Tyson Fury and Dillian Whyte have hit the scales ahead of Saturday night's heavyweight title fight at Wembley Stadium. Fury will defend his WBC and The Ring belts in front of an expected 94,000 crowd.
Fury has weighed in a stone lighter than he did for the trilogy fight against Deontay Wilder last year, when he was 277 lbs. This time, the Gyspy King has weighed in at 264 pounds, 13 ounces.
Whyte, meanwhile, weighed in at 253 pounds, 4 ounces.
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Speaking at Wednesday’s press conference, Fury said: “That's it (I am retiring after this fight). Get a good victory here on Saturday night, relax, sit back and enjoy life. I am loving every second of it (this week).
“It's been a long old journey, ups and downs in my career, lots of ups and downs. I'm coming up to 34, 20 years as a boxer, that's enough for anybody. There's plenty of other stuff I need to do like look after my kids and wife and enjoy them.”
Whyte said: “I've got nothing to lose, that's my mindset. I'm not a Gypsy King, I'm just little old me. He is a bigger star than me at the minute but I am also a big star in my right.
“I don't care what people say or think about me, I never have. That's why I'm still here. People said I was done after two losses, they wrote me off both times. I am still here.
“Three great fights (for Fury) against Deontay Wilder and none of them have been completely sold out. Tyson Fury is not this massive giant superstar everyone says he is, he's not. The fight at Wembley is sold out because it's Tyson Fury and Dillian Whyte not Tyson Fury and someone else.”