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Number Seven Is Gonna Be Popping Out Anytime Soon”- Tyson Fury Shares His Plans for Retirement After Dillian Whyte Fight

Published 04/23/2022, 10:13 AM EDT

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If there was one thing Tyson Fury was equally good at other than putting his opponents into a deep sleep, it would be his way with words. In just a matter of hours, The Gypsy King would step into his last fight of an entertaining career of 13 long years. At the Wembley Stadium in London, in front of an astounding number of 94,000 people, he will lock horns with his former training partner, Dillian Whyte. This will be his 33rd appearance inside the ring and he will try his best to retire undefeated from the game.

Talking about Fury’s humor, one cannot just get enough. Even before the anticipated match against Whyte, Fury doesn’t fail to rob his fans’ lungs of clean air as he speaks. In his very recent encounter with Behind The Gloves, correspondent Michelle Phelps asked him about his plans after his retirement. Hearing the question Phelps popped, pointing towards his wife, this is what Fury said:

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Look at this, look at this [pointing towards his wife]. This is what’s waiting for me at home for the last 10 years. I’ve got six children at home. I’m gonna put another one in this over there. Number seven’s gonna be popping out anytime soon, right? And I’m gonna be a family man. I’m going to be a big fat pig. Fatter than I already am. And I’m going to sit back and bask in the sun in the seaside and put a cone in the sand. And don’t bother me don’t enter me for interviews. Don’t call me. I am out of bounds after the fight.

Looking back at the glorious career of Tyson Fury

Tyson Fury made his professional debut in December 2008 against Bela Gyongyosi. Although he was only 20 years old, he won his debut fight with a knockout in the very first round.

Watch This Story – Mike Tyson Says Tyson Fury Is Losing His Mind — And Nobody Can See It

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As he moved on, his next opponent was the seasoned Marcel Zeller who had by then a record of 21 wins out of 23 fights. However, Fury shined through the night again as he captured a TKO over Zeller in the third round.

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And then there were the likes of Blasko, Page, Rogan Johnson, and the most recent Deontay Wilder, just to name a significant few. The Gypsy King faced a series of obstacles in his boxing career while he actively took part in the sport.

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With now a professional record of 31-0-1, 22 KOs, Fury walks towards war one last time. As all prepare to witness the biggest night in British Boxing, what do you remember and cherish the most from Fury’s boxing life? Let us know in the comments below.

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Written by:

Samrat Sardar

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Samrat Sardar is a Boxing writer at EssentiallySports and is currently a final year undergraduate student of English literature. A passionate content creator, he has been writing since his high school days, and possesses work experience as a commercial writer for companies such as WordsKraft among others. Samrat believes he fell in love with boxing the day he watched Vasiliy Lomachenko share the ring with Guillermo Rigondeaux.
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Edited by:

Vibhanshu Kumar