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Why the rest of 2021 is so important to Rickie Fowler and other big things that matter right now in golf

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Throughout a down period in his career that is now approaching three years, Rickie Fowler managed to maintain an air of positivity, sprinkled with some self-deprecation, while seemingly never allowing for any sort of dark moments to consume him.

He approached his slump with hard work, didn’t get impatient by moving on from his coach, John Tillery, talked a good game and simply expected his golf to one day cooperate.

Three tournaments into a new season and there are certainly plenty of positives for Fowler to build on, but also a slap of reality that played out over the weekend in Japan, where he was unable to take advantage of a small field and the chance to improve his world ranking.

Fowler certainly had plenty of time for reflection over recent months. He failed to qualify for either the Masters or the U.S. Open, firsts for him in 10 years. He didn’t make the FedEx Cup playoffs, meaning he was outside of the top 125 and not yet qualified for the 2022 Players Championship — a tournament he won with a stunning flourish in 2015.

The six-week break saw him go to work. He returned to competition and promptly missed the cut at the Shriner’s tournament in Las Vegas. But with a weekend off, he used the opportunity to visit his old coach, Butch Harmon, to make sure what he was working on got a stamp of approval.

With Harmon’s blessing and the ensuing confidence, Fowler took the 54-hole lead at the CJ Cup and ended up finishing tied for third behind winner Rory McIlroy. A victory would have solved a lot of problems, but given that Fowler’s last victory came at the Waste Management Phoenix Open in 2019, a strong showing was welcome.

“[It] was a very good week for me, especially after the last couple years,” Fowler said at the Zozo Championship in Japan. “I played very well tee to green. Unfortunately, I didn’t have a very good feel on the greens with speed, so that is where I struggled a little bit, but very happy with the ballstriking.

“That’s something we’ve been putting a lot of work in on the last couple years, especially the last couple of months — long time coming.”

Fowler’s long game was an issue for much of last season, when he ranked 89th in strokes gained tee to green on the PGA Tour. He ranked first at the CJ Cup, although his once extremely reliable putting stroke has cost him at times.

He hoped to take that momentum to Japan, but it didn’t materialize, which highlights the difficulty Fowler faces in returning to an elite level. He had slipped to 128th in the world after missing the cut in Las Vegas, jumped to 82nd with his tie for third at the CJ Cup, then lost three spots after a tie for 44th at the Zozo. Fowler never broke par in the limited-field event and now needs to decide how much to tee it up in the remaining events of 2021.

After this week’s Bermuda Championship, there are just three tournaments — Mayakoba in Mexico, the Houston Open and the RSM Classic.

The top 50 in the world at the end of 2021 receive a Masters invite, and that’s reason enough for Fowler to add a couple of those tournaments — although it does him no good to finish well down the list. Top-10 finishes are the only meaningful way to move up. Short of that, Fowler will head into 2022 with a lot of doubts about his playing schedule.

In order to make the Masters field, he will need to either win a PGA Tour event or be among the top 50 in the world two weeks prior to the first major championship. Winning would also get him in the Players, as would being among the top 50 in the world or top 10 in FedEx Cup points.

“Everyone’s gone through ups and downs in golf,” he said. “When you’re in those low points, there’s times when you wonder like ‘Am I ever going to be back in that position?’ Obviously you believe that you can, but there’s those thoughts [that] golf is obviously one of the most humbling sports there is and you can never take it for granted.

“So being in those positions, you know where you want to be, you know you can be there, you’ve been there before, but it seems like a long uphill battle. It’s definitely been humbling. We’ve been patient, but it’s nice to see some stuff start paying off.”

Hideki’s homecoming

Hideki Matsuyama capped off a historic year with a victory in his home country, the only PGA Tour event to be staged in Japan. But it was far from easy. While the 5-shot margin of victory might appear routine, Matsuyama trailed Cameron Tringale by a shot through 10 holes on Sunday and then produced three birdies over the next six holes to take the lead.

Even standing on the 18th tee, after bogeying the 17th hole, Matsuyama led by just 2 shots.

