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Tyson Fury admits he may retire from boxing after beating Dillian Whyte

 (Action Images via Reuters)
(Action Images via Reuters)

Tyson Fury admitted he may retire from boxing shortly after retaining his WBC heavyweight title with a sublime sixth-round victory over Dillian Whyte at Wembley Stadium.

If the Gypsy King bows out, he will do so unbeaten after 33 fights as a professional, having ended Wladimir Klitschko’s decade-long reign as champion before a spiral into depression that saw him step away from the ring.

He returned in 2018 and, after two warm-up fights, embarked on a defining trilogy against then-unbeaten champion Deontay Wilder.

Fury rose from the canvas in the 12th round in a spectacular first bout that was controversially ruled a draw before twice stopping the American in emphatic style to cement himself as the leading heavyweight of this era.

Whyte posed another test of that status but Fury dominated at Wembley and produced a devastating uppercut in the sixth round that floored the challenger, who rose to feet but saw the fight waved off by the referee as he swayed alarmingly.

During the build-up to the fight, Fury had insisted he would retire from boxing and in his post-bout interview, he hinted at the same - although stopped short of fully committing.

“I promised my wife, Paris, after the Wilder 3 fight that that would be it. I owed it to the fans [to come back to the UK],” explained Fury.

“I think this is it, this might be the final curtain for the ‘Gypsy King’, and what a way to go out.”

Tyson Fury celebrated a devastating victory over Dillian Whyte (Getty Images)
Tyson Fury celebrated a devastating victory over Dillian Whyte (Getty Images)

While Fury suggested his next opponent will be the mundanity of retirement and a peaceful life away from boxing’s bloody spotlight, his words have never possessed the same conviction as his punches and there is hardly a guarantee he won’t renege on that decision when the carrot of an undisputed bout against either Oleksandr Usyk or Anthony Joshua is dangled.

In the meantime, he was also keen to reflect on the victory over Whyte.

“First of all, I want to say that as always I dedicate this to my lord and saviour Jesus Christ. He gave me the victory again tonight, and I give him the glory,” said Fury. “In the mighty name of Jesus Christ, I won this fight in this country tonight in my lovely, my own, my England!

“I’m overwhelmed with the support. I can’t believe that my 94,000 countrymen and women have come here tonight to see me perform. I just want to say from the bottom of my heart, thank you so much to every single person who bought a ticket here tonight or stayed up late to watch it on TV.

“Dillan Whyte is a warrior. And I believe that Dillian will be a world champion, but tonight he met a great in the sport. I’m one of the greatest heavyweights of all time, and unfortunately for Dillian Whyte, he had to face me here tonight.

“There’s no disgrace. He’s a tough, game man. He’s as strong as a bull, he’s got the heart of a lion, but you’re not messing with a mediocre heavyweight; you’re messing with the best man on the planet, and you saw that tonight with what happened.

“As a professional, it was an uppercut. I think Lennox Lewis could even be proud of the right uppercut tonight.”