“He’s very, very good and he’s only young, 20, watch out for that name Anthony Joshua he is one prospect for the future.
“He came out at me for three rounds and he gave me a beating – I’m not going to deny it, he gave me hell for leather for three rounds.
“I thought ‘Oh my god, an amateur is killing me.’”
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
TYSON FURY: I'LL KNOCK OUT JOSHUA; HE DOESN'T HAVE A CHIN
Tyson Fury isn’t too pleased that Anthony Joshua pussyfooted around their planned pitting.
Fury and Joshua had a golden opportunity to bring their long-anticipated showdown to a promotional crescendo last month, moments after Fury beat Arslanbek Makhmudov in front of 60,000 fans at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, and millions more watching globally on Netflix.
“The Gypsy King” grabbed the mic and challenged Joshua in a made-for-TV moment. Joshua, who was sitting ringside, called Fury a clout chaser and labeled himself the boss as he refused to enter the ring or engage in much banter.
The sequence and missed opportunity to build buzz for their bout left Fury befuddled.
“I do believe if I fought like a nugget and got knocked all over the place and just about scraped through, they’d have been jumping up and down for a fight, like, ‘Yeah, we’ll have to fight next,’” Fury said on his YouTube channel, FurociTV.
“But because I just took out a world-ranked contender, they weren’t so keen. All of a sudden, they need another fight now in between, which wasn’t the plan before that. The fight was signed. Turki Alalshikh wanted us to get in there and have a proper face-off, and Joshua bottled it at its biggest moment with the world watching. He choked. He didn’t say three words. He sat at ringside and didn’t do anything after 10 years of simmering on boil. We’re finally both signed and he doesn’t have anything to say – proper sausage.
“Here's the facts of this fight – me beating Joshua doesn't do anything for my career, nothing. It doesn’t enhance me. Everyone expects me to beat him anyway. I’m an odds-on favorite, heavily. The world expects me to beat this guy. But if he could ever beat me, they’ll say he’s changed. So, the clout chaser is him. I’ll knock him out, for sure. He can’t and won’t be able to survive against me. He doesn’t have a chin and I’ll bang him on it because I’m quicker than him and I’m a better boxer ... I’ll put him back where he should be – ‘Bambi On Ice.’”
Joshua (29-4, 26 KOs) is scheduled to face a huge underdog, Kristian Prenga (21-1, 20 KOs), on July 25 in Saudi Arabia. His tune-up fight will take place seven months after Joshua survived a car accident that killed two of his friends in Nigeria.
Fury (35-2-1, 24 KOs) has also teased another tune-up fight for August ahead of the all-British battle between former two-time heavyweight champions. Fury-Joshua is slated to take place sometime in the fourth quarter of this year, assuming the rivals win their upcoming bouts.
The loquacious Fury however, curiously cast some unnecessary doubt about the much-desired contest.
“Listen, I might get knocked out in my next fight in August,” Fury said. “So, then it’s all over. So, I got to take it one fight at a time. They’re all deadly, serious fights. So, one step at a time, as I’ve always done.”
Tyson Fury isn’t too pleased that Anthony Joshua pussyfooted around their planned pitting.
Fury and Joshua had a golden opportunity to bring their long-anticipated showdown to a promotional crescendo last month, moments after Fury beat Arslanbek Makhmudov in front of 60,000 fans at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, and millions more watching globally on Netflix.
“The Gypsy King” grabbed the mic and challenged Joshua in a made-for-TV moment. Joshua, who was sitting ringside, called Fury a clout chaser and labeled himself the boss as he refused to enter the ring or engage in much banter.
The sequence and missed opportunity to build buzz for their bout left Fury befuddled.
“I do believe if I fought like a nugget and got knocked all over the place and just about scraped through, they’d have been jumping up and down for a fight, like, ‘Yeah, we’ll have to fight next,’” Fury said on his YouTube channel, FurociTV.
“But because I just took out a world-ranked contender, they weren’t so keen. All of a sudden, they need another fight now in between, which wasn’t the plan before that. The fight was signed. Turki Alalshikh wanted us to get in there and have a proper face-off, and Joshua bottled it at its biggest moment with the world watching. He choked. He didn’t say three words. He sat at ringside and didn’t do anything after 10 years of simmering on boil. We’re finally both signed and he doesn’t have anything to say – proper sausage.