But from more than 240 yards, he powered his second shot onto the par-5 green and then made the eagle putt. And for one of the rare times, Matsuyama let loose some emotion and a big smile.

The 2021 Masters champion added a second victory this year after missing out on a medal at the Olympics, also in his home country. It was his seventh PGA Tour win.

Prior to the tournament, Matsuyama had said his form was nowhere near what it was when he won the Masters.

“I would rate my performance as a 2 or 3,” Matsuyama said afterward. “From the results perspective, it went to about 8, but I think it’s because all the energy that I was getting from the fans and I was very surprised how much energy I was feeding off of them.”

Matsuyama, 29, who once was ranked as high as second in the world, has climbed back to 12th.

Saudi releases

It will be interesting to see how the PGA Tour and commissioner Jay Monahan decide to proceed with several players seeking releases to play in the Saudi International tournament early next year.

Golfweek reported last week that eight players, including defending champion Dustin Johnson, sought the releases — which are required to play in a conflicting event opposite the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Typically this is not a problem, and the tour has granted numerous such releases in the past.

But last year the European Tour dropped its sanctioning of the event, and the PGA Tour said it would not give releases to players wishing to play in an unsanctioned tournament. The Asian Tour has sanctioned the tournament — after considerable backing from Saudi Golf, which made a $100 million investment.

The PGA Tour last year formed a strategic alliance with the European Tour and is trying to enhance its offerings to fend off talk of a rival tour supported by the Saudi government known as the Super Golf League.

Among the other players who Golfweek reported sought releases were Graeme McDowell, Tommy Fleetwood and Lee Westwood. Phil Mickelson played in the event each of the past two years.

At issue is the tour’s ability to restrict its members, who are independent contractors. The tour has rules that require releases to play in competing events.

Langer’s longevity

Bernhard Langer won his first PGA Tour Champions event in 2007. Fourteen years later, he is still going strong. His victory on Sunday at the Dominion Energy Charity Classic gave him a win in 15 straight years. At age 64, he is the oldest champion in the Tour’s history.

The two-time Masters champion and European Ryder Cup star had not won since early 2020. He defeated Doug Barron in a sudden-death playoff.

Langer is one of just a handful of players to win in their 60s and surpassed Scott Hoch, who was 63 when he won in 2019. When Langer won the 2020 Cologuard Classic, he was the fifth-oldest winner in tour history. He now has 42 Champions wins, three behind the record held by Hale Irwin.

Langer also accumulated 42 victories on the European Tour, the first in 1980 at the Dunlop Masters.

Anthony Joshua breaks silence on Tyson Fury win vs Deontay Wilder with surprise verdict | Boxing | Sport

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Anthony Joshua has admitted it was “lovely to see Tyson Fury making his family proud” by beating Deontay Wilder in their trilogy bout. AJ has had some public disagreements with his fellow British heavyweight in the past, but put that rivalry aside as he paid tribute to the job the ‘Gypsy King’ has done.

Joshua also praised Fury’s coaching corner, whose “trust and wisdom” helped the Mancunian to get the job done in Las Vegas, he said.

Fury saw off the challenge of Wilder for a third time to retain his world WBC belt, recovering from being knocked down to the canvas twice in one round to eventually claim victory a 2-0 win in the trilogy overall.

It has since been dubbed one of the greatest heavyweight fights there has ever been, with both fighters giving it everything in a slugfest for the ages.

Both Fury and Wilder hit the floor on several occasions, but neither were willing to give up until referee Russell Mora took it out of the American’s hands when he waved the fight off as he laid on the floor in the 11th round.

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“Well done to him WBC champion of the world and two-time champion it is lovely for his wife and family particularly his old man [John Fury] who deserves it and is his biggest f***ing supporter.

“So it is lovely to see him making his family proud same as I make my family proud so well done to them.

“And SugarHill Steward and Andy Lee have done a superb job with Tyson.”

While Fury tasted success in his latest high-profile outing, the same cannot be said for Joshua who is still reeling from losing his belts to Oleksandr Usyk last month.

