If Fury prices himself out, the backup plan is a third fight with Usyk, and that’s not appealing. Fans have already watched Fury lose twice, and a trilogy would look more like a fight happening because there’s nothing else left.
“There’s nothing been signed yet, but Tyson’s indicated if it’s the right deal, he’ll definitely do it,” Warren said to Sky Sports News.
Turki Has a Decision
When Turki Alalshikh looks at this, he has to consider name value and Fury’s recent form, because in real life, failure doesn’t get rewarded. If you underperform repeatedly, you don’t get a raise, and handing Fury top-tier money after three poor outings would set a bad example.
“I do believe it will happen,” Warren added. “He may have a warm-up fight, but if it happens, it’ll be sometime in late summer.”
Risk of Another Loss
A tune-up makes sense because Fury needs one to show fans he’s not finished. But if Turki sets it up, there has to be an escape clause, because if Fury loses that fight, going ahead with Joshua would be pointless.
“When it does happen, I think it’s going to be massive,” Warren said.
For that tune-up, Fury shouldn’t face a total unknown. He needs someone fans recognize who doesn’t bring much risk, and a fringe contender like David Adeleye fits that purpose.
Anything less than Adeleye only strengthens what many already think, that Fury is being paid for what he did years ago, not what he is now.
Olly Campbell has been covering boxing since 2014, offering readers a clear ringside perspective and thoughtful analysis on many of the sport’s biggest nights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, corner adjustments, and the technical details that shape high-level bouts. Over the years, Olly has reported on major cards in Las Vegas, New York, London, and across the UK boxing circuit, earning a reputation for levelheaded, detail-driven coverage.