Tyson Fury Reveals Five Ways Wladimir Klitschko Tried To Cheat Before Their Fight

Back in 2015 Tyson Fury earned his claim to fame when he became the first man to defeat Wladimir Klitschko in over a decade. Fury out-classed Klitschko via unanimous decision in Germany. With the victory, Fury picked up the WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO, The Ring, and lineal heavyweight titles. Although Fury came away with the win, it wasn’t all […]

The post Tyson Fury Reveals Five Ways Wladimir Klitschko Tried To Cheat Before Their Fight appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Back in 2015 Tyson Fury earned his claim to fame when he became the first man to defeat Wladimir Klitschko in over a decade.

Fury out-classed Klitschko via unanimous decision in Germany. With the victory, Fury picked up the WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, IBO, The Ring, and lineal heavyweight titles. Although Fury came away with the win, it wasn’t all smooth sailings for “The Gypsy King,” as he told talkSport.

The lineal heavyweight champion explained five ways that Klitschko tried to cheat before they shared the ring:

“I’m a boxing historian, especially when it comes to heavyweights. Klitschko was a good champion and done well in his career, but as a person I’ve no respect for him at all, none. The man’s a cheater, the man’s an out and out cheater, he’s a jealous person and he’s resentful. When I went to fight Klitschko, it was my first time stepping up and I was a ten-to-one underdog… The win meant so much to him that he was gonna do anything to get it, I mean anything and even when it means cheating.

“Even the week of the fight, they messed around with the weigh-in scales to start with. They said I weighed 17st 9lbs – I’ve not been 17st 9lbs since I was about ten years old. It was another mind game because you think you’ve lost a stone in weight. Even my uncle Peter said, ‘I thought you’ve been eating? Have you not eaten your food?’ I said, ‘I’m 18st 4lbs.’ We went back, on my scales – 18st 4lbs. So that was one little cheat. I said to him across the weigh-in, ‘You’ve rigged the scales, while you’re at it you can take them heels out of your shoes as well. He was as tall as me. Wladimir is 6ft 5ins, I don’t look up at a 6ft 5ins man. I said, ‘You’ve got stilts in your shoes, like platforms.’ So that was two things.”

Fury then explained that while he was moving around the ring canvas before the fight, as he traditionally does before he competes, he felt that the ring had been tampered with. Instead, the canvas felt like a memory foam mattress, as he believes Klitschko tampered with the ring to hinder Fury’s ability to move:

“Then, the day of the fight, I go down to the venue like I do every time, to check the venue out and check the ring out. I get in the ring and there’s ten inches of foam in this ring. It was like a memory foam mattress. I got on it and I said to my dad and my uncle Peter, ‘I cannot fight in this ring.’ I felt like I was on the moon. It’s energy sapping and the thing is that I’m a mover, so he wanted to take the legs away.

“Johnny Nelson [Sky pundit who visited Klitschko during preparations] told me he was training on the same canvas in Austria in his training camp. So he was used to it. For the first time in a long time he was boxing someone who wasn’t bothered about how much money he was getting, who wasn’t bothered about winning his belts. I was there to win. If he’s done that to me, how many people has he done it to over the career? And how many people needed that money and didn’t say anything? I was like, ‘I don’t need the fight anyway, so let’s just go home.’

Once the canvas issue was resolved, Fury pointed out that the gloves he had ordered for the fight were also tampered with. As the mandatory challenger, Fury was allowed to pick his own gloves for the contest. However, Fury was delivered the wrong kind of gloves with just an hour to go before the fight:

“With an hour left to go there was still no fight on, we were going home. I had my flights planned to leave. In the end, Vitali Klitschko said, ‘Take it out.’ And then it was a normal mattress. And then there was the problem with the gloves. In a world title fight as the mandatory challenger you can pick your gloves, whatever you wanna wear. The gloves I ordered were puncher’s gloves and the gloves they gave me were like two big cushions.

“They said, ‘These are the gloves we have, take them or leave them.’ I said, ‘You know what, give me the gloves, I’m not bothered about the gloves.’ At that point we couldn’t fly any gloves in, it was too late in the day. So we took the s***ty gloves that I didn’t want, that was another thing. In championship fights a person from the opposite team comes in the changing room and watches you get [your hands] wrapped up. Vitali was in my changing room, so we sent my dad to go into his changing room and watch him get wrapped up.

