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By the time Terence Crawford steps into the ring to face Israil Madrimov in a Los Angeles soccer stadium on Aug. 3, he will have been inactive for 371 days. That’s one year, plus a leap day, plus five ordinary days. That’s 53 weeks.

And it’s a lot to ask of people to keep you in the No. 1 spot on their pound-for-pound lists when you’re off that long. Especially when, on top of that, the last time you had multiple fights in any calendar year was 2019.

Nevertheless, keeping Crawford in the No. 1 spot is exactly what I’m doing for now.

And he has one Luis Nery left hand to thank for making it possible to even consider doing so.

As it happens, getting shockingly dropped by a Nery counter left in the opening round on Monday in Tokyo led to some of the finest work of Naoya Inoue’s career. The brief opening he left Nery in turn left him with an opening to show exactly what he’s made of — how he responds to adversity, how he adjusts to a dangerous challenge. Hitting the deck did not diminish Inoue’s reputation; in the end, it may have enhanced it.

Buuuuuut … Bud Crawford has never made a mistake that big or paid a price that significant. So, depending on what exact criteria in what exact proportions you like to feed into the little pound-for-pound calculator that exists in your mind, your heart, your gut, or all three interior locations, there is at least one very clear line of reasoning you can follow to say that Crawford still belongs atop the list.

But it’s one hell of a two-man debate right now. And there’s about a 50/50 chance that it’s going to turn into one hell of a three-man debate in a couple of weeks.

I know, I know. Pound-for-pound lists are stupid. They’re meaningless. They’re just marketing tools. Ranking fighters who for the most part can never and will never face each other is arbitrary and reductive.

But it’s a heck of a lot more interesting than discussing purse bids, or the difference between “super” titles and “regular” titles, or what your definition of ring generalship is.

Debates and comparisons and questions that can never truly be answered are essential to the experience of being passionate about sports. And Crawford vs. Inoue remains on Tuesday, just as it was on Sunday, one fantastically unanswerable question.

It’s worth noting that there was one man who declared in the last few days, “I’m the best fighter right now, for sure,” and it was neither Crawford nor Inoue. Saul “Canelo” Alvarez uttered those words to Jim Gray on Saturday night after outpointing Jaime Munguia.

With nothing but respect for Alvarez — an all-time great fighter, a future first-ballot Hall of Famer, a former pound-for-pound champ, and a man who has every reason to think highly and speak highly of himself — his part of the unanswerable question is eminently answerable: Canelo ain’t it.

After May 18, if Oleksandr Usyk becomes the unified, lineal heavyweight champion by defeating Tyson Fury, a man who presumably will weigh in some 50 pounds heavier than him (more than the number of pounds separating Canelo from Inoue, for what it’s worth), then Crawford vs. Inoue will turn into Crawford vs. Inoue vs. Usyk.

But for now, for at least the next 11 days, it’s just Crawford vs. Inoue. The debate that appeared to peak last July when they each turned in career-best performances four days apart rages on.

At the time, Inoue was so spectacularly dominant and destructive in knocking out the well-regarded Stephen Fulton in eight rounds that the impatient among us declared him the pound-for-pound king no matter what Crawford or Errol Spence could possibly do against each other a few days later. Then Crawford went out there and looked as least dominant and destructive if not more so splattering Spence in nine rounds, and most — but not all — reversed their lean of four days prior and bestowed the crown upon Bud.

Since then, however, Inoue has done as expected against Marlon Tapales (KO 10) and, aside from one very scary moment, done as expected against Nery (KO 6). And Crawford hasn’t fought.

One of my least favorite cliches in sports is “the best ability is availability.” It’s something people say, in part I suppose because it sounds good, but it’s plainly wrong. Availability is by no means the best ability. You do need to start with availability, sure. If you don’t have that, you have nothing. But, hey, I have availability to box. It won’t get me very far if you glove me up and put me in the ring.

All of which is a long way of saying that Crawford’s inactivity counts against him, certainly, but, because he at least has a fight scheduled, it doesn’t disqualify him.

Just as there is no singular, correct formula for deciding who gets your MVP vote in a team sport or who gets your Best Director vote at the Oscars, there is no unanimously agreed upon approach to pound-for-pound.