The Ukrainian outboxed AJ at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium to win the bout on points, though the Brit has triggered his rematch clause for a shot at winning his titles back next year.

The loss delayed a hotly-anticipated meeting of the two British fighters, which was set to earn both fighters a huge pay day and give them a chance to unify the division.

Fury admitted he was “absolutely wounded” that Usyk had won, and said in the days after the fight that he was hoping his compatriot would triumph to set up a gigantic all-British fight.

That meeting could still happen, but first Joshua must try his luck against Usyk again and Fury will probably have to face another mandatory challenger in the meantime, most likely Dillian Whyte.

Draymond Green to buy another $5,000 bottle of wine on Joe Lacob’s tab in honor of Stephen Curry’s 75th team nod

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OKLAHOMA CITY — Draymond Green is going to celebrate another one of Stephen Curry‘s historical feats with an expensive bottle of wine — and for the second year in a row he’s going to put it on Warriors owner Joe Lacob’s tab.

In honor of Curry making the NBA’s 75th anniversary team, Green said he was going to enjoy the occasion in style inside of the same Oklahoma City restaurant where he celebrated Curry’s breaking Wilt Chamberlain’s franchise record for points last season.

What makes the meal even more special is that Green said he will be ordering up another bottle of Domaine de la Romanée-Conti La Tâche — a French wine that can start around $5,000 a bottle.

“Steph just made the 75th anniversary team so y’all can call Joe this time and tell Joe that we about to go order a bottle of DRC because Steph made the 75th anniversary team,” Green said after Monday’s practice. “And Klay’s 77.”

Green’s reference to teammate Klay Thompson came after Thompson wore a No. 77 jersey during Saturday’s practice after Thompson said he felt snubbed by not being named to the anniversary team last week. Warriors coach Steve Kerr originally thought Curry had the jersey made, but noted Sunday that from what he understood it was actually Thompson, with the help of longtime Warriors equipment man Eric Housen, who made the jersey.

So would Thompson get an invite to drink a glass of the expensive wine?

“The thing is Klay or Joe didn’t make the trip,” Green said. “So they can’t partake in the bottle. So me and Steph will enjoy it. [Warriors president of basketball operations] Bob [Myers] didn’t come, could have had a glass. They didn’t come. So me and Steph will enjoy a bottle of DRC tonight. It’s going on Joe’s tab.”

Unlike last year, when he texted Lacob to make sure the purchase was all right, Green enlisted the assembled media to pass along the message to Lacob for him. For his part, Curry took it all in stride, chuckling when asked what it’s like to drink such an expensive bottle of wine.

“I hope that every glass that I have I can manifest that same experience,” Curry said. “Whether it’s $8,000, $800, $80 dollar bottle, whatever it is. But, you hear the $8,000 cork pop, it’s a little different feeling for sure.”

Robby, a line-painting robot, blazes trail on UBC sports fields

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A little robot named Robby is blazing a trail — literally — on athletic fields at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

The bright green automaton uses GPS to paint the lines on soccer fields with “laser-like precision,” and is the first of its kind in Canada, according to UBC.

“Robby and I have the closest relationship and I do refer to him like he is a co-worker,” Andre Dionne, Robby’s key operator on the UBC groundskeeping team, said in a news release on Tuesday.

“With Robby on the team, we’re able to focus more on sports field maintenance and irrigation repairs, or ongoing tasks, like mowing, weeding, and line trimming.”

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Prior to the robot’s recent arrival, it could take several people a full day to measure the lines, mark them with string, and push the manual line-painting machine across a field.

On a clear day, Robby can do it an hour, the release said, painting with a margin of error of less than half an inch. It is “seven times faster” than traditional line marking, uses less paint, and can be programmed with 45 different field types and customized with logos and numbers.


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Gary Bartley, head groundskeeper for UBC Athletics and Recreation, said he introduced Robby to the team after hearing about robot line painters abroad.

“We have a responsibility to provide the best playing conditions for athletes, whether they are professionals, in varsity programs, or community members,” Bartley explained.

