Alan Hubbard

Why should Tyson Fury’s phenomenal conquest of Deontay Wilder create a dilemma for British Olympic Association (BOA) chief Sir Hugh Robertson?

After all, Fury has never been an Olympian - but now he has again become a world heavyweight champion. So it is up to Sir Hugh, who now heads the Sports Honours Committee, succeeding his BOA predecessor Lord Sebastian Coe, to decide whether the most charismatic yet enigmatic of sports figures should be recommended for a gong. Or even a knighthood.

Sir Hugh, a boxing fan and former outstanding Sports Minister, is already under pressure from the media to push for a knighthood for the football legend Jimmy Greaves, who had his 80th birthday recently and remains unhonoured.

Now there are certain to be calls for the 31-year-old 'Gypsy King', widely acknowledged as Britain’s best-ever heavyweight boxer, to be duly anointed with a tap on the shoulder from Her Majesty. Or at the very least awarded a CBE.

Several in sport have been recognised for lesser achievements.

Moreover, only equally astonishing performances from one or two of Britain’s Olympians at Tokyo 2020 can stand between Fury and the BBC’s Sports Personality of the Year award, an event for which there were demands for him to be banned only four years back because of his hitherto outrageous behaviour.

The problem, of course, is Fury’s chequered lifestyle. The troubles that became public in 2015 - controversial statements on homosexuality and abortion, ugly headlines and struggles with depression, drugs and drinking - are only one chapter of Fury's story.

Tyson Fury holds his new belts along with his two Kronk Gym trainers, 'SugarHill' Steward and Andy Lee ©Getty Images
Tyson Fury holds his new belts along with his two Kronk Gym trainers, 'SugarHill' Steward and Andy Lee ©Getty Images

As early as 2012 he had talked of being in a dark place and of having an eating disorder, but I believe the time has come to recognise how he has picked himself off the floor of mental instability, just as he did went rising from the canvas in the final round of his first fight with Wilder. 

In three years he has gone from pariah to icon, raising awareness of mental health issues. Not since Muhammad Ali rumbled George Foreman in the jungle 46 years ago has there been such a seismic upset in boxing or indeed any other sport. 

The change of tactics forged by Fury's switch to the famous Kronk Gym, which saw him act as the aggressor during the seven rounds during which Wilder was floored twice and given a savage battering took everyone’s breath away, not least that of the 'Bronze Bomber'.

It was significant that Fury publicly thanked his British promoter Frank Warren from the ring for his part in hauling him back from the brink of self-destruction and conquering his demons during the dark period of his life. Significant too that Warren was telling everyone before the fight that if Fury uncharacteristically jumped on Wilder from the start he would stop him.

“Everyone thought he was crazy to go toe-to-toe,” said Warren. 

"Why is he crazy? It was like he couldn’t fight or something. Like he had no knockouts on his record. This is without doubt the best performance by a British fighter ever.

“Fury is now up there with Ali, Foreman and [Joe] Frazier because this is his generation. He beat the second longest-running champion ever in Wladimir Klitschko and has just beaten the biggest puncher. 

"For a guy who doesn’t always look the most athletic and calls himself a fat bloke he is more athletic than the others put together. He moves quicker, has a better boxing brain, great hand-eye co-ordination and can fight on the back and front foot as a southpaw or orthodox. He is a nightmare to fight because he works out your style.

“He has never got the respect he deserved for beating Klitschko in Germany and I think that was part of problem. He should always have been respected. He is a Traveller, he thought they were outsiders and he wasn’t being embraced. At least people recognise what he’s doing now.”

This was one of the greatest strategies in boxing history. Fury may act crazy but he is the sanest man in boxing when it comes to tactics.

In terms of infusing charisma into the sport, Fury is unquestionably the best since Ali. And like Ali he showed that he can be a destroyer as well as a dancer when it matters.

Fury is now being compared to Muhammad Ali ©Getty Images
Fury is now being compared to Muhammad Ali ©Getty Images

The hope now is that Fury, having established himself as the number one attraction in the world - boxing’s equivalent of Usain Bolt - will not regress but continue to keep a lid on the early excesses which saw so much opprobrium heaped upon him.

His acquisition of the WBC crown - traditionally the most authoritative and prestigious of the fragmented heavyweight division - means that Britannia rules the rings in what is still regarded as the richest prize in sport.

The increasingly excited talk of a pairing with Britain’s 2012 Olympic gold medallist and holder of the three other world belts, Anthony Joshua, has to be a tad premature. Not unexpectedly Wilder, still shocked but now in recovery, has indicated that he will take up the contractual offer to complete the trilogy of meetings with Fury, which is likely to take place this summer or in early autumn.

And ominously there is the possibility of the applecart - one temptingly filled with Golden Delicious - being upset.

The heavy-handed Bulgarian Kubrat Pulev is the mandatory challenger for Joshua’s IBF title and the bout is pencilled in for this June at Tottenham Hotspur’s new stadium.

Although he is 38 and a slow mover, Pulev has a solid record and can punch, with only one defeat in 29 contests which was to Klitschko - from whom Fury took his original world titles before they were confiscated. Interestingly, Pulev is promoted by Warren’s American partner Bob Arum, who does not mess with no-hopers.

Arum forecasts that the Bulgarian will beat Joshua, who showed his vulnerability in his first fight with Andy Ruiz Jr.

Such an result would put the kybosh on, or at least devalue, any showdown with Fury, which could take place at Wembley, Old Trafford, Las Vegas or in Saudi Arabia around this time next year. The Saudis were much in evidence at ringside last Saturday, no doubt with pockets stuffed with petro-dollars.

British sportspeople have been honoured for less in the past, with Shane Warne famously criticising Paul Collingwood for accepting an MBE after playing in just one of five Ashes Test matches in 2005 ©Getty Images
British sportspeople have been honoured for less in the past, with Shane Warne famously criticising Paul Collingwood for accepting an MBE after playing in just one of five Ashes Test matches in 2005 ©Getty Images

Fury is now the Pied Piper of pugilism, the fans will follow him wherever he goes. His achievements should not be underestimated. It takes guile as well as gumption to win world heavyweight belts away from home - first in Germany and now in the United States, where he has become a hugely popular, even endearing figure.

Before an all-British unifying bout for the world heavyweight championship can be secured there are other obstacles to be overcome. Fury and Joshua are contracted to rival promotional organisations, Fury to Warren’s Queensberry Promotions and Joshua to Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Boxing. The two promoters have allegedly never met and do not speak with each other. Additionally, the fighters have obligations to different TV networks, BT and Sky respectively, but as a similar situation in America with Floyd Mayweather Jr and Manny Pacquiao showed, when money is the common denominator a resolution can be found. And this mega-fight could be worth in excess of £100 million ( $130 million/€120 million).

'AJ' may hold more titles but Fury is now the bigger attraction and holds the whip hand, as does Warren, who is firmly back on top of the promotional pile. No doubt they would settle for a 50-50 split of the spoils, however.

All this and yet another lip-smacking heavyweight clash to come at London’s O2 Arena on April 11 when two other unbeaten heavyweights, the British champion Daniel Dubois - almost as big a hitter as Wilder - and Olympic silver medallist Joe Joyce clash for the British and European titles.

But for Fury, the world, as the late George Cole used to quip as Arthur Daley, is now his lobster.

As a result of dethroning Wilder he has been invited to meet Donald Trump at the White House and the Pope at the Vatican.

We wait to see whether the Gypsy King he will also receive an invitation to meet the Queen at the Palace.

Over to you, Sir Hugh.