Some people do the “if everyone was the same size, who would win?” routine, and that’s part of it, but that can’t be all of it, both because styles make fights and because that removes accomplishment from the equation entirely. I’ve always viewed pound-for-pound as a combination of ability (what my eyes tell me) and accomplishment (what the resume tells me), with an emphasis on what you’ve done for me lately, but without ignoring what you did for me several years ago.

But to each their own, within reason.

It feels like Crawford has been in the upper echelons of the sport a little longer, but in actuality, they won their respective first alphabet titles just a month apart in 2014. Neither has many sure-fire Hall of Famers on his record — Inoue has Nonito Donaire and that’s probably all, while Crawford has a “maybe” in Spence and a bunch of “not quites” like Shawn Porter, Kell Brook, and Yuriorkis Gamboa. Inoue has held titles in four weight classes and achieved undisputed status in two of them, while Crawford is at three and two in those respective tallies.

So maybe a slight edge to Inoue in all of that resume-building stuff?

But Crawford’s KO of Spence, a top-five pound-for-pounder coming in, is just on another level — I view it as the single most complete, dominant performance by an elite fighter over a fellow elite fighter since Bernard Hopkins beat Felix Trinidad. That fight alone goes a long way toward swinging the debate to Bud.

And then there was that momentary lapse Inoue had against Nery. It was a good thing for “The Monster” that he crashed directly to the canvas after the single shot and didn’t absorb multiples.

He showed tremendous poise in the wake of his first career knockdown, calmly waiting on a knee until the count of eight to get up, as if he’d been there before. And then he got back to doing Inoue things. As early as the second round, he’d made the adjustment to Nery’s dangerous left hand, keeping his right glove to pinned to his jaw and picking off the punch with it. As he got more comfortable, he saw the left coming and repeatedly ducked clean under it.

In the fourth round, Inoue was finished concerning himself with Nery’s fists and focused fully on figuring out how to stop “Pantera.” And that meant punching to the head to open up the body, then banging to the body to open up the head. He was, by this point, in complete control — and showboating, even.

It was reminiscent of another pound-for-pound great, Floyd Mayweather, when he was hurt worse than at any other point in his pro career, against Shane Mosley. He got out of the woods, and before you knew it, he was walking his man down.

There were four knockdowns in the Inoue-Nery fight; Inoue scored the final three, each more vicious than the last.

And you could interpret Inoue’s victory in whichever way you wanted, or bend it to fit whatever narrative you’d already decided on. The comments under Tris Dixon’s initial report from ringside here on BoxingScene spanned the spectrum.

One reader wrote that Inoue “cemented himself as 2nd best pound for pound after crawford…bud dont get sloppy and get planted on the seat of his pants not even when he faces this hard hitting madrimov at 154 just to skillful in the gym every day never out of shape why hes the best on the planet……”

Another reader opined, “Crawford is irrelevant, has an awful resume, and his best win is against a shot recovering alcoholic. INOUE is CLEARLY #1 p4p”

(Stay classy, comments section.)

Tim Bradley said on ESPN after the fight, referring to both Crawford and Inoue, “Their athleticism is godly.” He was separating the two of them from the rest of the current pack.

But then there’s Usyk. Here he comes, sneaking into the frame, as he likes to do. He doesn’t dazzle in quite the same way as Inoue and Crawford. His athleticism is certainly impressive, but I wouldn’t call it “godly.” On the eye test, it feels like there’s a bit of distance between the Crawford/Inoue tier and the Usyk/Dmitrii Bivol/Canelo tier.

But good lord, if this former undisputed cruiserweight champ who moved up and defeated Anthony Joshua twice adds to that a win over Fury to claim the undisputed heavyweight title? It won’t matter whether he looks particularly athletic. It can be as ugly as Fury’s win over Wladimir Klitschko, and we’ll have to insert Usyk into the P4P king conversation.

And if it is sensational and Usyk does show something “godly” in Riyadh on May 18, then perhaps that will make this whole pound-for-pound thing easy — aside from the complicated debate over whether it’s Crawford or Inoue who gets the No. 2 spot.