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“When one of our clients, the Vancouver Whitecaps, shared experiences of playing abroad on fields that were painted by robots, we wanted to find out more.”

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Some universities in the United States already use similar robots. Bartley did some research and discovered Turf Tank, a robot field painter from Denmark.

He borrowed one from a Turf Tank distributor in the U.S., and was so impressed by its test run in Vancouver that he bought one for UBC.


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According to Dionne, the robot’s primary operator, Robby has good days and bad days, when he loses his WiFi connection, doesn’t connect to the satellite transmitter, or glitches in bad weather, resulting in wobbly or incomplete lines.

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Parts can wear out and paint can get plugged up, so he get regular checkups.

“The challenge with Robby is making sure he’s well-maintained,” Bartley said. “If you keep him ‘healthy,’ he’ll perform to the best of his capabilities – same as any other employee.”




© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

UEFA hope for record-breaking women’s Euro 2022 after 12-month delay | The Guardian Nigeria News

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A year later than planned, the countdown to the women’s European Championship begins on Thursday when the draw for Euro 2022 takes place in Manchester.

England will play host to the tournament from July 6-31, which hopes to smash attendance records for women’s football with Manchester United’s Old Trafford the setting for the opening game before a Wembley final.

The hosts are hoping home advantage will help them win a major women’s international tournament for the first time.

The Lionesses have fallen at the semi-final stage in each of the last two World Cups and Euro 2017.

England are guaranteed to kick the tournament off at Old Trafford with organisers hoping for an attendance that will break the 41,300 record for a women’s European Championship match.

Holders the Netherlands, France and Germany are the other top seeds and contenders for the tournament, along with Olympic silver medallists Sweden and a rapidly improving Spain side filled with Champions League winners who play their club football for Barcelona.

Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Italy, Northern Ireland, Norway, Russia and Switzerland are the other qualifiers for a tournament UEFA hopes to be the biggest European women’s sports event ever in terms of attendance.

Premier League stadiums in Brentford, Brighton and Southampton will play host to games, along with more modest venues in Leigh, Manchester, Milton Keynes, Rotherham and Sheffield.

“This was coupled with the need to strike the right balance for the tournament. Setting an ambitious ticket target – with more than 700,000 tickets available for fans – whilst seeking to achieve full venues where possible,” said the English Football Association’s director of women’s football Sue Campbell.

“This is a balance we believe we have achieved in the selected venues and cities, with England’s Lionesses due to play all of their group stage games at Premier League grounds across the country.”

Women’s football was hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic at time when participation and popularity was growing rapidly after a successful 2019 World Cup in France.

As governing bodies scrambled to restart the men’s competitions as soon as possible to secure lucrative broadcast income, even the elite end of the women’s game was treated as an afterthought.

The Lionesses did not play a game for nearly a year between March 2020 and February this year, while the 2019/20 Women’s Super League season was terminated with nearly a quarter of the games still to play.

UEFA also moved the women’s Euro back a year to allow the men’s Euro 2020 to go ahead earlier this year.

But UEFA’s chief of women’s football Nadine Kessler defended that decision to give “maximum exposure for women’s football and the goal to provide the tournament with the centre stage it deserves.”

That call was aided by a rare space in the men’s football calendar due to the later start to the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

After being shunted into the shadows for too long, Europe’s best female players will again have a stage on which to shine.

Hill: It’s looking like Max’s title at the moment

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One DNF could change everything but the statistics are stacking up for Red Bull’s Max Verstappen as he seeks to deny Lewis Hamilton a record eighth Formula 1 championship this season.

Sunday’s United States Grand Prix victory at Austin’s Circuit of the Americas was the 24-year-old Dutch driver’s eighth from 17 of 22 races, compared to five for Mercedes’ seven times world champion.

Seasons have more races now but only once in the 70-year history of the championship has anyone won eight times and not ended up as champion.

That exception was Hamilton, who won 10 times in 2016 but lost out to teammate Nico Rosberg after a down-to-the-wire battle.

Austin also saw Verstappen extend a record that may not be his for long.

