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With Joshua watching from ringside, Fury seized the moment to call out his long-time rival and urged him to step into the ring.

He said: “Next I want to give you the fight you’ve all been waiting for; I want you AJ, Anthony Joshua

“Let’s give the fight fans what they want, a battle of Britain. I challenge you AJ to fight me, The Gypsy King, next. Say yes or no now.”

Joshua, however, declined the invitation and chose not to enter the ring, drawing jeers from sections of the crowd. He later fired back at Fury, saying: “Tyson… you’re a clout chaser. Tyson I’ve never had no problem getting in the ring with you, I punched you out when we were kids, and after seeing you in the ring tonight I’d punch you up again.”

“With all due respect tonight is your night and you I’ll sit across the ring from you in due time. You ain’t gonna tell me what to do. I’ve been chasing you for the last 10 years. When you’re ready you come and see me and tell me your terms and conditions. I’m the boss, you work for me. I’m the landlord remember that, you work for me.”

Joshua insisted he remains open to the fight but stressed that proper negotiations must take place before any agreement is reached.Tyson Fury

“There are negotiations that you go through. I have been at this table with him many times. In my heart, I’d fight Fury tomorrow, especially after watching that. There is not a problem fighting him.

“I am not here to get clout. I am here to fight. The contract will be sent over, we will go through the nitty gritty, and you will probably see us in the ring next, more than likely – but I am not here to get in the ring, shouting in someone’s face. If you look at my track record, I have never done that. I came to watch the fight, I saw what I saw, and I know what I need to do.”

When asked about a possible interim bout, Joshua added: “Good question. There is both options. We’ll see. I was in a serious incident maybe four months ago. I need to really check out what is going on with my return to the ring. But I’m here, keeping my eye on the game. I am not ducking anyone, there is just things in my life I need to tend to.

“I am sorting some things out. My brothers, their parents, the brotherhood of taking care of things. That is the priority right now.”

He then made a beeline for long-term heavyweight rival Joshua who watched on from ringside seemingly waiting in the rings.

But unlike many expected, AJ refused to jump in the ring and come face-to-face with his fellow Briton.

The pair instead exchanged words from opposite sides of the ropes, with Netflix and Turki Alalshikh teasing a fight agreement for this summer.

Joshua later clarified that he didn’t entertain any promotional antics as he didn’t want to take the limelight from Fury, but also that nothing is yet set in stone.Tyson Fury

He said: “It’s on him. It’s been hard to get it done in the past.

“Look, he’s the one that retired. I’ve been in the game, never retired. I’ve been standing strong for the last 13 years. It’s on him.

“He disappears, come back, disappears. I’m not here to chase fame, or chase hype.

“I’m a real person and fight whoever is in front of me, whether it’s him or the next person. It don’t matter to me.”

On whether the Fury fight is signed to come next, he added: “[Fury] could be a warm-up fight after what I saw tonight.

“We’ll see. I was just in a serious incident just four months ago and I need to see what’s going on with my return to the ring.

“I’m here and keeping my eye on the game. There’s real stuff happening in my life.”

Fury suggests he has already signed for fight

So for Joshua, the formalities are yet to be completed with a plan not yet set in stone.

The former champion is likely to take a warm-up fight, given he was involved in a car accident in December, and has not competed since.

But Fury is ready to go now and is trying to lure AJ into taking the fight immediately.Anthony  Joshua

Netflix teased that the fight could come on the streaming service in the autumn period.

And the Morecambe giant said he’d signed an agreement and hoped the Joshua fight was on it.

He said: “I’ve signed, done. It doesn’t really matter how many fights it is [on that deal], let’s just get one done.

“He was brought here tonight, ringside, for a reason: to get the fight done. I signed months ago, I don’t know if he’s signed, and by the looks of it, he’s not gonna.

“He didn’t want it, he was shellshocked, he didn’t know what to say. If it was me, I’d have jumped in the ring, faced off, let’s get it on.

“I don’t know [what the purse split is], I’m not interested in all that bulls***. If he gets £600m, good luck to him, and if I get 50p, good luck to me.”

Tyson Fury conserved energy in his comeback fight so that he could call out Anthony Joshua after the fight.

Joshua sat stony-faced close to the ring, initially refusing to reply, but the crowd were enthralled.

Joshua hadn’t seen much to terrify him in the Gypsy King’s routine win over Soviet man-mountain Arslanbek Makhmudov.

Fury was insistent, saying: ‘I challenge you, Anthony Joshua, to fight me, the Gypsy King, next. Do you accept my challenge?

