Tyson Fury back at a work on one plan that emerged after he was hit
By Norm Frauenheim-
LAS VEGAS – He is named for a fighter who these days is remembered for some wisdom about how vulnerable a plan can be.
Everybody has one, Mike Tyson said, until he gets hit. Tyson left it open-ended, leaving an implicit suggestion that there was only chaos after one punch lays waste to any plan, no matter how carefully plotted and practiced.
But Tyson Fury, whose dad named him for Mike more for the heavyweight chaos he caused than the wisdom he left, survived the hit without a planned victory, yet with a new plan already as rich as perhaps it will be far-reaching. It came about, maybe because of Fury’s resiliency or instinctive creativity.
He was born to fight.
Born to promote, too.
Fury has done more of the latter than the former in the wake of an astonishing moment last December when he awakened from a lightning bolt of a shot from Deontay Wilder. One moment Fury was face down on a stretch of canvas at Los Angeles Staples Center. A moment later, he was upright, a fighter resurrected and soon a man with a plan that for a few perilous seconds looked as if he were finished.
If you subscribe to his namesake, the new plan is as vulnerable as the old one was. But that’s why Fury (27-0-1, 19 KOs) is about to re-enter the ring Saturday night (ESPN+) against a German challenger, Tom Schwarz (24-0, 16 KOs) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.
“I believe the fight with Wilder only helped my profile here in the United States, and here we are again, only a few days away from the biggest fight of my life,” said Fury, whose comeback in the ring marked a longer, more compelling battle with depression, including thoughts of suicide. “I talk about mental health a lot because it’s very important to me. Only 18 months ago, I was in a very, very dark place. I just wanted to prove to people that there is a way back. You can come back from anything. Nothing is impossible, and if you’d seen me a time ago when I was very heavy and very unwell.’’
Fury is back for his first bout since the Wilder drama in an opening step to introduce the UK heavyweight to the American market. He signed rich deal with ESPN and Top Rank’s Bob Arum, who sees some of the same charisma in he saw in Muhammad Ali and George Foreman.
Fury, Arum says, “is a guy people can relate to. He has the ability to capture pubic imagination.’’
Sure enough, Fury has been busy working on exactly that is appearances throughout the last couple of weeks. He showed up early at a news conference Wednesday, presumably just to schmooze. He was shirtless under a wildly-colored sports coat. It was reminiscent of Foreman in the comeback stage of his career. Foreman would show up in hotel lobbies and press rooms, sometimes with a cheeseburger in one hand, always a smile and never speechless. He was impossible to dislike.
So, too.is Fury, nicknamed The Gypsy King for his bare-knuckled heritage as a son of the Irish Travellers. They crisscrossed the UK, a travelling circus. In other words, Fury gets it. He grew up in the family business, which – first and foremost – means show biz.
“Did we entertain you?’’ Fury said in his first words to reporters at the Staples press room after he got up off the canvas like a guy getting out of a coffin last December.
Fury got his answer, chorus-like, from a room full of sportswriters who joined him in singing Bye-Bye, Miss American Pie. It was fun. It was a bite of Foreman’s cheeseburger. And it screamed for an encore, although the sequel is not exactly what had been immediately expected. A Fury-Wilder rematch has been postponed until at least early next year. Wilder said before Andy Ruiz Jr’s upset of Anthony Joshua a couple of weeks ago in New York that a deal was in place.
That poses an inherent risk. Ruiz’ stunner over Joshua at Madison Square Garden is proof of that. Nobody gives Schwarz much of a chance. He is fighting in the United States for the first time. But nobody gave Ruiz a chance either. Again, remember Mike Tyson’s caveat about plans They can come crashing down with one big punch, especially from a heavyweight. In part, that’s what makes the division makes the division so thoroughly unpredictable and dramatic. But it is also the very thing that makes it so risky.
Ruiz’ victory took the Joshua-Wilder showdown off the table, at least for now. Arum called that one “unlikely” in a conference call this week. For now, at least, the Wilder-Fury rematch is the biggest heavyweight fight out there. First, however, Fury has to elude an unforeseen punch from a mostly-unknown German and then Wilder has to avoid the same from the skilled and powerful Luis Ortiz in a September rematch.
Lots of plans. Lots of punches, too.