“But by the time my dad’s got there, he’s already wrapped up, bandages on, gloves on, ready to go. So dad says, ‘Take them off or we’re going home again.’ Anyway, my dad stormed out the changing room and had an argument with his manager, he said, ‘Come on, let’s go home, they’re cheating c***s. At that point I’m thinking, ‘God almighty, does it mean this much? Do you have to mess around this much to get a victory over a ten-to-one underdog?

“Every single cheat he tried, we pulled him up on it, we made him change and play fair… I believe Wladimir Klitschko was already beaten before he got in the ring on the night. Watching him walk to the ring, he had the face of a loser straight away because all of his little antics didn’t work. All I had to do was go in there, play my part and win.”

Since the victory over Klitschko, Fury has emerged as one of the sport’s biggest stars. He’s on a three-fight win streak, with one of his contests (against Deontay Wilder) going to a Draw. Now, he’s expected to take one more fight before rematching “The Bronze Bomber” in early 2020.

What do you think about Fury’s comments regarding his fight with Klitschko?

The post Tyson Fury Reveals Five Ways Wladimir Klitschko Tried To Cheat Before Their Fight appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Watch: Floyd Mayweather Gets Dropped During Charity Basketball Game

Undefeated boxing legend Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. recently took part in a charity basketball game known as the “50k charity challenge match.” During the game, Mayweather came head-to-head with Larry “Bone Collector” Williams. Williams crossed Mayweather up on the court, resulting in “Money” getting his ankles broke and eating it on the court floor. To […]

The post Watch: Floyd Mayweather Gets Dropped During Charity Basketball Game appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Undefeated boxing legend Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. recently took part in a charity basketball game known as the “50k charity challenge match.”

During the game, Mayweather came head-to-head with Larry “Bone Collector” Williams. Williams crossed Mayweather up on the court, resulting in “Money” getting his ankles broke and eating it on the court floor.

To make matters worse, Williams also sank a three-pointer. The entire audience in attendance gave an amused reaction while Mayweather himself laughed it off. Check out the clip here:

Mayweather is, arguably, the greatest boxer of all time with an undefeated record of 50-0. In his last outing, Mayweather picked up a TKO defeat over UFC star Conor McGregor. It also marked his 50th consecutive victory. There has been chatter about Mayweather potentially returning to the ring soon, however, the undefeated boxing legend seems to be enjoying retired life.

Rematches against the likes of Manny Pacquiao and McGregor certainly sound financially appealing, and Mayweather has been open to doing exhibition bouts similar to the one he did against Tenshin Nasukawa.

The post Watch: Floyd Mayweather Gets Dropped During Charity Basketball Game appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Tyson Fury Confirms When He’ll Fight Deontay Wilder In Rematch

The rematch is on. We now have official confirmation from both WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder and lineal champion Tyson Fury that they will rematch each other in early 2020. Fury announced the news during a recent Q&A session, where he revealed that his rematch against “The Bronze Bomber” has been “confirmed and signed” for […]

The post Tyson Fury Confirms When He’ll Fight Deontay Wilder In Rematch appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

The rematch is on. We now have official confirmation from both WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder and lineal champion Tyson Fury that they will rematch each other in early 2020.

Fury announced the news during a recent Q&A session, where he revealed that his rematch against “The Bronze Bomber” has been “confirmed and signed” for February 22, 2020. “The Gypsy King” also promised a more conclusive result the second time around. Check out the announcement here:

Fury and Wilder first met back in December with Wilder’s WBC heavyweight title on the line. Both men fought all 12 rounds, in which most boxing fans believe Fury out-classed the American. However, Wilder landed the only two knockdowns of the night. The latter being in round 12, and the argument could be made that the fight should’ve been stopped.

However, Fury got back to his feet and was able to finish the fight. When it was all said and done, the judges’ scorecards turned in a Majority Draw decision. Fans clamored for an immediate rematch, but unfortunately that was not to be the case. Since, both men have picked up respective knockout victories in the lead-up to their eventual rematch.

Wilder is expected to fight Luis Ortiz later this year before rematching Fury in 2020. Fury is also expected to face one more opponent before the highly-anticipated showdown, which Bob Arum believes could do numbers similar to Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao.

Who are you picking between Fury and Wilder in their rematch?

