Degrees of Separation: Linking Tyson Fury with his dad

Boxing Junkie was able to link heavyweight champ Tyson Fury with his father, John Fury, who fought in the 1980s and ’90s.

Six degrees of separation is a theory that everyone in the world is separated by no more than six social connections.

In other words, you know someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows Queen Elizabeth. Or so the concept goes.

We’re borrowing the six degrees concept – well, sort of loosely – to connect fighters from the past to their more contemporary counterparts in our new occasional feature, “Degrees of Separation.”

Example: Let’s connect Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Super easy; we did it in two steps. Senior fought Grover Wiley, who fought Junior.

In this installment of the Boxing Junkie feature, we wanted to link another father and son set: heavyweight champ Tyson Fury and his dad, John Fury, who suddenly has an itch to fight a comebacking Mike Tyson.

The elder Fury, who at 6-foot-3 is six inches shorter than his son, had a pro career. He was 8-4-1 (1 KO) between 1987 and 1995. And he faced one big-name opponent, one-time titleholder Henry Akinwande, who stopped him in three rounds.

Akinwande was the fighter who allowed us to link father and son in seven steps. Check it out:

John Fury fought …

Henry Akinwande, who fought …

Oliver McCall, who fought …

Lennox Lewis, who fought …

Vitali Klitschko, who fought …

Chris Arreola, who fought …

Deontay Wilder, who fought …

Tyson Fury

Could you do it in fewer steps? Let us know via Twitter or Facebook. Or you can contact me on Twitter. And please follow us!

Read more:

Degrees of separation: Connecting John L. Sullivan to Deontay Wilder

Degrees of Separation: Linking Filipino greats Flash Elorde, Manny Pacquiao

Degrees of Separation: Linking Japanese greats Fighting Harada and Naoya Inoue

Degrees of Separation: Linking Tyson Fury to first U.K.-born heavyweight champ

Degrees of Separation: Connecting Canelo Alvarez with Mexican legends

Degrees of Separation: Linking the Mayweathers

Degrees of Separation: Linking Manny Pacquiao to Pancho Villa

Special feature: 10 greatest heavyweights of the modern era

Tyson Fury has made it clear that he’s more than a big personality. The “Gypsy King” is a damn good fighter, arguably the best heavyweight since the hey-day of Lennox Lewis. Those are the kind accolades you earn when you embarrass long-reigning …

Tyson Fury has made it clear that he’s more than a big personality. The “Gypsy King” is a damn good fighter, arguably the best heavyweight since the hey-day of Lennox Lewis.

Those are the kind accolades you earn when you embarrass long-reigning Wladimir Klitschko, leave boxing to tangle with personal demons and then return to draw with and then knockout then-unbeaten Deontay Wilder in sensational fashion.

Anyone who doesn’t believe Fury is the best heavyweight today isn’t paying attention.

But where does he rank among the most-accomplished heavyweights of the modern era, meaning those who had fights after World War II?

Well, he’s already knocking on the door of the Top 10 but, in our estimation, he isn’t quite there. His legacy is still under construction. Another victory over Wilder and one over U.K. rival Anthony Joshua in all likelihood would allow him to crack the list.

With that in mind, here is the Boxing Junkie list of the 10 best heavyweights of the modern era (plus the next five).

NO. 10 SONNY LISTON

Record: 50-4 (39 KOs)
Years active: 1953-70
Title reigns: One (1962-64)
Among his victims: Cleveland Williams (twice), Nino Valdes, Zora Folley, Eddie Machen, Floyd Patterson (twice), Chuck Wepner
Background: Liston was a role model for a young George Foreman, an ornery, intimidating man who used a pulverizing jab and frightening power punches to lay waste to his early opponents in a way that Foreman and Mike Tyson did years later. By the early 1960s, the Mob-connected slugger was considered heavyweight champion in waiting. Cus D’Amato, titleholder Floyd Patterson’s manager, feared Liston to such a degree that he did everything in his power to steer his protégé away from the top challenger but ultimately failed. Liston obliterated Patterson in one round to become champ in 1962 and then did it again 10 months later. He seemed to be something beyond human. And then he had the misfortune of crossing paths with Cassius Clay, who would become Muhammad Ali. The young, brash Clay was too quick, too athletic and much too good for the champion, who was stopped in six rounds in their first fight in 1964 and in one round in the “Phantom Punch” rematch. Were either of the fights fixed? We’ll never know. What we do know is that Liston never again fought for a major title. He was found dead in 1971. The official cause: heroin overdose. Many believe something more sinister played a role.

10 tallest heavyweight titleholders

Boxing Junkie presents the 10 tallest heavyweight champions in history.

The top end of heavyweight scene is the land of the giants.

Anthony Joshua, who holds three of the four major titles, is 6-foot-6 and he’s the short guy. Tyson Fury and titleholder Deontay Wilder, who will meet in a rematch on Feb. 22, are 6-9 and 6-7, respectively.

With the current champions and top contender in mind, Boxing Junkie presents the 10 tallest heavyweight titleholders in history (from shortest to tallest).

 

PRIMO CARNERA

Height: 6-5½ (1.97)
Active: 1928-46
Record
: 88-14 (71 KOs)
Titles
: World
Background: Carnera is a tragic figure in one sense. The massive Italian, who weighed as much as 284½ when he fought, enjoyed considerable success and the fame and fortune that went along with it. That included a sixth-round knockout of Jack Sharkey to win the heavyweight title in 1933. Fans seemed to be fascinated by both his size and power. However, prevailing wisdom is that many of his biggest fights – including the one against Sharkey – were fixed as a result of his connections to underworld figures, although Sharkey denies it. Carnera’s handlers reportedly arranged the fixes without his knowledge. In other words, the crude “Ambling Alp” wasn’t nearly as good as his record might suggest. Don’t feel too sorry for him, though. He immigrated to the U.S. and later had a successful career as a wrestler and part-time actor.