Fury Retires (for 2 hours)....
Posted: 03 Oct 2016, 08:47
It's been announced on Sky Sports from his Twitter feed. I think there will be plenty of press releases to follow.
Ricky_ wrote:Again? I've lost count.
2013: http://metro.co.uk/2013/11/20/tyson-fur ... l-4195006/Loki wrote:Ricky_ wrote:Again? I've lost count.
Has he ever retired before? The combination of his pending drug offences x2, his depression, his view that he's not appreciated and his idiotic remarks have appeared to have nailed his coffin. If he's stripped, which he will be and a ban, I doubt we will see him again for a few years.
What an awful champion, but it's a pity, as I'd like to see what had happened with the Wlad rematch.
I didn't know about this, but I probably stopped reading after the 1,000,000% comment.zorndeslammes wrote:2013: http://metro.co.uk/2013/11/20/tyson-fur ... l-4195006/Loki wrote:Ricky_ wrote:Again? I've lost count.
Has he ever retired before? The combination of his pending drug offences x2, his depression, his view that he's not appreciated and his idiotic remarks have appeared to have nailed his coffin. If he's stripped, which he will be and a ban, I doubt we will see him again for a few years.
What an awful champion, but it's a pity, as I'd like to see what had happened with the Wlad rematch.
Also claimed to retire after beating Klitschko.
The problem is he has two basstard sociopaths as mentors in his family. Their aggression, problem with rules and authority, unreasonability to live within normal society (whether that be any religion, western or eastern or a secular environment) has caused this.Loki wrote:Ricky_ wrote:Again? I've lost count.
Has he ever retired before? The combination of his pending drug offences x2, his depression, his view that he's not appreciated and his idiotic remarks have appeared to have nailed his coffin. If he's stripped, which he will be and a ban, I doubt we will see him again for a few years.
What an awful champion, but it's a pity, as I'd like to see what had happened with the Wlad rematch.
I agree, whilst Wlad, Vitali and Lennox were somewhat boring, at least they are true champions. I've seen more class in Deliverance.Bricks wrote:The problem is he has two basstard sociopaths as mentors in his family. Their aggression, problem with rules and authority, unreasonability to live within normal society (whether that be any religion, western or eastern or a secular environment) has caused this.Loki wrote:Ricky_ wrote:Again? I've lost count.
Has he ever retired before? The combination of his pending drug offences x2, his depression, his view that he's not appreciated and his idiotic remarks have appeared to have nailed his coffin. If he's stripped, which he will be and a ban, I doubt we will see him again for a few years.
What an awful champion, but it's a pity, as I'd like to see what had happened with the Wlad rematch.
Fury was cheating and hes caught so he does what he does best act aggressively and talk like a dumb ccuunt to think I defended this guy.
he's a misraeble ungrateful ccunt just like his dad and uncle.
Its a shame he tainted the linear title, now wlad wont have the same glisten to his legacy but wlad v Joshua, and haye v wilder with parker and luiz Ortiz waiting for the winners aint bad
Although it did make me chuckle, he's clearly not right.Ruthless-RKO wrote:He's just retracted the claims saying 'he is here to stay' lmfao!!
klitoris wrote:Once he and his wife sniff through all the money he made in the first Klitschko fight, he'll be back.
Any guess as to why he didn't want to fight Wlad?Enlightened-One wrote:Tyson Fury claimed that:
• He’d retire if he couldn’t beat Steve Cunningham
• He was ‘one million percent retired’ after David Haye withdrew from their bout
• He’d retire if Wladimir Klitschko beat him during their first fight
• He may never fight again shortly after claiming Wladimir’s world titles
• He’d retire immediately after the Klitschko rematch
• He was retired shortly after being tested positive by VADA with cocaine and the announcement of his so-called mental health issues
It’s safe to say that Fury will be announcing his inevitable return to the ring before the end of 2017.
For whatever reason, he seemed very reluctant to engage in a rematch against Wladimir Klitschko… and we know for certain that Team Fury threatened to withdraw from the bout due to their insistence to renegotiate the fight contracts that had already been agreed.
It seems that Fury has got his own way, because he is no longer obliged to fight Klitschko, especially if the Ukrainian loses to Anthony Joshua or one of the other heavyweights, before Tyson announces his ring return.
EDIT: The árse is back again!
It could have been contractual, maybe (as the challenger) his team had agreed to terms that they subsequently regretted.Loki wrote:Any guess as to why he didn't want to fight Wlad?Enlightened-One wrote:Tyson Fury claimed that:
• He’d retire if he couldn’t beat Steve Cunningham
• He was ‘one million percent retired’ after David Haye withdrew from their bout
• He’d retire if Wladimir Klitschko beat him during their first fight
• He may never fight again shortly after claiming Wladimir’s world titles
• He’d retire immediately after the Klitschko rematch
• He was retired shortly after being tested positive by VADA with cocaine and the announcement of his so-called mental health issues
It’s safe to say that Fury will be announcing his inevitable return to the ring before the end of 2017.
For whatever reason, he seemed very reluctant to engage in a rematch against Wladimir Klitschko… and we know for certain that Team Fury threatened to withdraw from the bout due to their insistence to renegotiate the fight contracts that had already been agreed.
It seems that Fury has got his own way, because he is no longer obliged to fight Klitschko, especially if the Ukrainian loses to Anthony Joshua or one of the other heavyweights, before Tyson announces his ring return.
EDIT: The árse is back again!
I don't buy that; he'd get a career best payday (he got £5m) from first fight (I think) plus it was in Manchester. Doesn't make sense. Something was wrong with the first bout (apart from it being a snoozer until the last round). Klitschko was so bad, hardly threw a punch.Enlightened-One wrote:It could have been contractual, maybe as the challenger his team had agreed to terms that they subsequently regretted.Loki wrote:Any guess as to why he didn't want to fight Wlad?Enlightened-One wrote:Tyson Fury claimed that:
• He’d retire if he couldn’t beat Steve Cunningham
• He was ‘one million percent retired’ after David Haye withdrew from their bout
• He’d retire if Wladimir Klitschko beat him during their first fight
• He may never fight again shortly after claiming Wladimir’s world titles
• He’d retire immediately after the Klitschko rematch
• He was retired shortly after being tested positive by VADA with cocaine and the announcement of his so-called mental health issues
It’s safe to say that Fury will be announcing his inevitable return to the ring before the end of 2017.
For whatever reason, he seemed very reluctant to engage in a rematch against Wladimir Klitschko… and we know for certain that Team Fury threatened to withdraw from the bout due to their insistence to renegotiate the fight contracts that had already been agreed.
It seems that Fury has got his own way, because he is no longer obliged to fight Klitschko, especially if the Ukrainian loses to Anthony Joshua or one of the other heavyweights, before Tyson announces his ring return.
EDIT: The árse is back again!
I’m not sure if he ducked Klitschko out of fear though, but he did clearly admit that he may lose the rematch against Wladimir when interviewed by IFL TV, but perhaps he was trying to sell the fight by adding intrigue or teasing those fans that desperately wanted to see him lose.
It probably was due to the terms of the rematch.