The post Tyson Fury Confirms When He’ll Fight Deontay Wilder In Rematch appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

BKFC 6 PPV Numbers Fall Well Short Of Promotion’s Estimate

Earlier this week, Dave Feldman had some good news about his latest event and the pay-per-view numbers it drew. At BKFC 6, Artem Lobov took on Paulie Malignaggi which generated a ton of interest, and Feldman had a high estimate for the card. “We got ou…

Earlier this week, Dave Feldman had some good news about his latest event and the pay-per-view numbers it drew. At BKFC 6, Artem Lobov took on Paulie Malignaggi which generated a ton of interest, and Feldman had a high estimate for the card. “We got our digital numbers right away,” Feldman told MMA Junkie. “In April, […]

The post BKFC 6 PPV Numbers Fall Well Short Of Promotion’s Estimate appeared first on MMA News.

Paulie Malignaggi vs. Artem Lobov Does Poor Numbers For Bare Knuckle FC

Bare Knuckle FC 6 headlined by Paulie Malignaggi vs. Artem Lobov reportedly did not do as well as claimed by president David Feldman. The highly-awaited grudge match took place late last month that saw Lobov come away with the unanimous decision victory. Feldman recently told MMA Junkie that the event was trending towards 200,000 pay-per-view […]

The post Paulie Malignaggi vs. Artem Lobov Does Poor Numbers For Bare Knuckle FC appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Bare Knuckle FC 6 headlined by Paulie Malignaggi vs. Artem Lobov reportedly did not do as well as claimed by president David Feldman.

The highly-awaited grudge match took place late last month that saw Lobov come away with the unanimous decision victory. Feldman recently told MMA Junkie that the event was trending towards 200,000 pay-per-view (PPV) buys, which would represent a huge success for the promotion.

However, according to MMA Fighting’s Dave Meltzer, it was in the range of 18,000 buys, at least on traditional television PPV. While the event was also broadcast online on FITE TV, Meltzer notes that “it is extremely rare that a pay-per-view event that airs on television does nearly the same number on digital.” The normal number seems to be 15 percent additionally on digital, but even that would be far from the 200,000 estimate of Feldman.

When it comes to Google searches, BKFC did 200,000 searches, which notably beat UFC Greenville which took place the same night. In addition, of the 18,000 buys, roughly 37.5 perecent were from UFC fans who had ordered UFC 235. Roughly 22.6 percent of the number also ordered the September rematch between Canelo Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin.

Feldman has yet to comment on these new PPV estimates, but it would be interesting to hear what he has to say.

Did you expect these numbers for BKFC 6?

The post Paulie Malignaggi vs. Artem Lobov Does Poor Numbers For Bare Knuckle FC appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

David Feldman Reveals What BKFC 6 PPV Numbers Are Looking Like

Last month (Sat. June 22, 2019) Bare-Knuckle FC (BKFC) held its biggest event to date. The BKFC 6 pay-per-view (PPV) went down from the Florida State Fairgrounds in Tampa, Florida. In the main event of the night, former UFC star Artem Lobov stepped into the ring against former boxing world champion Paulie Malignaggi. Both men […]

The post David Feldman Reveals What BKFC 6 PPV Numbers Are Looking Like appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Last month (Sat. June 22, 2019) Bare-Knuckle FC (BKFC) held its biggest event to date.

The BKFC 6 pay-per-view (PPV) went down from the Florida State Fairgrounds in Tampa, Florida. In the main event of the night, former UFC star Artem Lobov stepped into the ring against former boxing world champion Paulie Malignaggi.

Both men put on five hard-fought rounds following a rivalry that became extremely personal in the months leading up to the contest. When it was all said and done, however, the pair showed nothing but respect for one another. BKFC President David Feldman spoke to MMA Junkie recently to speak on the success of the BKFC 6 PPV.

Feldman noted that the PPV is trending around 200,000 buys at the moment:

“We got our digital numbers right away,” Feldman said. “In April, we did a certain amount, and in June, we did six times that digitally. It’s given us a gauge that we’re going to end up at the 200,000 line.”

The BKFC figurehead also mentioned that he believes the event proved BKFC isn’t’ about boxing vs. MMA, but instead serves as a middle ground for the two sports:

“I think what it did is it showed this is truly a middle ground,” Feldman said. “It’s not really boxing versus MMA. It’s a pretty good middle ground. Each and every one of these fighters have an equal chance of beating anybody. Most people didn’t think Artem had a chance at all.

“A lot of the guys that said we’re a gimmick and won’t be around, well, one year later, we’re around and we’re more popular than ever, and we’re picking up steam,” he concluded.”

Did you tune in for BKFC 6? What did you make of the bare-knuckle boxing event?

The post David Feldman Reveals What BKFC 6 PPV Numbers Are Looking Like appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.