‘Come on you big s***house, are we going to fight or not?’

Joshua finally replied: ‘Tyson, I’ve never had any problem getting in the ring with you. I punched you up when we were kids. And I’ll punch you up again.Anthony Joshua

‘You ain’t going to tell me what to do. I’ve been chasing you for 10 years. I’m the boss. I’m the landlord. You work for me.’

In the ring, Fury had staged a comfortable, carefully negotiated, virtually risk-free 12-round decision over Makhmudov.

Was it also clever? A performance more than good enough to tempt AJ into the ring.

Before the fight, an icy gale was gusting around the stadium as the fighters arrived, giving rise to the wry thought that it was fortunate there were no flyweights on the open-air card.

Fury had been in sparkling form all week. Four months of training and taking a lion for walks in the heat of Thailand had trimmed the belly and burnished his charm as well as his tan.

This was one happy camper returning to what he does best. He had gone so far as to encourage the giant Makhmudov to lift his own huge self off his feet at the main media event, to demonstrate the physical strength of his hulking Russian opponent.

It filled more seats, if perhaps not quite all the 68,000 – which was the sell-out target.

Saudi Arabian promoter/paymaster His Excellency Turki Alalshikh had said that he expects Fury to take the fight with Joshua ‘back here in London this year’.

Fury made his entrance to the strains of Blue Moon in honour of his late, great friend, Hatton the Hitman. When he disrobed he revealed the tribute ‘RIP Ricky’ emblazoned on his shorts.Tyson Fury

True to his reputation as a fast starter, Makhmudov charged out to land the first two fistfuls of swinging punches. Fury rode them, as he does, and the computer beneath that shaven head began coming up with the answers as he boxed his man and then treated him to some big shots of his own.

Out came the jabs, as Fury began to assert his dominance. Not only his orthodox lefts, but some switch-hitting rights as the Russian began to look confused.

Makhmudov the bear wrestler was fittingly rough and wild but took at least as many hefty hits as he delivered in the fourth.

The wiles of Fury were prevailing on the inside as well. It wasn’t pretty but it wasn’t going to be against this brawler. So it continued, Fury’s jabs landing more often than the frustrated Russian’s swings.

A trio of uppercuts hinted at Tyson wanting to finish it. Especially when he had Makhmudov reeling on the ropes midway through the eighth.

Fury was back in the set routine in the ninth and 10th – with a little more wrestling thrown in. Makhmudov was forced on to his knees. Not for the first time.Tyson Fury

Sensing restlessness in the crowd, Fury unleashed a flurry of uppercuts in the 11th.

The Russian looked ready to go, but was now in survival mode.

Who would have thought this would go to the last round? After a few more uppercuts to rattle the Russian, and a couple more right hooks for Fury to ride, to a victory as clear as the gaps in Tottenham’s defence.

Eleven rounds to one, surely – and from there to the real business of enticing Joshua to sign up for what will certainly be a sell-out.

After five failed attempts at retirement, Tyson Fury (35-2-1, 24 KOs) returned to the ring once again. At 37 years of age, the Gypsy King rejoined the circus and the race for world titles after defeating Arslanbek Makhmudov (21-3, 19 KOs) by a clear unanimous decision (120-108, 120, 108, 119-109)

Good performance from the ‘Gypsy King’, who showed in the packed Tottenham Hotspur stadium that the 16 weeks of camp have helped him to return with less rust than expected. It should be remembered that he had not been in a ring since his defeat to Oleksandr Usyk in December 2024.

Fury, who had a nice touch by wearing the words ‘RIP Ricky’ (for his good friend Ricky Hatton) on the back of his shorts, dominated from the start against ‘The Lion’ Makhmudov. It was a fight between two giants, but undoubtedly the best boxing, as well as most of the best and most powerful punches, were the work of the Englishman. A dangerous Makhmudov started the fight well, and scored some hard rights, but Tyson Fury’s jabs and precise hooks determined who was going to be in charge.Tyson Fury

From the eighth round onwards, the Russian tried to survive by grappling, which of course an experienced Fury took advantage of to work the ‘Lion’s’ side. The hooks and accurate uppercuts came from the Englishman with great clarity and perhaps some other opponent would have kissed the canvas, but Makhmudov stood his ground. In the tenth the Russian showed signs of being quite stiff and Fury pressed harder in search of the knockout. ‘Gypsy King’ persevered in the pressure, always with great mobility despite the inactivity. Great finish by the Briton, who worked this fight to give his opponent no chance.

