Sept. 13 (UPI) -- Heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury says he is exactly where he is supposed to be before his bout against Sweden's Otto Wallin on Saturday in Las Vegas. He also says it's up to "lively" boxers to keep the sport popular.
The 31-year-old Englishman has experienced the highest of highs and lowest of lows during his decorated boxing tenure, battling boxing bans, drug use, media criticism, depression and thoughts of suicide before his re-emergence.
But the "Gypsy King" never has been at a loss for words or personality when heading into a fight. Fury wants to wallop Wallin in his fifth bout in 15 months after a hiatus of nearly 2 1/2 years.
"Boxing fans know what's going to happen when we get in the ring," Fury told UPI. "It's going to be a fight. He's in good shape and I'm in good shape. May the best bloke win. No regrets. No hard feelings, whoever wins."
The "rejuvenated" Fury (28-0-1) says he wouldn't be in the fight if he didn't feel good going into it. He has a looming high-profile rematch against Deontay Wilder (40-0-1) set for February, but says he isn't focusing on that clash, despite many viewing the Wallin match as a primer.
State of the heavyweight
Fury said the heavyweight division is "on fire." The return of the 6-foot-9 fighter is part of the reason for that.
Andy Ruiz Jr. holds the IBO, IBF, WBA and WBO belts after beating Anthony Joshua in June. Wilder has the WBC belt. Ruiz and Joshua rematch in December.
Wallin (20-0) spars with Joshua, a common Fury critic. The 28-year-old southpaw stands at 6-foot-6. Wallin had a no-decision in an April clash with Nick Kisner.
Pre-fight news conferences are typically filled with trash talk between fighters, including Fury. But the resurgent star says that's what keeps the sport popular.
"Boxing revolves around champions, whoever the champions are of that era and time," Fury said. "If you have a lively world champion who talks a lot, then people might be more interested in him than someone who is boring."
Fury contends the sport is still shown on mainstream TV and many big fights are on national TV globally. He is part of the reason for that after signing with promoter Top Rank Boxing -- a major HBO business partner previously -- in February. He also agreed to a lucrative and exclusive series of fights with ESPN.
HBO announced it was dropping its boxing coverage in September 2018, ending a 45-year run.
Streaming service DAZN hired former ESPN president John Skipper as executive chairman before agreeing to deals for more than 50 combined boxing bouts and MMA fights in 2018. Showtime and Fox Sports also have stepped into the ring.
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