‘From 95,000 at Wembley for the heavyweight championship… to taking out the bins!’: Tyson Fury and his trainer SugarHill Steward come back down to earth with chores after dizzying high of win over Dillian Whyte
- Tyson Fury vowed to retire from boxing after beating Dillian Whyte at Wembley
- An uppercut finished challenger and Fury underlined his status as a great
- From buzz of fighting in front of 94,000 fans at Wembley, it was back to reality
- Fury shared a video of himself and SugarHill Steward taking out the bins
Tyson Fury has come back to reality with a thud, going from the adrenaline rush of beating Dillian Whyte at a packed Wembley, to taking out the bins.
The heavyweight champion was carried to the ring on a throne before dispatching Whyte with an uppercut in one of the great nights of his career.
He vowed to retire afterwards and was stuck into the mundane chores of everyday life on Monday.
Fury and SugarHill Steward took out the bins and drove to the tip on Monday afternoon
Fury and Steward then tucked into some food and the ‘Gypsy King’ is easing into retirement
The trainer said it is the ‘little things’ like taking the bins out that help the big accomplishments
Tyson Fury had one of the great nights of his career in beating Dillian Whyte at Wembley
With Fury filming, SugarHill Steward was seen in front of a huge pile of boxes and rubbish and the pair set about stacking them into the back of a truck for a trip to the tip.
The ‘Gypsy King’ said: ‘From 95,000 people at Wembley and the heavyweight championship of the world… to me and Sugar doing the bins.
‘Straight back off the motorway, on our own, getting it done. Tip run for us.
His renowned trainer then offered: ‘This is how everything comes to be, the little stuff.’
The pair later tucked into a barbecue after their trip to the dump and perhaps the magnitude of Saturday night will now being to sink in for the 33-year-old.
He completely out-classed Whyte in front of a sell-out Wembley in what was the highest gate in British boxing history.
Fury celebrated in style in front of a sell-out crowd at Wembley on Saturday night
Fury is in his prime but was speaking about retiring after beating Whyte at the weekend
Afterwards, Fury said it would be the last time his fought professionally. ‘I promised my lovely wife Paris that would be it after the [Deontay] Wilder fight. But I got offered a fight at Wembley and I owed it to the fans. What a way to go out,’ he explained.
But Top Rank boss and co-promoter Bob Arum rubbished the idea that Fury will simply walk off into the sunset.
‘No, he definitely won’t retire,’ Arum told USA Today Sports. ‘Of course not. Are you crazy? We’ll have plenty of time to talk everything out.’
A cross-over fight with UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou could be on the cards and the Cameroonian was present at Wembley.
He wants to be able to take on Fury but remain in the UFC but his contract is up at the end of this year and the ‘Predator’ can explore his options in free agency.
Whyte was floored by a big uppercut and Fury cruised to another victory to stay undefeated
Fury talked up the contest, saying: ‘Big Francis Ngannou was here, he’s on my hit list in an exhibition fight, either in a cage, in a boxing ring, boxing gloves, UFC gloves, we can make it happen,’ Fury said.
‘He’s a monster of a guy, I’m a monster of a guy, so that will be a Clash of the Titans for sure.’
Oleksandr Usyk will rematch Anthony Joshua and depending on the outcome of that battle, Fury could be tempted to come back and face the winner.
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