Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua are heading to a 2021 mega-fight for the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world, with the Gypsy King’s trilogy battle against Deontay Wilder in December being abandoned.
The first of potentially two Fury-Joshua blockbusters next year has been made possible by the imminent expiration of Wilder’s contractual right to a rematch following the sensational loss of his WBC world title in a second clash with Fury in Las Vegas this February.


Fury will now make a warm-up defence of his belt before Christmas, while Joshua defends his WBA, IBF and WBO titles against mandatory challenger Kubrat Pulev on December 12.
There will no longer be a trilogy fight between Deontay Wilder (left) and Tyson Fury
Sources on both sides of the Atlantic confirmed on Saturday that Fury-Wilder III is now off.
Assuming neither suffers an unimaginable defeat this winter, Joshua or Fury should become the first undisputed world heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis.
The Joshua vs Fury fight is understood to be earmarked for the spring at Wembley Stadium, if the government lifts fan restrictions by then, or in either the Middle East or China.


The only conceivable impediment to boxing finally regaining an outright champion of its marquee division would be Olexsandr Usyk enforcing his mandatory right to challenge Joshua for the WBO belt if he defeats Dereck Chisora in London at the end of this month.
Joshua defeated Andy Ruiz Jr in their rematch in Saudi Arabia last December to win back his WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO belts
It would be in the best interests of the sport and their own finances for the WBO to grant a temporary waiver but if they refuse Joshua would be likely to relinquish that belt in favour of two near-hundred-million-pound paydays against Fury.


Joshua and Pulev will happen behind closed doors. Fury’s return to the ring against an as-yet unnamed opponent will either be devoid of fans, also, or located abroad in one of a number of countries ready to offer large site fees.
Fury, who made two tick-over appearances in America between his dramatic draw and ensuing sensational demolition of Wilder in LA and then Vegas, would prefer ‘a homecoming fight in England.’
But in boxing, as in all sports, money talks. Bob Arum, Fury’s renowned US promoter, has been hoping to stage Fury-Wilder III in the new NFL stadium in Vegas but time has run out.
Joshua’s fight against Kubrat Pulev will happen behind closed doors later this year
Joshua’s fight against Kubrat Pulev will happen behind closed doors later this year
A combination of crowd-blocking coronavirus in America as well as here and Wilder’s slow recuperation from surgery for a bicep injury sustained in his defeat by Fury have made it impossible for the Bronze Bomber to commit to fighting before the contract deadline ‘in a very few weeks.’ He is still unable to resume training.


‘Recovery [is] going well, I’m in therapy, I ended up injuring it during my last fight, somewhere up in there’, he told the PBC Podcast.
‘But everything is going great with it. That’s another thing, I’m focusing on recovery, getting myself back to full health.’
He added: ‘Oh yeah, I can’t work out now. Once I get healed with my arm I’m looking forward to just working out, being able to do the things I love to do.
‘Right now I’m just sitting back and getting taken care of, all meals being prepared for me, a lot of catering now between my fiancee and all the kids around me. It’s nothing we can complain of in this moment in time.


The American admitted that he has been unable to train as he continues his recovery
The American admitted that he has been unable to train as he continues his recovery
‘I know we all in the world are going through something together, it’s the first time the world is going through the same things.
We all have to survive and I love being around my loved ones through these tough times.’
Joshua received a £66 million purse for his return fight against Andy Ruiz Jr in Saudi Arabia last December, his last appearance in the ring.