Who’s truly the best fighter in the world pound-for-pound? Depends who you talk to.

Terence Crawford, No. 1 on Boxing Junkie’s list, and No. 2 Inoue are both unbeaten, near-flawless all-around fighters who have dominated almost everyone they’ve faced over an extended period of time.

Inoue (27-0, 24 KOs) was at his glorious best in the early morning hours (U.S. time) Monday in Japan.

Luis Nery shocked everyone watching by putting Inoue down in the opening round but that only hardened Inoue’s resolve. The 122-pound champion responded by destroying a good opponent, putting him on the canvas three times and brutally stopping him in Round 6.

Inoue was nothing short of brilliant. It becomes more and more clear that he’s one of the best to ever do it.

And don’t count the knockdown against him when assessing his pound-for-pound credentials. Almost all the great ones have gone down. The important thing is they get up and  demonstrate who’s the better man, as Inoue did in spectacular fashion on Monday.

The question is whether he did enough — or is good enough — to supplant Crawford at No. 1. That answer is no, at least for now.

The resume of Crawford (40-0, 31 KOs) is roughly equal to that of Inoue. Both of them have faced a long list of top contenders but relatively few pound-for-pound-caliber foes, although Crawford is coming a ninth-round knockout of Errol Spence Jr. last July.

And Crawford has been as dominating as Inoue, unleashing an overwhelming combination of skill, speed and power on one opponent after another.

The knockout of Spence, a pound-for-pounder himself, was just as breathtaking as Inoue’s annihilation of Nery at the Tokyo Dome even though Crawford didn’t have to demonstrate that he could overcome adversity.

Crawford has been nothing short of brilliant his entire career, which is why he was Boxing Junkie’s top pound-for-pounder since this feature was initiated in 2019 and hasn’t budged.

How could we justify demoting him under those circumstances? We can’t.

Inoue could reach the top at some point in part because of their respective ages: He’s 31, Crawford 36. That time simply isn’t now.

Another pound-for-pounder was in action on May 4, No. 6 Canelo Alvarez, who defeated Jaime Munguia by a one-sided decision in Las Vegas.

The superstar looked sharp but he was never destined to leap up the list because Munguia was not ranked. However, sitting directly above Alvarez at No. 5 is fellow Mexican Juan Francisco Estrada.

Did Alvarez do enough to swap places with his countryman? That’s a matter of interpretation. We decided to leave Alvarez where he is in good part because Estrada is scheduled to face rising star and No. 10 “Bam” Rodriguez on June 29. Estrada’s fate is in his hands.

Next pound-for-pounder up: No. 13 Vasiliy Lomachenko is scheduled to face George Kambosos Jr. for the vacant IBF 135-pound title May 12 in Australia..

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – Scheduled to challenge 154-pound titleholder

    Israil Madrimov on Aug. 3 in Los Angeles.

  2. Naoya Inoue – No fight scheduled.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on May 18 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Fight against No. 12 Artur Beterbiev for the undisputed 175-pound championship, originally scheduled for June 1, was postponed after Beterbiev injured his knee.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – Scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against No. 11 Jesse Rodriguez on June 29 in Phoenix.
  6. Canelo Alvarez – No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – Scheduled to defend his 135-pound title against Frank Martin on June 15 in Las Vegas.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on May 18 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez – Scheduled to face No. 5 Juan Francisco Estrada for Estrada’s 115-pound title on June 29 in Phoenix.
  11. Artur Beterbiev – Fight against No. 4 Dmitry Bivol for the undisputed 175-pound championship, originally scheduled for June 1, was postponed after Beterbiev injured his knee.
  12. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  13. Vasiliy Lomachenko – Scheduled to face George Kambosos Jr. for the vacant IBF 135-pound title May 12 in Australia.
  14. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduld.
  15. David Benavidez – Scheduled to fight 175-pounder Oleksandr Gvozdyk on June 15 in Las Vegas.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled); Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to face Fernando Martinez in a 115-pound title-unification bout in on July 7 in Tokyo); Teofimo Lopez (reportedly near a deal to defend his 140-pound title against Steve Claggett on June 29 in Miami); Junto Nakatani (no fight scheduled).

