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By Norm Frauenheim-

It’s a UK day to celebrate a Saint, Saint George, a long-forgotten Crusader. Not too many Saints in boxing. Not many Crusaders either, although the business could use one after a long week full of allegations and suspicions involving alleged Irish gangster Daniel Kinahan.

There are more questions than answers. But the questions are mounting, fueled by a sudden succession of sanctions, resignations and denials that leaves one of the biggest fights in British history under a darkening cloud.

Tyson Fury is coming home for his first UK fight in nearly four years Saturday (ESPN Pay-Per-View $69.99/2 p.m. ET) since he affirmed his worldwide celebrity. He’s the lineal heavyweight champ, which doesn’t mean he can trace his heritage all the way back to the sainted George. Nonetheless, it’s a lineage, historical enough for a projected milestone — a record crowd of 94,000 at London’s Wembley Stadium against challenger Dillian Whyte. It looked to be a majestic stage for Fury, the proverbial hero-come-home story about a people’s champ who has always been comfortable on just about any stage. He sings. He dances. He danced all over Deontay Wilder the last time we saw him.

But the expected parade is taking an ominous turn. Fury, who has more lyrics and one-liners than counters, is uncomfortable with all things Kinahan. But, increasingly, the Kinahan question is impossible to ignore. It’s crashing the party. 

Within about 10 days, the questions have gone from absent to everywhere. From muted to megaphone. On April 12, news broke that the US Treasury Department had levied sanctions against Kinahan. Actually, sanction is a polite word for what the Feds have done. They published a poster, bordered in red and Kinahan’s photo beneath a headline offering a reward of up to $5 million for “financial disruption of the Kinahan criminal organization or the arrest and/or conviction of Daniel Joseph Kinahan.’’

The wanted poster has morphed into the main event.

Fury has long acknowledged his relationship with Kinahan, who has been living in Dubai as a fugitive, reportedly since 2019. The High Court of Ireland and Irish law enforcement has long called him a gangster who smuggles drugs and guns throughout Europe. Murder has also been alleged.

But Fury doesn’t get specific about his relationship with Kinahan.

“I just had about a million questions about all of this rubbish,’’ he told Sky Sports. “But, like I said to them, it’s none of my business. I don’t get involved in other’s people’s business. So, it doesn’t really concern me.’’

But the relationship is there, caught in photos and in logos. For a while, he fought with MTK Global stitched onto his trunks. The MTK logo – originally called MGM — was the management/promotional company reportedly formed by Kinahan, who would only say that he worked as an advisor for the MTK boxers, mostly from the UK.

“I haven’t done any dealing, business, with him for a long time.’’ Fury said, again to Sky Sports. “I think there was a statement released in 2020. So, that was the end of the business.’’

A succession of moves in the aftermath of the US sanctions on Kinahan, however, suggests that the end is not that simple or definitive. MTK, which said it parted with Kinahan in 2017, shut down Wednesday, the day after MTK CEO Bob Yalen, a former ESPN executive, resigned. Thursday – just a couple of days before the Fury-Whyte opening bell, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) froze Kinahan’s assets.

World Boxing Council President Maurico Sulaiman, who helped broker the deal for the Fury-Whyte fight, appeared in a photo while meeting Kinahan during a stop in Dubai last month. Then, Sulaiman defended the meeting, saying he had no “knowledge of any wrongdoing” by Kinahan. Monday, Sulaiman said in a statement that “at no time have we (the WBC) had any relationship with Daniel Kinahan.’’

There’s no end in sight. This story is just starting. 

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