With Anthony Joshua in the front row, after the fight came the challenge: “I want to give you the fight that everyone has been waiting for. I want you, AJ, Anthony Joshua. Let’s give the boxing fans what they want, the ‘Battle of Britain’. I want to fight you next, do you accept my challenge?” said Gypsy King. Joshua was unfazed and did not accept, so Fury insisted: “You’re a big wimp, do you want to fight or not? This time there is no escape; after 10 years in the making, let’s dance!” Joshua did say: “I’m the boss. You work for me. I’m your owner,” but he gave no clues about his immediate future. According to Turki Alalshikh it all “depends on AJ”.

After all these years, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are still on different pages.

Following Fury’s dominant victory over Arslanbek Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, it briefly felt like the moment had finally arrived when they might share common ground.

The Gypsy King leaned over the ropes and beckoned Joshua towards him. The rivalry suddenly felt alive again.

Joshua was not playing along with any mind games, though. Fury urged him to venture into the ring; Joshua stayed put. Another example of a subtle power struggle which has defined their history.

Joshua was not going to be hurried, but it seemed as though Team Fury – and the Saudi organisers – expected a different script. Before and immediately after the fight, Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority chairman Turki Alalshikh, a major power-broker in modern boxing, was speaking as if the fight announcement was imminent.

Netflix, the broadcasters of Saturday night’s comeback show, even announced the all-British fight on social media for autumn in the UK, which Fury’s promoter Frank Warren quickly shot down.

Backstage, Fury cut a weary figure and took aim at Joshua with his words.

“He didn’t want the smoke,” Fury said. “He came ringside to make the fight. If it was me, I’d have jumped in the ring. Ten years in the making and still there’s uncertainty if it’s going to happen next.”

For more than a decade, Fury-Joshua has never got past the hype. In another industry, a project left in development this long might be considered obsolete.

Now, Team Fury say they have signed the contract, and Joshua hasn’t. The blame game will continue.Tyson  Fury

There is a danger this will be yet another missed opportunity. The perfect moment belonged to 2019, or perhaps 2021. Now the question is simply – will the sport allow this entire generation to close without ever seeing them share a ring?

Fury and Joshua remain hugely important to the sport. If Joshua is the beating heart of boxing in the UK, Fury is the blood that surges through the veins.

He said he has a three-fight deal for this year but insisted there is only one fight he wants.

“If it isn’t AJ next, I’m not interested in boxing again. It’s either him or I’m gone,” Fury said.

Their rivalry has been a big factor in the heavyweight landscape for years without ever delivering the fight that British boxing craves.

Both men are past their peak, yet the fascination refuses to fade, partly because there are few genuine alternatives.

Moses Itauma is one of the most exciting young heavyweights in years, while welterweight Conor Benn continues to command headlines wherever he goes. Yet neither man commands the spotlight of Fury or Joshua.

Put Joshua and Fury almost anywhere – their strongholds of Watford or Morecambe, or Wembley Stadium – and it would still outdraw most fights on the planet.Anthony Joshua

“Let’s fight. What’s the hold-up?” Fury said.

There is a case for Joshua taking an interim fight. Fury returned from his fifth retirement with what was effectively a warm-up against Makhmudov, while Joshua has only fought YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in the past 18 months.

That means Joshua could enter a Fury fight having spent long spells away from elite-level opposition, whereas Fury showed that he can still navigate 12 rounds against a dangerous, if limited, puncher.

More importantly, Joshua has also had a traumatic few months outside the ring. A car accident in December, which tragically claimed the lives of two close friends, altered the emotional context around him entirely.

“I was in a serious incident maybe four months ago,” Joshua reminded viewers as pressure mounted on him to agree to Fury’s demands.

A lower-stakes contest could allow Joshua to rediscover rhythm without the suffocating spotlight that comes with a Fury build-up.

Fury is sympathetic to Joshua’s situation. He referenced his mental health struggles and how each fighter will have their own reality to deal with.

“We’ve all had problems – that’s life,” Fury said. “Taking interim fights, you can get chinned by anyone.”

Fury is not wrong about one thing – the wait can’t go on for much longer. The sport has already lived through the cautionary tale of Floyd Mayweather v Manny Pacquiao, which shattered records when it finally happened but fell flat.

Tyson Fury said that he has signed for fight with Anthony Joshua, but that AJ, his great rival, is yet to agree to heavyweight showdown; Fury declared that the fight must be made “now or never”; Fury called out AJ after a comeback win but said: “In my opinion he didn’t want no smoke”

Tyson Fury has demanded that Anthony Joshua accept his challenge and fight him next.