No other driver has ever had so many career wins without winning a title, Verstappen’s 18 well ahead of late British great Stirling Moss’s 16.

With five races remaining, Hamilton cannot match his 2020, 2019 and 2018 tallies of 11 wins and the Briton will struggle to match even his worst of the Mercedes-dominated V6 turbo hybrid era — nine in 2017.

Verstappen can still equal the record held jointly by Michael Schumacher (2004) and Sebastian Vettel (2013) of 13 wins in a season.

The youngster is ahead of Hamilton 9-3 on pole positions and 13-12 on podium finishes, with the Briton ahead 5-4 on fastest laps.

“Although Lewis has the experience of already winning F1 world titles, I don’t really see that as an advantage now,” Daniel Ricciardo said in talking about former teammate Verstappen’s maturity.

“I do think Max is capable of it, he’s got a pretty stable head on his shoulders now and he’s proven that with some of the drives he’s done this year,” added McLaren’s Australian driver.

If more omens are required, Hamilton has never won the title when not leading the championship going into Austin, a circuit where he had won five times in eight years and clinched two crowns.

This year he was six points behind Verstappen, a gap now extended to 12.

“I would never declare this a foregone conclusion at this stage of the season,” 1996 F1 world champion Damon Hill told Sky Sports television on Monday.

“There’s so many mishaps that happen in our sport and 25 points on the table for a victory but nothing if you don’t finish, and that can obviously happen.

“[Hamilton] really has to start winning again. It’s eight versus five in victories to Max, so it’s looking like Max’s title at the moment,” ventured Hill.

The next two races are in Mexico and Brazil, both seen as favouring Red Bull, before a Middle East triple in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi.

Qatar and Saudi are floodlit night races new to the calendar. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin)

Ricky Hatton tells Joshua to make Rob McCracken call to ‘reinvent himself’ | Boxing | Sport

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Joshua, 31, was left stunned last month when he was outclassed by Oleksandr Usyk at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, losing his WBA, IBF, WBO, and IBO heavyweight title belts in what was only the second professional defeat of his career.

He duly triggered a rematch clause with the unbeaten Ukrainian, with a second bout due to take place in spring 2022. It could prove to be a defining fight in Joshua’s career, and a failure to beat Usyk, 34, could end his hopes of ever having a much-talked about unification fight with Tyson Fury.

Speculation is rife that Joshua will have a new man in his corner when he bids for revenge over Usyk, having worked with former pro-boxer McCracken since he guided him to Olympic Gold in London 2012.

Now Hatton, 43, has encouraged his fellow Brit to ‘reinvent himself’, but by bringing in a coach to work alongside his current one, not instead of.

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“He’s been with Robert since day one, and though they and the set-up at Team GB have done a momentous job, he might just want to reinvent himself,” he told SportsMail.

“If he wanted my advice, why doesn’t Rob go to American with him and work together? Rob can describe to the coach AJ picks how he ticks, how he likes to operate.

“Let’s get it right, if he goes to a new coach, they’re starting from scratch. A coach has to know a fighter, what he prefers, what he doesn’t like. If Rob goes over with him, I think that’s the smartest move they could make.”

The former two-weight world champion should know what he’s talking about, now working as a trainer after ending his fight career in 2012 following a brutal defeat to Ukrainian fighter Vyacheslav Senchenko.

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Joshua has not commented on the speculation but ‘The Hitman’ did acknowledge the merits in working with the names he’s been publicly linked with, inclusing the likes of Virgil Hunter or Robert Garcia.

“They’re obviously good trainers,” he continued. “They’re proven in their achievements; as a coach myself, they’ve achieved what I’m aspiring to do.

“When I went with Floyd Mayweather Sr, he showed me a few little moves and bits to add to my game. It was all new and different, it raises your confidence and I think that’s what AJ needs.”

Eddy Reynoso and Ronnie Shields are the two other names to be widely linked to Joshua, whose professional record now stands at 24-2-0 following his defeat to Usyk.

