NSAC bans Wilder-Fury faceoff after weigh-in
In an unprecedented move, the NSAC has banned Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury from facing off after their weigh-in Friday. The…
LAS VEGAS — The Nevada State Athletic Commission has barred heavyweight world titleholder Deontay Wilder and lineal champion Tyson Fury from participating in the traditional faceoff at the weigh-in on Friday ahead of their championship rematch.
Wilder and Fury are scheduled to weigh in Friday at 6 p.m. ET.
“The reason the decision was made, on behalf of the commission, is because the press conference [Wednesday] spoke for itself,” NSAC executive director Bob Bennett told ESPN on Thursday.
As soon as Fury joined Wilder on stage to begin the final prefight news conference inside the MGM Grand Garden Arena, where they will fight Saturday (ESPN-Fox PPV, 9 p.m. ET), the two giants went nose to nose and their confrontation eventually erupted into pushing and shoving, forcing security to intervene to keep them apart.
“The actions of the two fighters pushing each other, which was not staged, is not indicative of the image of our sport as a major league sport, thus having a faceoff is not in the best interest in the health and safety of the fighters, the public and the event,” Bennett said.
“And, quite frankly, that image, where you have two professional athletes pushing each other where somebody could get hurt, is not keeping with the image of a major league sport and we’re a major league sport.”
Bennett said he conferred with commission chairman Anthony Marnell III on Wednesday night to tell him he wanted to cancel the faceoff and that Marnell fully supported the idea. Bennett said he spoke to Wilder promoter Tom Brown of TGB Promotions on Wednesday night and to Top Rank chairman Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter, Thursday morning and both “were OK with it.”
“I’m not going to put the public or the fighters or the event in harm’s way because everybody is looking forward to a spectacular event,” Bennett said. “This decision is in the best interest of the fighters, the fans and the event.”
It is an unprecedented move, but it is one Arum said he supported.
“If this fight depends on a faceoff to sell it, we have not done our job,” Arum told ESPN. “They will take pictures, just no faceoff. This commission realizes because of ESPN and Fox that boxing is back as a major sport and we’re not going to f— it up by having these guys push each other or fight each other at a weigh-in.
“It doesn’t happen in the NFL, or Major League Baseball or the NBA where you have the athletes pushing and shoving before their contest. Boxing is now a major sport and we will conduct ourselves like one.”
When Wednesday’s final news conference ended, Arum on his own called off the faceoff between Wilder (42-0-1, 41 KOs) and Fury (29-0-1, 20 KOs) because he was upset by the pushing and shoving that opened the news conference.
Top Rank president Todd duBoef, Arum’s stepson, said he was surprised by the commission’s decision.
“In my 25 years in boxing, I’ve never heard of an administrative body stepping in and prohibiting a faceoff,” duBoef said. “It’s the pinnacle moment before the fight. I am just shocked. That’s the money shot and not having that is frustrating.”