Fury revealed that he has signed for the all-British mega-fight, but that AJ, his great rival, is yet to agree to their heavyweight showdown.

Ever since Fury first became a world champion, back in 2015, and Anthony Joshua rocketed through the professional ranks after his Olympic triumph at London 2012, the clamour to see the two finally square off has only grown.

Over the years that fight has come close to being made and it seemed on the brink of confirmation after Fury won his comeback fight against Arslanbek Makhmudov on Saturday night.

Joshua was seated ringside at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and as soon as the fight was over, Fury addressed him directly, called on the fight and beckoned for Joshua to face off in the ring.Tyson Fury & Anthony Joshua

Joshua did not confirm that the fight with Fury was on and did not face off with his rival, though didn’t rule out it could still take place.

Fury however characterised that as hesitation and voiced his frustration. “Openly surprised. He was brought here tonight ringside for a reason, to get in that ring and make a face off and get the fight done. I’ve signed. I signed months ago. I don’t know if he signed,” Fury said.

“He was very evasive and didn’t give no definitive answers,” he continued. “I know one thing. He wasn’t saying yes.

“In my opinion he didn’t want no smoke. He didn’t want it. He didn’t look like he wanted it. He was just shell-shocked. Didn’t know what to say, He came ringside to make a fight. If it was me I’d have jumped in that ring, faced off, let’s get it on.

“10 years in the making and still, after all this time, there’s still uncertainty about if this fight’s going to happen next.”

Tyson Fury marked his return to the heavyweight mix with a composed points win over Arslanbek Makhmudov at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, before immediately turning ringside to call out long-time rival Anthony Joshua.

The 37-year-old Briton – out of his latest retirement after 15 months – was far from Fury in full flow, but had enough ring IQ and technical control to outbox Makhmudov across 12 largely one-sided rounds.

Fury had to be watchful at times as Makhmudov did land occasional overhand rights, but the Russian was largely one-dimensional as Fury took a wide decision with scorecards of 120-108, 120-108 and 119-109.

But before the scores were even read out, Fury invited Joshua into the ring, but his rival refused.

“I challenge you, Anthony Joshua, to fight me next. Do you accept?” Fury said after more attempts to get Joshua into the ring failed.

Joshua, who appeared to film much of Saturday’s fight on his phone at ringside, initially seemed reluctant to engage, before replying: “I punched you up when we were kids and I’ll punch you up again.

“You aren’t going to tell me what to do, I’ve been chasing you for 10 years.

“I’m the boss, you work for me. I’m the landlord. You work for me.”

Fury responded: “You [Anthony Joshua] are next. You are getting knocked out. Believe it.”

A bout that should have happened in both men’s primes, it now lingers as boxing’s great what-if – but it appears it may finally be made a reality.

In his first fight since successive defeats to unified champion Oleksandr Usyk in 2024, Fury moves to 35 wins, two losses and one draw.

For Makhmudov, 36, it was a third defeat in 24 fights.Anthony Joshua

Fury and Joshua – both two-time world champions – have carried British boxing on the global stage for more than a decade, yet despite years of negotiations and false starts, the fight has never materialised.

Now, though, this feels like their most significant breakthrough yet.

“I have been at this table with him many times. In my heart, I’d fight Fury tomorrow, especially after watching that. There is not a problem fighting him,” Joshua told Netflix.

“I am not here to get clout. I am here to fight. The contract will be sent over, we will go through the nitty gritty, and you will probably see us in the ring next, more than likely.”

Joshua, 36, beat YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in December, before suffering a tragic car crash in Nigeria later in the month which claimed the lives of his two friends.

“I was in a serious incident maybe four months ago,” he added. “I need to really check out what is going on with my return to the ring.

“But I’m here, keeping my eye on the game. I am not ducking anyone, there are just things in my life I need to tend to.”

Most fans argue the moment has passed. Both fighters are now in their late thirties and no longer at their physical peak, but the commercial pull remains enormous.

For all the focus on Joshua, Usyk still looms in the background as a potential sporting detour for Fury, although there is limited appetite for a third fight after Usyk’s dominance across their first two meetings.

Another route could lead Fury towards the winner of the 9 May clash between WBO world champion Fabio Wardley and Daniel Dubois.

For now, though, Fury has done what he needed. He returned and he won comfortably.

And if the showdown with Joshua truly is next, British boxing may finally get the fight it has spent a generation waiting for.

