By Norm Frauenheim-
Interim can mean just about anything. Interim is a way station, or a stop to nowhere, or a euphemism for forget-about-it. In a business where the word has been used way too much, it’s back all over again.
Forget about an immediate rematch. Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder will fight interim bouts. I’m not sure how to apply interim in this case, other than to say:
Meanwhile, it’s back to business as usual.
There was plenty of healthy anticipation and reported momentum toward a Wider-Fury rematch just a few weeks ago, when suddenly the optimism vanished, or perhaps was put on hold with Fury’s surprising deal with ESPN and Top Rank as a co-promoter. Welcome back to the waiting room, a place that is beginning to feel a lot more permanent than interim these days.
I get it. I understand the reason for pushing the projected rematch date from May 18 to later in the year. Timing for a later date makes sense, mostly because of Anthony Joshua’s British Invasion of America on June 1 at Madison Square Garden against Jarrell Miller. Joshua-Miller will happen nearly a month after Canelo Alvarez middleweight title defense on May 4 against Danny Jacobs.
A mid-May rematch wouldn’t leave much in the pay-per-view budget for most fans. What I don’t get are plans for interim bouts for both Fury and Wilder. Interim means risk, a huge gamble for both the fans and the fighters. Let’s face it, neither Fury or Wilder are great heavyweights. What they have is each other and the chance to extend their controversial draw on Dec. 1 at Los Angeles Staples Center into a compelling sequel and a good payday. But if either loses in the interim, who cares about a rematch? The real trouble is that either can lose to just about anybody. In the interim, consider Luis Ortiz, who in the interim is perhaps the biggest danger to Fury-Wilder II.
Ortiz is fighting Christian Hammer Saturday at Brooklyn’s Barclay Center. If he wins, he has a strong argument for a rematch with Wilder, who was losing on the scorecards when he scored a 10th-round stoppage of Ortiz a year ago. Ortiz could have beaten Wilder in March. He could beat him in May, too. Truth is, anybody from Dillian Whyte to Dominic Breazeale can beat Wilder.
Interim bouts are seen as a way to further introduce both Fury and Wilder to a wider audience. Despite the drama surrounding their December rematch, the PPV audience was reported to be 325,000. Top Rank’s Bob Arum guesses in several media reports that an immediate rematch would have done about 400,000. Arum hopes to market Fury, whose UK roots as an Irish Traveller has given him an innate sense of theater.
After getting up twice against Wilder in December, he got a room full of reporters at Staples to sing along in his own rendition of American Pie. Before the sing-along, he spread out his arms like a preacher and asked: “Did we entertain you?’’
Did he ever.
It is Arum’s thinking that the PPV number for the rematch could surpass one million if more people get to know the likable Fury. Nobody is more adept at creating celebrity than Arum’s Top Rank machine. But the marketing would be built around an interim bout. Therein, rests the danger.
As his unbeaten record attests, Fury is good enough to beat anybody, yet there are still questions about a heavyweight who got up, yet still absorbed a huge punch in a dangerous knockdown from the powerful Wilder.
There are further questions about whether a more skilled heavyweight might be more of a danger to Fury than the one-dimensional Wilder was in December.
Fury dominated the pace against Wilder with a good jab. He controlled the ring until Wilder’s power connected in the ninth and again in the 12th. A multi-skilled heavyweight might force Fury out of doing what he does best – a comfort zone he occupied for eight-plus rounds in December, a year after he was reportedly heavier than 400 pounds.
The fear here is that interim bouts will leave Fury and Wilder with nothing more than a couple of interim belts. It’s not worth the risk, especially for the fans who have been left holding a pile of interim for too long.