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Home » Dillian Whyte out, but Fury vs Joshua not happening after Deontay Wilder

Dillian Whyte out, but Fury vs Joshua not happening after Deontay Wilder

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A bittersweet knockout of Dillian Whyte on Saturday night slightly affected the future of Tyson Fury, who now has no immediate mandatory plans after Deontay Wilder.

Fury can choose a voluntary defense of his green and gold belt, provided he gets through Wilder in their trilogy meeting.

That third fight is scheduled to take place between December 2020 and February 2021.

Dillian Whyte

But Whyte’s removal as the number one contender for Fury’s title will have no real impact on Anthony Joshua’s two-fight stipulated blueprint.

Joshua already has his next fight double lined up with mandatories against Kubrat Pulev and Oleksandr Usyk next. Both bouts have been ordered by their respective bodies.

So there was some surprise when Joshua’s promoter Eddie Hearn made a post-Alexander Povetkin loss statement on the situation.

Hearn discussed the current climate from his perspective: “One of the stumbling blocks was that early in 2021 the mandatory defense against Dillian Whyte.

“Alexander Povetkin won’t be called that immediate mandatory even though he sits at the number one position. So, yes, that frees up Tyson Fury to fight Anthony Joshua after the Deontay Wilder fight.

“For me, I wanted Dillian Whyte to get that opportunity. I thought a good win tonight would secure that.

“I thought he deserved that, but he did lose. Now he needs to rematch and try to beat Alexander Povetkin.”

Fury vs Joshua

Hearn believes Fury vs Joshua is now a step closer. This may be the case in some respect. But only once has AJ fought both Pulev and Usyk.

It still leaves Fury vs Joshua with a window at the end of 2021 and no earlier. That’s unless Joshua wants to drop the WBO belt for the Fury fight.

This would end any hopes of either becoming undisputed. There’s also Deontay Wilder for Fury to contend with and the dangerous Pulev for AJ.

The most likely scenario is dealing with Usyk and the WBO to delay the mandatory. It’s the only way Fury vs Joshua happens in the summer.

But maybe all concerned should leave the fight to stew. Hold off and wait for the pandemic conditions to allow a fully-packed 90,000 into Wembley Stadium.

WBN Editor Phil has over ten years of boxing news experience. Follow WBN on Facebook @officialworldboxingnews and Twitter @worldboxingnews.