Tyson Fury acknowledges the harsh truth about two Usyk fights

Tyson Fury

TYSON FURY feels Oleksandr Usyk was given an early โ€œChristmas giftโ€ on Saturday night.

The former WBC heavyweight champion canโ€™t believe he wasnโ€™t afforded more credit for his performance in their 12-round rematch at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The 6-foot-9, 281-pound Brit doesnโ€™t believe in โ€œrobberiesโ€ anymore, though members of his team used that word to describe Usykโ€™s second victory over him in their DAZN Pay-Per-View main event.

All three judges โ€“ Chicagoโ€™s Patrick Morley, Puerto Ricoโ€™s Gerardo Martinez and Panamaโ€™s Ignacio Robles โ€“ scored eight rounds for Ukraineโ€™s Usyk, who retained his WBA, WBC, WBO and IBO titles. After a second defeat to Usyk in seven months, Fury disputed losing 116-112 on each scorecard during an entertaining post-fight press conference early Sunday morning in Riyadh.

In some ways, however, Fury acknowledged that he ultimately has no one to blame but himself for suffering just the second official defeat of his 16-year pro career.

โ€œListen, it is what it is,โ€ a blunt Fury said. โ€œIโ€™m not gonna cry over spilled milk. Itโ€™s happened now. Iโ€™ve been in boxing all me life. You canโ€™t change no decisions. โ€ฆ I think when you donโ€™t get the knockout, this is what happens. You canโ€™t guarantee a win.โ€

The shorter, lighter, left-handed Usyk (23-0, 14 KOs) was the one who came close to scoring a knockout during any of the 24 rounds they spent in the ring together since May 18. He hurt Fury badly late in the ninth round of their first fight, when he knocked his buzzed opponent around the ring.

Referee Mark Nelson never appeared close to halting the action during that controversial sequence. Fury (34-2-1, 24 KOs) recovered rather quickly and made their contest competitive in the championship rounds, but he lost a split decision.

Canadaโ€™s Craig Metcalfe scored that bout 114-113 for Fury, who lost a point due to the knockdown Usyk scored when the ropes held up Fury late in the ninth round. Wisconsinโ€™s Mike Fitzgerald (114-113) and Spainโ€™s Manuel Palomo (115-112) both scored their first fight for Usyk, a former undisputed cruiserweight champ.

โ€œI felt I won the both fights,โ€ Fury said. โ€œI donโ€™t know what Iโ€™ve got to do โ€“ well, obviously, I know what Iโ€™ve got to do โ€“ knock him out to get a decision. But do you know what? Itโ€™s boxing, and it happens. And thereโ€™s no doubt in my mind I won the fight, and thatโ€™s it. We canโ€™t cry over it.โ€

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