Former world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua has made his first public appearance since he survived a car crash in Nigeria that killed his close friends Sina Ghami and Latif Ayodele.

Joshua had kept a low profile since the accident on December 29, but he was seen at London’s 02 Arena on Saturday watching a Derek Chisora bout.

The British fighter was ringside as Chisora made the 50th and final fight of his career against Deontay Wilder.

Boxing promoter Eddie Hearn has said Joshua needs time to heal before considering stepping back into the ring himself.

Dressed in a white tracksuit, Joshua emerged with Hearn from a black people carrier as he walked into the arena past a number of camera crews.Anthony Joshua

There was no friendly welcome from his old rival Wilder, who was repeatedly linked with a world title bout with Joshua during the peak of their powers.

The American went straight past Joshua without any acknowledgement in a tight corridor inside the arena.

Joshua last fought before Christmas when he faced YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in Miami, but speculation continues over a potential bout with British rival Tyson Fury.

During a ringside interview with DAZN, Joshua said: “It’s amazing to be here. Boxing, especially British boxing, is booming.

A long-awaited showdown between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua remains one of boxing’s most talked-about matchups, yet the two heavyweights have still not met in the ring.

Years of negotiations, delays, and shifting plans have stalled the bout. Now, fresh comments from promoter Kalle Sauerland have brought renewed attention to the potential clash.

Speaking in a recent interview, Sauerland suggested the fight could finally take place later this year, although no official confirmation has been issued by either camp. The situation remains fluid, with fans still awaiting definitive details.

In an interview with iFL TV, Sauerland pointed to reports that the fight could be staged in Dublin around September or October.

“You also look at other fights coming up. Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are expected to fight later this year, possibly in Dublin around September or October,” he said.

Tyson Fury & Anthony Joshua

Itauma Targets Joshua After Statement Win

Rising heavyweight Moses Itauma has also entered the conversation following an impressive stoppage victory over Jermaine Franklin.

Itauma became the first fighter to stop Franklin, securing a fifth-round knockout at Manchester’s Co-op Live arena. The performance has strengthened his case for a high-profile bout.

When asked about a potential clash with Joshua, Itauma was direct:

“If that’s a fight to make, that’s a fight to make.”

Now 14-0 with 12 knockouts, Itauma is on track to potentially become the youngest British heavyweight champion in history.

Joshua’s Return Timeline Unclear

Joshua’s 2026 has been affected by personal tragedy following a fatal car crash earlier this year that claimed the lives of close friends. The incident delayed his return to training camp.

Promoter Eddie Hearn is now targeting a return for the 36-year-old between July and August.

What Comes Next?

Despite years of failed negotiations, a Fury vs Joshua showdown remains the ultimate goal for boxing fans.

Fury is currently scheduled to face Arslanbek Makhmudov on April 11, while Joshua is still searching for his next opponent.

Promoter Frank Warren has praised Itauma as the best heavyweight he has worked with, but is also considering a direct path to a world title fight against Oleksandr Usyk later this year.

For now, the boxing world continues to wait for confirmation of whether Fury and Joshua will finally share the ring.

Deontay Wilder had a clear message for Anthony Joshua following his win against Derek Chisora.

Wilder proved some of his doubters wrong as he was able to claim bragging rights against fellow veteran Chisora with a split decision victory at The O2 Arena in London.

It was a scrappy affair between the two men, with Wilder earning two knockdowns across the course of the 12 rounds, as the judges scored the bout 115-111, 115-113 and 112-115 to secure the narrow victory for the American.

Speculation has now begun over who ‘The Bronze Bomber’ may look to target next, with a clash against unified world heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk or WBO titleholder Fabio Wardley seen as two potential options.

It seems as if Wilder may have another target in mind though, after he crossed paths with long-term rival Joshua as he left the ring on Saturday.

‘The Bronze Bomber’ made his intentions known, as in a video captured by Boxing King Media he called Joshua out with a three word message.

“Let’s do it.”

The aftermath was then captured by DAZN, as Wilder revealed what he thought about the coming together with Joshua.

“He’s scared as f**k. Let’s do it.”

Wilder and Joshua were linked to a showdown for a number of years when they were each reigning world heavyweight champions, but for one reason or another, it was never able to come to fruition.

While both men may now be past their best, it would still be a big fight for the division, but for now it seems that Joshua’s focus is on landing a battle against countryman Tyson Fury, who himself knows what it is like to share the ring with Wilder after their epic trilogy.