‘Have you seen Space Jam 2?’ — ‘Squid Game’ creator chirps back at LeBron James

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Last month, a South Korean drama titled “Squid Game” was released on Netflix and took the world by storm. Nearly 132 million people tuned in to the show during its first month on the streaming service, which smashed the previous Netflix record of 82 million viewers that was set by “Bridgerton.”

Two of those record-breaking fans were Los Angeles Lakers superstars LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

In an Oct. 12 news conference, James was heard discussing his thoughts about the show’s finale with Davis.

Spoiler alert: The two teammates were left unsatisfied by the conclusion.

“I didn’t like the ending though,” James said. “I know they start it off with a Season 2 but, like, get on the f—ng flight and go see your daughter, bro. Like what are you doing?”

Hwang Dong-hyuk, the show’s creator, had some choice words in response to James’ critiques.

“Have you seen Space Jam 2?” Hwang said to The Guardian. “LeBron James is cool and can say what he wants. I respect that. I’m very thankful he watched the whole series.”

“Space Jam: A New Legacy” was James’ first leading role in a movie, but he has appeared in supporting roles in films and television shows for well over a decade.

His production company, SpringHill Company, was founded in 2020 with Maverick Carter and its board of directors also includes Serena Williams.

The company started as SpringHill Entertainment in 2007 with the award-winning documentary “More Than a Game,” which chronicled James and his teammates’ experience at St. Vincent-St. Mary High School in Akron, Ohio.

Hwang went on to encourage James to create a “Squid Game” sequel.

“If he has his own ending that would satisfy him, maybe he could make his own sequel,'” Hwang continued. “I’ll check it out and maybe send him a message saying, ‘I liked your whole show, except the ending.'”

For what it’s worth, Bloomberg estimates that “Squid Game” generated nearly $891.1 million in value for Netflix, and cost only $21.4 million to produce. On the other hand, “Space Jam: A New Legacy” had a $150 million budget and grossed $162 million at the box office.

Tonight, the Lakers take on the San Antonio Spurs, who had some fun with a “Squid Game”-inspired preseason game promotion earlier this month.

Ban vs Eng – T20 World Cup

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Rubel was part of the reserves’ list, and is now in the main team after the allrounder picked up a back injury

Mohammad Saifuddin, the Bangladesh medium-pace-bowling allrounder, has been ruled out of the rest of the T20 World Cup because of a back injury. Rubel Hossain, the veteran quick, has been moved in to the main squad from the reserves’ list as a replacement for Saifuddin and is now available for selection for Bangladesh’s next match, against England on Wednesday in Abu Dhabi.

Saifuddin, 24, played all of Bangladesh’s games so far, picking up at least a wicket in each of them, and also hit an unbeaten 19 in six balls against Papua New Guinea in the last first-round game at the World Cup. He played the game against Sri Lanka too, on Monday, proving expensive in his three overs – he took 1 for 38 – and not getting a chance to bat.

His replacement, Rubel, is vastly experienced, having played 159 international matches including 28 T20Is, in which he has picked up 28 wickets with an economy rate of 9.45.

Bangladesh, who got into the main draw of the tournament after a stutter, losing to Scotland before beating Oman and Papua New Guinea, have had a poor start in Group 1, losing by five wickets to Sri Lanka after a decent batting performances was followed by a poor show in the field. The game against England on Wednesday is, therefore, a key one for Bangladesh to stay alive in the competition, with matches against Australia, South Africa and West Indies to follow.

Tyson Fury receives retirement plea as wife Paris describes ‘horror’ of watching him fight | Boxing | Sport

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“But, on the other hand I know it’s his love and his passion and it’s what he wants to do most in the world.”

Paris has the extra responsibility of caring for their six children while Tyson is away at training camps to prepare for a big fight.

But despite that and the fact she hates to see her man get punched, she feels she has a duty to be there at every single bout.

“I support him but I don’t enjoy it, I hate being there, but on the other hand I feel like I have to be there,” she added.

“I feel like if I’m not there, and what happens if something goes wrong and you’re not with him. So that’s the brutality of the sport and that is the fact of it.