Who’s your money on, Big John Fury or Carl Froch? One was an overinflated heavyweight, the other a world champion of inestimable courage and indefatigable spirit.
For those in any doubt about the capacity of Fury Snr to throw his weight about with skill and alacrity, just Google the last two bouts of his iridescent 13-fight career against Henry Akinwande and Steve Gerber.
The former deflated him in three, the latter in four. At least Akinwande would go on to win a world title. Gerber lost more than he won in a classic journeyman’s career. Fury came at both powered by his signature bluster, square on, screaming the odds until the violence he threatened was met by a greater force, felling him like a tree.
Sensibly he left it at that, beaten four times in total, including his debut, with a win percentage barely breaking 60 per cent. Tyson, the son of John, not God for the record, is responsible for the return to the spotlight of boxing’s foremost bore.
How or why the sport tolerates the tiresome braggadocio of Fury Snr is beyond me. Perhaps I am slow to the boil here, failing to grasp the social media appeal of the crazy man charging about the precinct with his head on backwards. Plus, lest we forget, the occasion marks the boxing debut of Netflix in the UK.
John Fury is really really REALLY not happy with Carl Froch @NetflixSports #JohnFury | #CarlFroch pic.twitter.com/U6ayKOI3hU
— IFL TV (@IFLTV) February 16, 2026Big John flaunts his Stone Age proclivities with pride, bleating about “bitches” in crude tirades intended to emasculate potential rivals, in this case Froch, working as a pundit for broadcaster Dazn.
Froch was on his case early, labelling Fury a disgrace and a bully for prior eruptions, which include headbutting the smallest member of Oleksandr Usyk’s entourage and attempting to throw water over an opponent of his second fighting son, Tommy Fury.
These elegant demonstrations of bravery are all part of the sulphurous circus proudly brought to you by Tyson, whose sixth comeback is, he tells us in MAGA tribute mode, intended to “make boxing great again”.
He might start by leaving Pops at home, but that would require the son to stand up to the father, which is a complex if necessary transition in the life of any fully-formed male.
Watching Big John shaking his fists about the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium you can see why Tyson might be leaving that for another day. As well as saving boxing in his comeback bout in April against Arslanbek Makhmudov, Fury is saving himself from himself, recognising that without gloves, fulfilment and validation is hard to find.
He also cites the tragic accident in Nigeria that claimed the lives of two of Anthony Joshua’s team as the trigger that reconnected him with the ring. A holiday in Thailand to escape the rain in Morecambe was obviously not doing it for him.
“I made my mind up there and then that I’m going to come back to boxing, because it’s something that I love. Tomorrow ain’t promised. Tomorrow is a mystery. So we have to live for today.”
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Fury informs us that on this occasion he will be training himself since none knows how to do this better than he.
In his heart he remains unbeaten, the two career defeats inflicted by Usyk a technical matter for the records, not for the truth as he understands it. What possible help could another voice be, when the internal speaker is omnipotent and Big John is permanently at his elbow?
Makhmudov is a big lump standing 6ft 6in tall yet is unlikely to give Fury much of a game, much like the scenario were Froch ever to grant Big John his wish and step into the ring. Rather than put “some f***ing respect on the name of John Fury”, I’d wager Froch would drop a right hand on his chin and send him to the same ignoble place where Akinwande and Gerber dumped him. The sooner the better.
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