Shakur Stevenson is setting the stage for what could be the most significant fight in boxing by challenging Gervonta ‘Tank’ Davis.

As he seeks to elevate his profile for a shot at the lightweight world champion of the WBA, Stevenson has openly promised Davis a “rude awakening” should the opportunity arise for them to face each other.

He anticipates that their match, a classic showdown between a slugger and a boxer – both undefeated – would become a landmark event in the sport.

However, Davis, who has not fought in over a year and is expected to face Frank Martin later this year, dismisses the potential challenge from Stevenson as an easy fight due to Stevenson‘s perceived technical limitations.

In an interview on Naji’s podcast, Cigar Talks, Davis mocked Stevenson‘s abilities when asked if the 26-year-old challenger would be his toughest opponent to date:

“Hell no. Show me something he has done. Show me. His power isn’t scandalous. What defense? He’s just lacking,” Stevenson said.

Stevenson Confident Despite Criticism

These remarks did not sit well with Stevenson, who took to his X account (formerly Twitter) to respond to the criticisms, asserting that it would be “a rude awakening when fight night comes.”

While such exchanges have been common between them for months, experts believe these provocations might finally lead to a face-off, giving Stevenson a chance to prove whether his zeal is sufficient to challenge one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world.

Regarding the potential fight, Todd duBoef, President of Top Rank, indicated that it’s only a matter of time before it happens as their careers are on a “collision course.” He stated: “I hope so. I think it makes sense.”

In addition, Bob Arum expressed confidence in Stevenson‘s capabilities to defeat Davis, but emphasized that the decision ultimately rests with ‘Tank’ himself.

In a conversation on the podcast Million Dollaz Worth of Game, Stevenson acknowledged Davis‘s stature as the PPV star, noting the financial dynamics at play.”

Who am I to make an offer to the biggest star in boxing? What can I offer him? It doesn’t make sense. It would have to come from his side, from his team, to want to make a fight,” Stevenson said.

As anticipation builds, the boxing community is keen to see if this verbal sparring will translate into an actual match-up, potentially setting up one of the most intriguing fights in recent boxing history.

Frank Martin, boasting an unblemished record of 18 wins in as many fights, is considered one of the top lightweights in recent years. However, his upcoming opponent, Gervonta Davis, has issued a stark warning, suggesting that Martin cannot afford to slack off in training, especially after seen partying with Ryan Garcia.

Scheduled to meet on June 15 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, for the World Boxing Association (WBA) lightweight title, the clash between Davis and Martin has already sparked controversy beyond the two fighters.

During a recent face-to-face encounter, defending champion “Tank” Davis raised concerns about Martin’s commitment, referencing his social activities with GarciaDavis questioned, “Do you have the skills to do that?”

Tank questions his rival’s skills

“You’ve been with Ryan (Garcia)… been drinking, been out with him partying,”Davis stated. He continued, “Do you have the skills to be out partying and missing (training)?! You don’t have the skills to be doing that.”

Davis highlighted Martin’s late start in boxing, noting, “You started(boxing) when you were 15. If I started at 15… If I started when I was 15… I’m taking that sh*t off. I’m grinding (training all day), I ‘I’m grinding!”

In a press conference, Davis further dismissed Martin’s bravado, stating, “He put on for the people that he comes with here, because they think they’re ‘thugs’ and sh*t like that but I’m telling you, it’s a different beast in front of him.”

Asserting his dominance, Davis warned, “Nobody that’s walking with him, holding his hand, is going to be able to save him June 15th. I’m telling you. And it’s a lot of s**t built up, a lot built up, and I’m going to take it out on him. Sorry it’s going to be him.”

The Davis-Martin bout will headline a card featuring fights between David Benavidez and Oleksander Gvozdyk, the rematch of Edwin de los Santos and Jose Valenzuela, and Demetrius Andrade against David Morrell, among others.

A much-talked-about potential fight between Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez and Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford has been given an update by Turki Alalshikh, the chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, and the one man who might be able to make it happen.

Alvarez is coming off yet another impressive win over the Cinco De Mayo weekend when he took on fellow Mexican Jamie Munguia.

Despite Munguia being on a hot streak and being the younger man, Canelo put on a fine boxing showcase and kept Munguia quiet throughout and knocked him down with a big uppercut in the fourth round, He eventually ran out a wide points winner to retain his undisputed super middleweight status.

He has long been mooted as a potential opponent for Crawford, a fellow pound-for-pound king and fellow former undisputed champion in two divisions, most recently welterweight when he unified against Errol Spence Jr last summer.

Next up for Crawford is Israil Madrimov up a new weight that will see him challenging for the WBA junior middleweight title on August 3 in Los Angeles.

Speaking to ESPN, Alalshikh spoke of his desire to sort out the sport and put the best with the best.

“We need to improve it with something else, we have a strategic vision where we have identified untapped opportunities and are committed to market improvement. Now my strategy, each card the result of it connects with another card. I deal with everyone.

“When I started in this field, in the beginning [the promoters] competed against each other but now we managed to get them all to work together.”

The fight between Crawford and Madrimov is proof of that as the card features fighters from many different promotions including Matchroom, PBC, Top Rank and Golden Boy and is the first to be presented by Riyadh Season in the United States.

Those fighters include Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz defending his WBA junior welterweight title against Jose Valenzuela and Tim Tszyu, fresh off a loss from Sebastian Fundora which most people put down to a bad cut that affected his vision, is stepping straight back in against the knockout artist Vergil Ortiz Jr.

Deontay Wilder is also said to be taking on the undefeated Jared Anderson and Andy Ruiz is set to return vs. Jarrell Miller.

With all those different promoters working together, and now with the influence that Alalshikh yields, a fight between Crawford, should he come through against Madrimov, and Canelo, seems closer than ever.

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Renowned boxing trainer Andre Rozier is concerned about Turki Alalshikh’s plans to make Terence Crawford vs Canelo Alvarez.

The chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority recently revealed to ESPN that he is planning to stage the super fight in either December or January over in the United States.

“I’m working to deliver [Canelo] but it will be a big fight [for Crawford],” Alalshikh said. “I’ll discuss with him the names. ”

Crawford, who has won world titles at lightweight, super lightweight and welterweight – earning undisputed status in the later two – is moving up to super-welterweight for his next outing against WBA champion Israil Madrimov on August 3 in Los Angeles.

Although he is edging closer to super-middleweight, where Canelo is the reigning undisputed champion, ‘Bud’ is still two weight classes below the former pound-for-pound king.

Rozier, trainer to former world champions Demetrius Andrade and Daniel Jacobs, is worried that the gap in size will be too great for Crawford to bridge.

“I don’t like it. Canelo hasn’t been rattled by anybody, and he’s been in with some big punchers. I don’t like that fight for Crawford,” Rozier told Fight Hype.

“I like him at 154, and maybe touching ground at 160. But at 168, I don’t like it.

“He’s going to box well because he’s a fantastic athlete and a fantastic boxer, but I don’t want to see TC going into that deep waters like that.

“If it’s about money, it’s a different story, but his legacy is being lamented in a fantastic way, and I’d hate to see it tarnished by trying to do too much.

“I think he’s already there. He’s going to the Hall of Fame. His accolades have mountain-high stats to them.

“I don’t want to see him get into a situation where [he could get beat]. He has to build up to it. I just can’t see it.”

Alalshikh did not disclose the weight he is planning to have Canelo and Crawford fight each other at, however, it is unlikely the Mexican superstar will drop down.

Canelo started his career at welterweight but has only fought at super-middleweight and light-heavyweight over the last five years.

“These things didn’t happen before. Once in a blue moon, but now, it’s modus operandi,” said Rozier about the recent trend for fighters to move up two to three weight classes.

“Now, it’s like, ‘I’m fighting at 140. I’m going to be fighting at cruiserweight in a year.’ It’s ridiculous.

“There’s a common phrase and it holds true. There’s a reason why there’s weight classes.”

Tyson Fury doesn’t believe that size will play a factor when he faces Oleksandr Usyk on May 18 for the undisputed heavyweight championship.

Fury stands six inches taller than his rival Usyk and normally weighs in around 50 pounds heavier than the former undisputed cruiserweight champion. The 6ft 9ins heavyweight is known for using his size to break his opponents down, using it effectively in his three fights against Deontay Wilder. Despite his huge size advantage, Fury doesn’t think it will play a part after Usyk proved he can handle big heavyweights with his performances against Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois.

“It won’t come down to, ‘He’s bigger than me or he’s smaller than me,’” Fury told Queensberry Promotions. “I think it will come down to who wants it most on the night. If he wants it more than me, he will win and if I want it more than him, I’ll win, but either way I think we’re in for a real treat.

“He’s proved he can mix it with the big heavyweights, he’s beat Joshua and Dubois – they’re pretty big heavyweights. I’m messing with an elite fighter who’s got more than boxing ability, he’s stubborn and wants to win like I do. We both have talent, we both have good attributes and bad attributes, it will come down to who wants it most on the night.”

Fury has been critical of Usyk in the build-up for their fight, jibing at his opponent’s size and appearance, but insisted that he still has respect for his opponent and his achievements. Fury even compared his foe to boxing great Evander Holyfield, who too was undisputed cruiserweight champion before moving up to heavyweight.

“Usyk is a bad man,” added Fury. “He’s a real bad man and any underestimation of Oleksandr Usyk – you’d be a mug. I’m training hard for him, I’m doing everything I can, I respect Usyk as a man. I respect his career as well, he’s been Olympic champion, he’s had 350 amateur fights or something, and he’s been an undisputed cruiserweight champion, and he’s a unified heavyweight champion. So, you have to respect that. I’m not fighting a guy that’s had 14 and won 11, I’m fighting the real deal, as real a deal as Holyfield. I’m looking forward to the challenge.

The highly talked about rematch between Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk has been officially confirmed for later in 2024.

Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk will be a two-part showdown

With less than two weeks remaining until their initial clash, Saudi boxing chief Turki Alalshikh is already paving the way for the heavyweight giants to go toe-to-toe once again.

The rematch, agreed upon as part of the contractual terms for their first encounter, is scheduled to kick off the latest edition of Riyadh Season.

The stage is set for a historic showdown, as the pair prepares to vie for the undisputed world heavyweight championship later this month on May 18th.

This monumental event marks the division’s first undisputed title fight in nearly 25 years, promising an electrifying spectacle for fight enthusiasts worldwide.

Date revealed for part 2 of Fury vs. Usyk

The road to this highly anticipated rematch hasn’t been without its hurdles.

A two-way rematch clause, already invoked three times due to unforeseen circumstances, underscores the gravity of this encounter.

Saudi kingpin Turki Alalshikh has earmarked October 12th and 13th as potential dates for the rematch, subject to both fighters emerging unscathed from their imminent battle in Riyadh.

However, there’s a twist in the tale regarding the heavyweight title landscape.

The winner of the initial bout will relinquish the IBF title to pave the way for mandatory challenger Filip Hrgovic.

Despite this, the stakes remain sky-high as Fury and Usyk gear up for a clash of titans.

Fury, exuding confidence ahead of the showdown, emphasized the business-like nature of their rivalry, stating, “It’s not personal, it’s strictly business for both fighters.”

With the promise of a hefty paycheck and the opportunity to showcase his prowess on a global stage, Fury is poised to deliver a spectacle worthy of his moniker, ‘The Gypsy King.’

Before the Fury-Usyk sequel, Turki Alalshikh has his sights set on hosting a mega-event at London’s Wembley Stadium, further solidifying his position as a pivotal figure in the boxing landscape.

Reflecting on his approach to matchmaking, Alalshikh emphasizes collaboration among promoters, a strategy that has propelled him to the forefront of boxing’s resurgence.

As the countdown to Fury vs. Usyk intensifies, boxing fans await with bated breath, eager to witness history unfold in the heart of Riyadh.

Tyson Fury has been surprisingly complimentary of heavyweight rival Oleksandr Usyk in a new interview.

The ‘Gypsy King’ will look to become the division’s first undisputed world champion in the four-belt era when he touches gloves with Usyk on May 18 in Saudi Arabia.

The build-up so far has seen Fury attempt to lure Usyk into a battle of mind games, and he has regularly mocked his fellow champion’s size by labelling him a ‘middleweight’.

But Fury has now handed surprising credit to Usyk’s achievements, which began as an all conquering amateur before taking over at cruiserweight, with boxing’s glamour division in his sights.

He said during an interview with Queensberry Promotions: “Oleksandr Usyk’s a real bad man and to underestimate Usyk you’d be a mug.

“So I’m training hard for him, I’m doing everything I can.

“I respect Usyk as a man. I respect his career as well – Olympic champion, undisputed cruiserweight champion, unified heavyweight champion.

“You have to respect that, I’m fighting the real deal. I’m looking forward to the challenge.

“He’s got good footwork, good boxing ability, technically sound.

“He’s proved he can mix it with the big heavyweights because he’s beat Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois. I’m messing with an elite fighter.”

Fans were stunned by his new stance, with one writing: “Tyson Fury tomorrow will be calling Usyk gappy teeth and a dosser.”

Another wrote: “Well he’s changed his tune.”

One added: “He’s changed his narrative and has been mostly quiet. Finally it seems like Fury is taking it seriously.

“As much as I like Usyk, I think Fury is just too big. Either way, it should be a fun fight.”

He has regularly joked that his upcoming bout with Usyk will be a routine night, though it will likely be anything but given the Ukrainian’s skillset.

Usyk is undefeated in his professional career, and has yet to be beaten at heavyweight since making the switch from cruiserweight in 2019 where he reigned as undisputed champion.

He comfortably outboxed Joshua in their two heavyweight showdowns in September 2021 and August 2022, and will likely provide the sternest examination of Fury’s credentials.

Fury, who has also yet to be defeated, claimed previously that Usyk wouldn’t even be able to inflict defeat on him with a baseball bat.

He said at their press conference in November 2023: “I’ve got nothing to really fear with Oleksandr.

“I think even if he had a baseball bat in one hand and a meat cleaver in the other, he couldn’t really do much to me. I’d still beat him.

“Never mind the size. He’s a middleweight. It’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog.

Anthony Joshua’s long-awaited clash with Tyson Fury has been pencilled in for March.

The two Brits have traded verbal jabs for almost a decade but have failed to meet in the ring – despite several attempts. Joshua has won and lost world titles since first calling out Fury who is enjoying his second reign as world champion.

But the pair could meet for all four heavyweight belts next year – if they remain undefeated until then. Fury will put his unbeaten record on the line against fellow champion Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday week in a fight which will crown the division’s first undisputed ruler since Lennox Lewis in 1999.

The rivals have already agreed to a rematch which is expected to take place on either October 12 or 13. Three weeks before that, Joshua is expected to attempt to become a three-time world champion when he takes on either Daniel Dubois or Filip Hrgovic at Wembley.

Dubois and Hrgovic will clash on June 1 in Saudi Arabia for the IBF world title which will be stripped from the winner of Fury vs Usyk due to overdue mandatory obligations. If Fury wins back-to-back fights against Usyk, and Joshua has his hand raised in London, the two are expected to meet in a £200million mega-fight early in 2025.

The Brits could then rematch next summer, with the second fight potentially taking place at Wembley. Last month, Fury claimed he is ready to fight into his 40s – and walk to the ring another 10 times. “We’ve talked about 10 more fights and that’s the aim. I’m not even 36 yet so I’ll go to 40, all these fighters go to 40,” he said.

“If they can line them up quickly I’ll do them. I can get the best out of me when I have two, three, four fights on the spin. If they can do it, fantastic. I’ll do Usyk, Usyk, AJ, AJ – if he doesn’t get beat in the meantime – so that’s four.

“Then I’ll do Daniel Dubois and Joe Joyce, then Joseph Parker, that’s seven. Then I’ll go to America and chuck in an American, maybe Deontay Wilder for a fourth time. Maybe a European, an Agit Kabayel. Then for the 10th I’ll probably do a trilogy with Usyk.”