Tyson Fury’s unbeaten record as a professional consists of 33 fights to date, of which he has won 32 and drawn 1. He has never lost a fight. A total of 23 of Fury’s victories have come inside distance. Here is a full rundown of his fights and results to date:
Fury vs Dillian Whyte
Date: April 23, 2022
Venue: Wembley Stadium, London, UK
Result: Fury won by TKO R6
Fury produced an utterly dominant performance on his triumphant Wembley homecoming in front of more than 94,000 fans. He boxed smartly from the first bell against an opponent who just could not get close enough to pull the trigger. The first five rounds were one-way traffic as ‘The Gypsy King’ produced a boxing masterclass, but the punch to end it in the sixth took it up a level further. A peach of an uppercut that landed Whyte flat on his back. He beat the count, but was in no state to continue.
Fury vs Deontay Wilder 3
Date: October 9, 2021
Venue: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, United States
Result: Fury won by KO R11
We waited 20 months for the Fury vs Wilder trilogy to be completed, and how it delivered. Fury dominated for most of a wildly exciting showdown, but he had to get off the deck twice in the fourth as Wilder landed that great equalising right hand on two occasions. ‘The Gypsy King’ has gone to deep waters many times in his career, and he showed his terrific fighting heart to maintain that unbeaten record and retain his WBC, Ring magazine and lineal titles.
Fury vs Deontay Wilder 2
Date: February 22, 2020
Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States
Result: Fury won by TKO R7
Under the tutelage of Kronk disciples Javan ‘SugarHill’ Steward and Andy Lee for the first time, Fury came in way more aggressive than in the first fight. He handed ‘The Bronze Bomber’ his first professional defeat in his 44th fight via a dominant offensive performance.
Fury vs Otto Wallin
Date: September 14, 2019
Venue: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada
Result: Fury won by UD (116-112, 117-111, 118-110)
Fury overcame a major scare to stay on course for a lucrative rematch with Wilder. He showed guts and smarts in equal measure to survive a horrible cut sustained in round three, overcome the dangerous Wallin and score a unanimous points victory.
Fury vs Tom Schwarz
Date: June 15, 2019
Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada
Result: Fury won by TKO R2
Fury looked highly impressive in his Las Vegas debut and the first bout of his lucrative five-fight deal with ESPN. After a circumspect opening session he opened up in Round 2. He battered Schwarz with heavy combinations until Kenny Bayless stepped in six seconds before the bell.
Tyson Fury vs Deontay Wilder
Date: December 1, 2018
Venue: Staples Center, Los Angeles, California
Result: Draw (115-111 Wilder, 114-112 Fury, 113-113)
It says much for Fury’s technical dominance that despite being floored twice – notably by the shot which sparked that memorable recovery in R12 – many experts felt he was robbed when the judges scored the fight a draw. An incredible performance from ‘The Gypsy King’ just six months into an epic comeback.
Fury vs Francesco Pianeta
Date: August 18, 2018
Venue: Windsor Park, Belfast, Northern Ireland
Result: Fury won by UD (100-90)
Not the most exciting of nights but Fury continued his ring rehabilitation by pitching a shutout at Windsor Park. Meanwhile Deontay Wilder was on hand to properly begin the promotion for their planned December 2018 showdown.
Fury vs Sefer Seferi
Date: June 9, 2018
Venue: Manchester Arena, Manchester, England
Result: Fury won RTD R4
After two-and-a-half years out of the ring, Fury finally returned to doing what he does best. The bout may have had a bit of farce about it with Seferi more than four stones lighter. When Fury stepped things up in round 4 his overmatched opponent had no answer. He would eventually quit on his stool after the session had ended.
Fury vs Wladimir Klitschko
Date: November 28, 2015
Venue: ESPRIT Arena, Dusseldorf, Germany
Result: Fury won by UD (115-112, 115-112, 116-111)
‘The Gypsy King’ became heavyweight champion of the world at the age of 27, ending the long reign of Wladimir Klitschko. He did so with a brilliant technical performance on the road. In the process Fury took the WBA, IBF, WBO and lineal world heavyweight titles. Klitschko looked completely befuddled by Fury’s unique boxing skills, and just unable to pull the trigger. The result was a seismic changing of the guard in the heavyweight division. For Fury though, it would be the last fight before mental health problems and weight gain saw him spend more than two years in the wilderness.