Darren Till has explained why Tyson Fury's retirement is similar to Conor McGregor's. Fury recently announced that he is hanging up the gloves and walking away
"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.
The boxing world was handed a shock on Monday when former heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury announced his retirement from the sport … again.
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.
Fury is one of the best fighters of his generation, reaching boxing's pinnacle as a heavyweight, but skeptics wonder whether this will stick
A number of big names fell victim to the power of Tyson, including Larry Holmes, Michael Spinks, Trevor Berbick and Frank Bruno. One man who Tyson never fought during his career was his good friend Riddick Bowe, who was unified heavyweight champion in his own right during the 1990s.
The announcement comes after Fury suffered a second defeat of his career by Oleksandr Usyk last month in Saudi Arabia.
Tyson Fury shocked pretty much everybody with his retirement announcement this week, including his own family members and coaches.
A decorated heavyweight boxing career apparently has come to an end with Tyson Fury announcing his retirement.
Tyson Fury took to social media to surprisingly announce that he is retiring from boxing, revealing the massive news in a short video.
British heavyweight Tyson Fury has retired from boxing — again — one month after losing a rematch with Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk