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    Tommy Fury ‘in talks’ to fight 54-year-old Roy Jones Jr in shock showdown after controversial KSI win

    TOMMY FURY is in talks with boxing icon Roy Jones Jr over a shock exhibition bout, his dad John has claimed.The pair playfully agreed to share the ring after meeting one another in Saudi ahead of Tyson Fury’s crossover clash with Francis Ngannou last month.
    Tommy Fury was last in action against YouTube sensation KSI last monthCredit: Splash
    The former Love Island star recently agreed to face Roy Jones Jr, 54, in an exhibitionCredit: BOXING KING MEDIA
    John Fury has claimed his son is now in talks to face the former four-weight champCredit: ALAMY
    But that playful conversation, according to John, has led to very serious talks over a bout between the former Love Island star and the Hall of Famer.
    He told The Daily Express: “We’re speaking to Roy Jones Jr; we can do something with him.
    “I’m giving it some thought at the time of speaking. Roy Jones Jr is a great guy.
    “He’s a lovely fella, a standup man and a hall-of-fame great.”
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    Boxing legend Jones Jr, 54, is old enough to be the dad of 24-year-old Tommy, who narrowly eked past YouTuber KSI in his last outing in October.
    When pressed further on the bout, John said: “Yeah, maybe it is an exhibition or something, whatever he wants to do.
    “We’ve not really spoken in great detail, but he did say over in Saudi ‘Let’s do something’ and we’re all ears.
    “We just need to sit down and see what is best for Tommy and Roy Jones Jr.”
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    Tommy Fury eked out a controversial win over KSI in his last outing last monthCredit: GETTY
    Undefeated cruiserweight Tommy seemingly jumped at the opportunity to face Jones Jr after the American jokingly proposed they fight on the undercard a show headlined by John and Mike Tyson.
    Jones Jr said: “I said if your father fights Mike, me and you do the co-main event.”

    A shocked Tommy: “Hey, let’s do it.”
    Jones Jr responded: “That would be out of this world, brother. If they fight, me and him on the undercard.
    “That would be out of this world.”
    Tommy later said: “Let’s get this stuff made, regardless of if Mike and my dad don’t fight.
    “Me and Roy Jones exhibition, why not?”
    Jones Jr hasn’t set foot inside the ring since his 2020 exhibition with fellow icon Tyson, which ended in a draw after going the full eight rounds. More

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    John Fury offers shock assessment of son Tyson ahead of Oleksandr Usyk fight, saying: ‘I have seen a decline’

    JOHN FURY has given a shock assessment of Tyson Fury ahead of his fight with Oleksandr Usyk.The Gypsy King has pencilled in a February 17 date to fight Usyk, 36, in what would be a colossal four-belt heavyweight unifier.
    John Fury said he has seen a ‘decline’ in son Tyson from in his last three fightsCredit: AP
    He also warned Tyson to change tactics before his fight with Oleksandr UsykCredit: PA
    However, while the WBC champion remains unbeaten, his most recent fight against former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou gave him a mighty scare.
    And Fury Sr, 59, has offered his take with a stark assessment of his son’s chances for the Usyk fight after being left shocked about his preparation levels before the Ngannou bout.
    Speaking to the Metro via Free Bets UK, he said: “The 17th February is the date they have got to work towards.
    “But in my opinion, Tyson needs a bit more time to get his conditioning right and his weight right.
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    “For me it looked like he had lost 20lbs of muscle last time. Something was wrong.”
    Before Ngannou, Tyson, 35, had fought against Dillian Whyte and Derek Chisora.
    And while he collected wins in all three, John believes there has been a “decline” in his son’s form.
    He continued: “For my money, his last three fights, I have seen a bit of decline. Not a decline in ability but a decline in strength, power and physical condition.
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    “I don’t know what they are doing up there, you have to address it. He didn’t look himself out in Saudi.
    “He didn’t look right, everything had changed about him, his demeanour, his body. I was puzzled.
    “He said he had been training but there is training and there is training.
    “If you’re going at your own pace no one is going to tell you otherwise, no one is going to offend you or kick you up the backside.
    “No one can teach Tyson how to box, or teach him more than he knows. All they can do is put some muscle on there and make his body rock solid.
    “For my money he looked fat-thin, he should have been better, a bit heavier with a lot more muscle.
    “Tyson is a mammoth fella. He needs to power up in the body department and the only way you do that is a proper course and they take time and we don’t have the time.”
    It is not the first time John has called out Tyson’s trainers, having previously hit out at SugarHill Steward.
    And he also believes Tyson’s tactics will need tweaking before the Usyk bout.
    John added: “He still won the fight [against Ngannou] because that is what he does best. But for my money, the tactics were all wrong too.
    Tyson beat Francis Ngannou on points but suffered a scare after being knocked downCredit: Getty
    “You don’t try meet an express train head on, do you? He would have been better boxing off the back foot, slipping and sliding.
    “Against the old Tyson, Ngannou wouldn’t have landed a glove on him.
    “They keep missing this in the corner. They aren’t looking at what the other man is doing. He needs to change it up. All of a sudden, they think one tactic works for all fighters but it isn’t like that.
    “The style I am seeing is no good, it won’t be any use boxing Usyk like that, just stood in front of him.
    “You have to be clever and agile, as much as he [Usyk] is. But unless you are trained to do that, what can you say?
    “Usyk is nowhere near as big and powerful as Ngannou who is one of the hardest punchers in the world. But he is a skilful heavyweight and they need to practice for that.
    “He is taking more punches now than he has taken in his whole career and that could have shortened his career.
    “That is the worry we have got here. Tyson is a remarkable man but sometimes he needs to listen to a bit of common sense.
    “Usyk is a tricky man and you have to be on your best to beat him and the style he has got now, it won’t do the trick. He has got it in his head he can knock everyone spark out.
    “But no fighter in the world can keep taking big shots. He can’t keep taking them because all of a sudden a jab can sit you down. You have to be clever and the way he beats Usyk is more brain than brawn.”

    TYSON FURY VS OLEKSANDR USYK: ALL THE DETAILS YOU NEED AHEAD OF HUGE UNDISPUTED HEAVYWEIGHT BOUT More

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    Tyson Fury set for 2024 rematch with Francis Ngannou after talks with Saudi boxing chiefs before Usyk fight announcement

    TYSON FURY is on course for another money-spinning showdown with former UFC champion Francis Ngannou.The Gypsy King was embarrassed by the boxing novice in their Saudi showdown last month, getting dropped in the third round on his way to earning a narrow points victory.
    Tyson Fury locked horns with Francis Ngannou in a crossover clash last monthCredit: AFP
    The Gypsy King was dropped in the third round of the Saudi showdown, which he narrowly wonCredit: GETTY
    Promoter Frank Warren has revealed the Brit is in line for a rematch with the ex-UFC champCredit: GETTY
    MMA man mountain Ngannou immediately began campaigning for a rematch after going the distance with the WBC heavyweight king, which the boxing-mad Saudis have already discussed.
    During an appearance on The MMA Hour, Fury’s co-promoter Frank Warren revealed: “Tyson told me that he wants the rematch, and I know Ngannou wants it.
    “Because after the fight we were out there, we met at His Excellency [Turki Alalshikh]’s house and we had quite a lengthy conversation.
    “He’s a nice guy, by the way. He’s a really nice guy, good team around him, and I’m quite sure we’ll do it again.”
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    Before Fury can think about definitively settling the score with Ngannou, he has the small matter of a historic undisputed heavyweight title fight.
    The Wythenshawe warrior will look to become the first undisputed ruler of the heavyweights in over 25 years against Oleksandr Usyk on February 17.
    The multi-million-pound deal for the Riyadh Rumble includes a two-way rematch clause, which could mean Ngannou will be waiting on the sidelines for a while before getting his second crack at Fury.
    Warren said: “I don’t know [if it’ll be next for Fury]. It’s like jumping too far forward.
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    The stats from the fight show Fury landed more punches overall and in the majority of the rounds
    “Let’s get the big one [with Oleksandr Usyk on Feb. 17] out of the way first, and then we’ll see where we go. But I do think [it’ll happen].”
    Vicious knockout artist Ngannou shocked the world with his boxing know-how in the crossover clash.
    And after initially underestimating The Predator’s chances, Warren believes the Professional Fighters League pounder would give some of the other big names in the division a run for their money.
    The Queensberry Promotion’s chief said: “Look, I’d like to think I know about boxing.“
    “I’ve guided a lot of champions over the years, and a lot of my guys have gone into fights.
    “Certainly with my fellow promoters in America — Don King and Bob [Arum] and so forth — as underdogs, and have won.
    “And we’ve picked the right matches at the right time and won the fights.
    “I think Ngannou will give any of the guys in the top 10 — and he’s ranked now, I think couple of the organizations have dropped him in there, and they should do it, he’s just gone the distance with the world champion.
    “I think it’ll give all of them a problem, and there’s a couple of them there I think he could beat.”
    Fury faces Usyk in a historic undisputed title fight on February 17Credit: Getty More

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    Mike Tyson called me the world’s toughest white guy but my boxing dream died…I was broke & almost killed by machete gang

    STEPPING into the ring, 17-year-old Joe Egan stood his ground as blow after blow rained down on him from his ‘ferocious’ sparring partner Mike Tyson.It was the start of a lifelong friendship – and a promising boxing career – with the heavyweight champ, who dubbed the Irish fighter “the toughest white man on the planet” .
    Big Joe Egan was a champion amateur fighter dubbed the ‘toughest white man on the planet’Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    The Irish fighter is a close pal of Mike Tyson and was his sparring partner
    But after 80 wins in US Golden Gloves bouts and seven Irish titles, Joe’s dreams were cut short by a horrific car accident, sending him into a downward spiral that saw him shot twice in a gang attack, accused of attempted murder and jailed for shipping stolen cars abroad.
    Now ‘Big’ Joe, who made his boxing comeback at the age of 38 and went on to star in a Hollywood movie, tells The Sun about his incredible life – from being bullied at school to losing his girlfriend to Michael Flatley.
    While few would mess with the 6ft 1in hardman now, Joe – the eldest of seven kids – was mercilessly bullied by older kids in the Ringsend suburb of Dublin and in the UK, where his dad moved to find work.
    “When I was seven or eight, I made my Holy Communion, and two of the bully boys, who were 15 or 16, tried to take away my Communion medal,” he says.
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    “I held on to it and I got my two front teeth knocked out. 
    “When I got bullied it was physical, and when you got an arm broken or a nose broken the doctors would say ‘It’ll heal in a week’.
    “In all my years in boxing I only ever had one tooth knocked out. The boxing ring literally was a safe place for me, compared to the years of bullying.”
    Joe’s dad encouraged him into the ring as a young boy and in his first fight, at 12, he was pitted against future middleweight champ Steve Collins, who he says “pounded me to a pulp, absolutely hammered me. I lost on points but I went the distance.”
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    Tyson even visited Joe’s late mother several timesCredit: YouTube
    At 17, he travelled to the US to train with the Irish Boxing Team and met heavyweight champ Floyd Patterson who asked him to stay on in the States as a sparring partner for a new heavyweight hope, Mike Tyson.
    The pair – who remain close friends 40 years on – bonded over their experiences of being bullied, sharing the ring for over two years and living together in New York’s Catskill Gym. 
    Tyson gave him his flattering “toughest man” title after their first sparring session, when he was the fourth fighter in the ring and the only one to stay standing after three minutes.
    “If you are going to get battered you might as well get battered by the best,” Joe says. “I got battered by Mike Tyson and I got battered by Lennox Lewis when I fought him in 1985. 
    “It was a privilege to share the ring with both of them and it is an honour to say Mike Tyson has been my close friend for 40 years now. He visited my mother at home in Ireland four times.”
    Shot by machete-wielding gang 
    As well as going the distance with champion Lewis, and wearing the green vest of the Irish boxing team 11 times, Joe’s proudest achievement was a win against World Heavyweight Champion Bruce Seldon in 1988.
    But after going pro in 1990, his promising career was cut short by injuries sustained in a car accident and his life began to “spiral out of control”.
    Joe ploughed his money into the Lyndhurst pub in Erdington, Birmingham, where he says he upped takings from £1,000 a week to £16,000 a week.
    But it was here the brawler faced his most terrifying opponents yet, in the summer of 1998.
    “I had a demand for £500 a week protection money from a racketeering gang in Birmingham,” he says. “I bow down to royalty only out of respect but no man out of fear. After telling them no, the following week, on July 26, 1998, they attacked my pub. 
    “There were 37 of them armed with handguns, shotguns, machetes. It was a horrific day. 
    “It was savage. I got shot twice while trying to help a man who had fought in World War II, only to get shot at in a pub in a Birmingham housing estate by scum. It was a nasty 25-minute experience.”
    Joe took over the Lyndhurst in BirminghamCredit: Frank Peters
    The war veteran was shot in the hip and Joe was shot in the arm and nose, but says he was “lucky nobody died”.
    He adds: “The gang that attacked me had burned down some pubs before in the Birmingham area. They even burned down the pub  belonging to my old boss, Harry.
    “Then afterwards I got charged with attempted murder. I was defending myself.” 
    Dumped for dance millionaire
    Faced with jail, Joe ran up huge legal bills as he fought the charge, and his business went under. He was eventually tried for attempted murder and found not guilty.
    At the same time, his relationship with fiancee Lisa Murphy fell apart in bizarre fashion.
    “When Lisa saw that I was a sinking ship, she jumped ship to Michael Flatley,” he says. 
    “He was the biggest star of Irish dancing in the world, earning a million pounds a week. 
    “It doesn’t bother me now but at the time it was very upsetting. 
    “Mike Tyson called me ‘the toughest white man on the planet’, but even my heart has been broken by a woman. 
    “There was a lot of anger there at the time, but it wasn’t always an angry relationship. There was a lot of love at one time. I thought we’d be together forever.
    “But I don’t hold a grudge against Michael or Lisa anymore.”
    After a six-year romance, Lisa split from the Lord of the Dance star who is now battling cancer, and Joe says: “I sincerely hope he wins this fight.”
    Joe with former fiancee LisaCredit: Newsteam
    She went on to a high profile romance with Michael FlatleyCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Jail time
    With problems piling up, Joe says he got “involved in criminality” and in 2001, he was jailed for two and half years for his part in an international car-ringing gang.
    “My business was failing and I ran out of money so I got involved with crime to pay for my legal fees,” he says. 
    “I got grassed on and sent to prison. It shouldn’t have happened. I hadn’t been in trouble with the law before but all these things happened in my life. 
    “I don’t believe crime pays. Tragically, I was forced to go down that road but I regret it. 
    “The only time I saw my dad cry was because I was going to prison. The shame I had, the disgust I had for myself, the hurt and pain I had caused him, I was so ashamed of myself. 
    The only time I saw my dad cry was because I was going to prisonBig Joe Egan
    “I told him I’ll never get into trouble again. 
    “It’s not nice being locked up, you’re confined for 23 hours a day. I wouldn’t recommend it. But what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.”
    While in prison, Joe trained in the gym and on his release he announced his comeback, at the age of 38, after a 12-year absence.
    He won in the fifth round, against a pal in Dublin, and says: “It was good to be back as Joe the boxer and not Joe the criminal.” But he went back into retirement after the lone fight.
    New life
    His days in the ring finally over, Joe turned to acting after meeting Brit star Tamer Hassan and signing up with his agent, who sent him to audition for the 2009 Guy Ritchie hit Sherlock Holmes.
    Cast as a boxer who fights Robert Downey Jr’s fictional detective, Ritchie told him, “I’ve been trying to get you in one of my films for a long time,” adding that Downey Jr had also suggested him because of his “fearsome reputation”. 
    “I couldn’t believe that these people even knew me, but they knew me because of my close friendship with Mike Tyson,” he says.  
    “When he told me the amount I was getting paid, it was more than any of my professional fights. 
    “I said, ‘Guy, for that money, Robert Downey Jnr can really hit me if he wants to. I’ve been beaten up for a lot less.”
    Although the fight scene was dropped, the boxer instead filmed a specially-written prison scene as a character named Big Joe. 
    He went on to appear in Prize Fighter with Russell Crowe and has since made guest appearances in numerous TV shows, including Brassic in 2019. 
    Big Joe squares up to Sherlock in the 2009 movieCredit: Warner Bros
    The former boxer (far left) in the 2019 film Once Upon a Time in LondonCredit: Alamy
    Joe with A-lister Robert Downey JrCredit: Twitter
    Joe’s colourful life has earned him some high-profile pals including Ricky Hatton and heavyweight champ Tony Bellew, who is set to enter the I’m A Celebrity camp this week as a late arrival.
    More controversially, he has also been associates with notorious gangsters, including Daniel Kinahan, from the infamous Irish organised crime family, and Gerry Hutch, who was the prime suspect in the 2016 murder of David Byrne at a boxing weigh-in at the Dublin Regency Hotel, which sparked a tit for tat feud amongst rival gangs that left dozens dead.
    He previously told the Irish Mirror the horrific attack was “wrong on every level”.
    He added: “David Byrne was my friend and I know his dad Jaws Byrne since I was a little boy.
    “That room was full of boxing fans and boxers, so to go in and spray a machine-gun in a room full of people that weren’t involved in any criminal activity, that’s so wrong on so many levels.”
    While his career in the ring was short, he had no regrets.
    “I had nothing else to prove to anybody, nothing left to prove to myself,” he says. “I’ve been hit in the chin by some of the best punches in the world but they never once knocked me down – something I can be proud of.” More

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    I was drinking beer when I was plucked out of crowd to fight main event after heavyweight got cold feet in dressing room

    TIM TOMASHEK still holds the honour of being the unlikeliest heavyweight title challenger having been plucked from the crowd just hours before competing for the WBO belt.Tomashek found himself going from spectator to challenger for Tommy Morrison’s dark brown and gold belt on a warm August night in Kansas in 1993.
    Tommy Morrison was due to defend his WBO heavyweight title against Mike Williams in 1993Credit: AP
    The Rocky V star was left without an opponent just hours before the fight when Williams got cold feetCredit: GETTY
    Tim Tomashek – who was drinking beer in the crowd – stepped up on just a few hours’ notice to fight for the WBO strapCredit: ESPN
    Morrison – who had starred in Sylvester Stallone’s ‘Rocky V’ three years earlier – was set to defend his title against Mike Williams.
    But Williams, who had promoters fearing the worst due to several missed media obligations, put the main event in jeopardy by refusing to leave his dressing room.
    Keen to ensure Morrison’s title defence went ahead, well-respected manager Bruce Trampler frantically sought after a late replacement.
    And he quickly turned his attention to Tomashek, who was in the crowd as a fan and a potential backup.
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    When recalling the circumstances in which he came to be the backup fighter, Tomashek told the Chicago Tribune: “He says, ‘Hey, do you wanna fight Tommy Morrison?’
    “Well, I’ve heard that kind of thing before, so I said, ‘Naw, I want to go to the Packers tailgate party.’
    “He says, ‘They’ll pay you $2,500 just for showing up here.’ I’m out the door.”
    Tomashek didn’t expect to get the call to lace up his gloves, so much so he was chugging beers and enjoying hotdogs in the stands.
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    Morrison wasn’t aware of Williams’ withdrawal until he got to the arenaCredit: GETTY
    But the call did come, prompting him to go backstage and do what little warm-up he could while under the influence and re-emerge two hours later for what would be the biggest fight of his career.
    Tomashek put up as much of a challenge as one would expect an intoxicated short-notice replacement to, suffering a fourth-round TKO defeat.
    ‘Doughboy’ retired on the stool but insisted he was “okay” as the referee waved off the fight, which sparked a chorus of boos from the frustrated crowd.
    Tomashek wowed viewers across the world with several witty one-liners in his post-fight interview.
    When asked how he trained for the fight, he said: “They beat me up at work.”
    Asked for his thoughts on why he got the call to replace Williams, he replied: “They knew I’d put up a good tussle – or else they like bloodshed.”
    Tomashek had viewers in stitches when quizzed about the best part of the short-notice showdown.
    He replied: “Not having to wait in line to get tickets.”
    Morrison, who would go on to lose his WBO strap in sensational fashion less than two months later, was completely clueless about the switcheroo of opponents until he arrived at the Kemper Arena.
    He revealed: “I didn’t know I was fighting Whatsisname until I got out there.
    “It wasn’t difficult. The guy was basically in there to survive.”
    Tomashek would go on to fight 20 more times before calling time on his career in 1996 with a TKO victory over Ken Doss.
    Morrison would go on to lose his title to Michael Bennett two months laterCredit: GETTY More

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    Deontay Wilder takes swipe at Anthony Joshua saying Brit’s team urge him to keep schtum because ‘he keeps slipping up’

    DEONTAY WILDER has taken a swipe at Anthony Joshua by claiming the Brit’s been told to keep schtum on boxing matters.That’s because “he keeps slipping up” and leaving a mess for his own team to clean up.
    Deontay Wilder has aimed a swipe at Anthony Joshua ahead of their potential meetingCredit: Richard Pelham / The Sun
    AJ and Wilder could meet in Saudi Arabia next year for a heavyweight battle provided they each come through their respective test on December 23.
    Joshua will travel to the Middle East to fight Otto Wallin before Christmas.
    Meanwhile, Wilder will take on Joseph Parker after the date was freed up by Tyson Fury’s decision to fight Oleksandr Usyk in February.
    And the stage is now set for Joshua and Wilder to battle each other next year, with both men favourites for their December clashes.
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    However, American ace Wilder has upped the stakes by claiming Joshua’s mouth is getting him in trouble.
    Wilder claims the Brit’s promotional team are frustrated with his choice of words when talking about boxing matters.
    But he can’t wait to eventually fight Joshua in 2024 after claiming talks for a bout have been ongoing for SIX years.
    Wilder told The Hook: “What I wouldn’t say it’s down to is money because he asked for $50million and we provided that for him. 
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    “He did not take it, and and the only way you disregard that is try to make a mockery of it, try to make a joke of it, try to make it seem to the public that it is not real.
    ‘They came up with $50m because he spoke, that’s why they don’t have Joshua speaking a lot on his own behalf and if he does speak, Joshua always slips up and says things that aren’t appealing to his people. 
    “They had to play clean up. But most of all I think is his management promotion that has really helped it.
    “Actually I don’t think, I know for a fact, that it’s been management, it’s been promotion that have held him back from fighting me because you know, he’s a fighter.
    “Of course, many times we get to the point where we say no, but then that peer pressure of people kicks in. ‘When you gonna fight Wilder? When you gonna fight?’ It’s been over six years.
    “He wanted to fight, he wanted to accept it, but his handler didn’t want it because Joshua is the money-maker for the company.
    “And if he goes down, so does the business.”

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    Muhammad Ali’s MMA star grandson opens door to boxing switch after Francis Ngannou’s performance against Tyson Fury

    MUHAMMAD ALI’S grandson Biaggio has opened the door to a boxing switch following Francis Ngannou’s performance against Tyson Fury. The Ali family is rich in boxing history, with Biaggio’s grandfather considered The Greatest.
    Biaggio Ali Walsh is Muhammad Ali’s MMA star grandson
    Francis Ngannou dropped Tyson Fury during his loss to the boxing champCredit: Getty
    Meanwhile his auntie Laila was an undefeated two-weight world champion and brother Nico is a current middleweight contender.
    But Biaggio gave up his dreams of the NFL to instead pursue MMA, training alongside Ngannou at the Xtreme Couture gym in Las Vegas.
    And he watched as Ngannou, 37, dropped Fury, 35, in their crossover clash and was deemed mighty unlucky to lose a split-decision.
    The bravery shown by the ex-UFC star has Biaggio refusing to rule out following in his iconic family’s footsteps one day.
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    He told SunSport: “I’m definitely open to the possibility. Who would have ever thought Francis would fight Tyson Fury? 
    “That was a completely unexpected thing that happened and it happened. So, I think in the future anything can happen. 
    “Maybe I have a successful MMA run and then I say, ‘Hey, let me go box and boxer.’ Then I could go to boxing. 
    “But, right now I’m focussed on MMA, I’m an MMA fighter right now and I’m only at the beginning of the beginning of my career. 
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    “The beginning would be right when I turn pro and I haven’t turned pro yet.
    “I’d like to turn pro next year, God willing I come out victorious in the next fight. But yeah, I’m open to anything.”
    Biaggio, still an amateur in MMA, had fierce debates with 8-1-1 boxing brother Nico on who would come out on top between Fury and Ngannou.
    He said: “Nico had Fury, I had Fury-ish, but I was thinking Francis had the power so I was unsure. 
    “But the way Francis looked, it surprised me and I think it surprised a lot of people as well. 
    “If you watched Francis’ fights in the UFC, he swings wild, when he knocked out Alistair Overeem the striking wasn’t as sharp. 
    “But Francis knew and his team knew as well that going into boxing was a whole different sport, this was his first boxing fight. 
    “It’s a lot more technical, the sweet science right? That’s what he was stepping into. 
    I’m definitely open to the possibility. Who would have ever thought Francis would fight Tyson Fury? Muhammad Ali’s grandson Biaggio on boxing switch
    “But seeing Francis come out and be calm and use his jab and use it to set up other things, he really shocked the boxing world and really represented the MMA guys super well.” 
    Nico, 23, is coming off his first defeat as a boxer, losing a majority-decision to Sona Akale, 35, in August.
    Meanwhile Biaggio, 25, is 5-1 and signed to the Professional Fighters League.
    He has won all five of his PFL bouts by knockout and returns this Friday in Washington, DC against Joel Lopez.
    Biaggio hopes it will be his final amateur bout before turning pro next year.
    He said: “The ideal 2024 would be finish this fight with a win and get my pro career started.
    “I don’t expect to jump into the tournament, that would be foolish I think.
    “As soon as I turn pro I need to build some resume, build some stability, maybe still be showcase bouts on the card. 
    “Regardless of where I am on the card I’m still fighting, still getting that experience so the ideal 2024 would be to get three or four fights as a pro and build my record.” 
    Boxer Nico Ali Walsh, middle left, next to brother BiaggioCredit: rashedaali1/instagram More

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    Jake Paul called out to two-fight MMA and boxing deal by Derek Brunson after leaving UFC for PFL

    JAKE PAUL has been called out to a two-fight MMA and boxing deal by Derek Brunson. Paul is set to make his debut in the cage next year after signing with the Professional Fighters League, a rival to the UFC.
    Derek Brunson has left the UFC for the PFLCredit: @DerekBrunson
    Jake Paul is set to make his MMA debut with the PFL
    And Brunson also left the UFC after over a decade of service to sign with the PFL, which operates in a win-or-go-home seasonal format.
    When Paul announced his boxing return for December 15 Brunson was an early bookies’ favourite to be the opponent.
    Instead, little-known 10-1-1 pro boxer Andre August, 35, was confirmed as the YouTuber-turned boxer’s shock next fight.
    But Brunson is leaving the door open to settling the score with Paul now the pair are both under the PFL banner.
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    He told SunSport: “Jake Paul is now with the PFL, we’ve got a bit of history. 
    “He asked Dana to fight me a couple years ago, so that’s a possibility. People saw me going over to the PFL and thought the timetable was there and it was perfect. 
    “Like I say, in the past me and Jake had discussions for a boxing match but I was under contract with the UFC. But things may align now.” 
    Paul, 26, was beaten for the first time in February, losing a split-decision to Tommy Fury, 24, in Saudi Arabia.
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    But he bounced back in August with a ten-round points win over ex-UFC star Nate Diaz, 38.
    Paul proposed a double header with the return bout in MMA and offered Diaz over £10million to do so.
    And despite the deal being rejected, Brunson, 39, is ready for a similar two-bout deal.
    He said: “Yeah, I’d be open to that. I love challenging myself, so definitely I’d be up for that.” 
    Brunson makes his PFL debut on Friday in Washington DC against former PFL champion Ray Cooper, 30.
    It could set him up to enter the PFL’s season next year, where stars compete in a four-stage knockout format where $1m is up for grabs.
    Brunson said: “I wanted something new, something to excite me, something to make me want to train really hard.
    “I’d been in the UFC for so long and I felt it was the time to change and the PFL came about and now here we are. 
    “You’re not going to go out there and just lay down, that’s just silly but just being able to have a fresh start, new fighters, the $1million tournament, I can just start over.
    “I can control my own destiny and that was a really big thing for me.” 
    Derek Brunson, right, was in the UFC for over a decadeCredit: Getty More