Tyson Fury, who is also known as the “Gypsy King”, has made a name for himself in the boxing ring after returning from a three-year break he took in favour of his mental health. 

Fury, a professional British boxing champion, currently holds all major titles in the sport, including Ring Magazine, lineal heavyweight and World Boxing Champion.

The rare record set by the 33-year-old boxer has helped him become the second fighter to claim all four recognised world titles, which were previously under the name of WBA, WBO, and IBF.

Also Read: Tyson Fury promises knockout finish to epic Wilder trilogy

Fury beat long-time champion Wladimir Klitschko nearly six years back and ended his reign in the heavyweight division, which had been persistent for more than a decade. The 2015 victory in Germany’s Dusseldorf, which ended with a unanimous decision, has been attributed as the fight that revived the boxing category, according to reports from Planetsport,

The renowned boxer has also garnered the accolade of being the only British individual who has been named Ring Magazine Fighter of the Year twice, in 2015 and 2020.

Deontay Wilder is known to be a nemesis of the Gypsy King and the rivalry unfolded in an epic thriller on Saturday in the WBC title fight. 

The rivalry goes back to December 2018, when drama-filled 12 rounds followed by a controversial twist with the verdict saw a tie match with the scorecards at 115–111 for Wilder, 114–112 for Fury. The decision had satisfied no one as the two met 15 months later, this time the British boxer ending Wilder’s unbeaten record.

Fury had won all three of his clashes against prominent individuals like Otto Wallin, Tom Schwartz and Wilder.

On Saturday, after his win over Wilder, in the third and final bout of their memorable trilogy when he dropped Wilder twice before finishing him via violent knockout punch in Round 11, Fury added any feather to his hat by defending his WBC and lineal titles inside T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.