“Here's the facts of this fight – me beating Joshua doesn't do anything for my career, nothing. It doesn’t enhance me. Everyone expects me to beat him anyway. I’m an odds-on favorite, heavily. The world expects me to beat this guy. But if he could ever beat me, they’ll say he’s changed. So, the clout chaser is him. I’ll knock him out, for sure. He can’t and won’t be able to survive against me. He doesn’t have a chin and I’ll bang him on it because I’m quicker than him and I’m a better boxer ... I’ll put him back where he should be – ‘Bambi On Ice.’”
Joshua (29-4, 26 KOs) is scheduled to face a huge underdog, Kristian Prenga (21-1, 20 KOs), on July 25 in Saudi Arabia. His tune-up fight will take place seven months after Joshua survived a car accident that killed two of his friends in Nigeria.
Fury (35-2-1, 24 KOs) has also teased another tune-up fight for August ahead of the all-British battle between former two-time heavyweight champions. Fury-Joshua is slated to take place sometime in the fourth quarter of this year, assuming the rivals win their upcoming bouts.
The loquacious Fury however, curiously cast some unnecessary doubt about the much-desired contest.
“Listen, I might get knocked out in my next fight in August,” Fury said. “So, then it’s all over. So, I got to take it one fight at a time. They’re all deadly, serious fights. So, one step at a time, as I’ve always done.”
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Re: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua | NETFLIX - Winter 2026
Eddie Hearn to Tyson Fury: 'More rounds isn't going to help you beat Anthony Joshua'
Eddie Hearn, promoter of Anthony Joshua, doesn't believe that Tyson Fury needs a warm up bout before taking on his charge in November.
Fury came back to outpoint Arslanbek Makhmudov over 12 rounds in April. It was Fury's first fight since twice losing to Oleksandr Usyk in 2024. Joshua, meanwhile, knocked out Jake Paul in six rounds in December. That marked his first action since being stopped by Daniel Dubois in September 2024.
After Fury's victory, he called out Joshua, who was sitting ringside. Joshua, though, insisted he needed more time. Following the victory over Paul, Joshua was involved in a car crash that killed two of his best friends and left the former heavyweight champion needed months' of treatment to get over his own injuries.
Joshua will face the unfancied Kristian Prenga, an Albanian based in New Jersey, on July 25 in Saudi Arabia. Fury was expected to confirm his warm-up bout last week after announcing on social media he would be fighting in Dublin on August 1. A further announcement has not been forthcoming, however.
"[Fury] said to us, 'You don't need another fight'. We had four [actually five and a half] rounds with Jake Paul, in two years of boxing'," Hearn told Sky Sports.
"Come on, you have 12 rounds with Makhmudov at Tottenham. But you still feel like you need more rounds to prepare yourself for Anthony Joshua? I tell you something now. More rounds ain't going to help you.
"When I saw Makhmudov in that fight, I just know what 'AJ' is going to do to him. If we keep this confidence, if we can go in there and put a great performance together on July 25, we go into that Tyson Fury fight with so much momentum. This will be a major moment for the sport but July 25th has to be done."
Eddie Hearn, promoter of Anthony Joshua, doesn't believe that Tyson Fury needs a warm up bout before taking on his charge in November.
Fury came back to outpoint Arslanbek Makhmudov over 12 rounds in April. It was Fury's first fight since twice losing to Oleksandr Usyk in 2024. Joshua, meanwhile, knocked out Jake Paul in six rounds in December. That marked his first action since being stopped by Daniel Dubois in September 2024.
After Fury's victory, he called out Joshua, who was sitting ringside. Joshua, though, insisted he needed more time. Following the victory over Paul, Joshua was involved in a car crash that killed two of his best friends and left the former heavyweight champion needed months' of treatment to get over his own injuries.
Joshua will face the unfancied Kristian Prenga, an Albanian based in New Jersey, on July 25 in Saudi Arabia. Fury was expected to confirm his warm-up bout last week after announcing on social media he would be fighting in Dublin on August 1. A further announcement has not been forthcoming, however.
"[Fury] said to us, 'You don't need another fight'. We had four [actually five and a half] rounds with Jake Paul, in two years of boxing'," Hearn told Sky Sports.
"Come on, you have 12 rounds with Makhmudov at Tottenham. But you still feel like you need more rounds to prepare yourself for Anthony Joshua? I tell you something now. More rounds ain't going to help you.
"When I saw Makhmudov in that fight, I just know what 'AJ' is going to do to him. If we keep this confidence, if we can go in there and put a great performance together on July 25, we go into that Tyson Fury fight with so much momentum. This will be a major moment for the sport but July 25th has to be done."