Francis Ngannou has a singular focus for his next potential boxing match: The man who welcomed him to the ring, Tyson Fury.
This past Saturday saw Fury drop a unanimous decision to Oleksandr Usyk in another thrilling contest in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Fury is now 0-2 against Usyk after losing a split decision to the heavyweight champion this past May.
That’s not the only notable recent split for Fury. When Ngannou—a former UFC heavyweight champion and current PFL star—ventured into boxing, he was immediately thrown to the wolves against the then-undefeated Fury in October 2023. Ngannou shocked the world by knocking Fury down and arguably doing enough to score a massive upset, but two of the three judges scored the fight in Fury’s favor.
Following the Usyk-Fury rematch, Ngannou was asked if he’d like to see Fury fight fellow British standout Anthony Joshua, but he has his own intentions of taking on “The Gypsy King.”
“What I want to see now is Tyson Fury and Francis Ngannou,” Ngannou told Pro Boxing Fans. “That’s all what matters for me.”
Ngannou’s inspiring performance against Fury allowed him to book a bout with Joshua the following March that wasn’t nearly as suspenseful. The far more experienced Joshua rocked Ngannou and then put him down for the count in Round 2, leaving Ngannou winless in two boxing appearances.
Still, he’s long maintained that a rematch with Fury is what he wants, even after a knockout of Renan Ferreira this past October that served as both his PFL debut and his return to MMA.
As for how he felt about Saturday’s scoring controversy with Fury adamant that he’d won the fight, Ngannou agreed that it should have been closer than the unanimous 116-112 Usyk scorecards suggested.
“I think the fight was pretty close,” Ngannou said. “I would have scored the fight closer than that, maybe Usyk still wins. I mean, at the end of the fight I wasn’t sure that anybody is the winner because everybody could have been the winner. From my scorecard, it was closer than that.”
Ngannou gave no support for the AI judging gimmick introduced Saturday. An automated judge was part of the broadcast, though not the official scoring, and had the fight 118-112 for Usyk. Like the actual judges, the AI heavily favored Usyk in the final seven rounds, giving none to Fury. The odd 118 score for Usyk is explained by a pair of 10-10 scores, one in Round 1 and the other in Round 12.
For Ngannou, the technology just isn’t where it needs to be yet to be taken seriously.
“AI might be intelligent, but AI don’t understand the sport properly,” Ngannou said. “It’s a man sport, it’s not a machine sport. I think AI is still, regardless of everything, it’s still a machine that operate automatically and score based on some—I don’t think AI has all the specifics or the date to score a boxing match today. .. It’s still a trial. We can’t take that for credit.”
Resolute. Tyson Fury has no doubt he deserved the nod in his rematch with Oleksandr Usyk.
Also resolute. Usyk fired back at promoter Frank Warren for his criticism of Saturday’s judges.
Izzy vs. Khamzat? Khamzat Chimaev’s dominant win over Robert Whittaker made Israel Adesanya eager to test himself against the undefeated fighter.
Platinum vs. Ruthless? Mike Perry wants UFC legend Robbie Lawler inside the BKFC ring.
Sliding doors. What would Jon Jones have been if he hadn’t become a UFC champion?
Witness. Nate Diaz’s latest water bottle throwing incident? It wasn’t his fault, says Brandon Royval.
Usyk vs. Fury 2 post-fight show.
And relive the magic with MMA Fighting’s Mike Heck and Jed Meshew.
BKFC ICYMI.
Arnold Allen bakes a yule log. Says what it means, means what it says.
2Straws Q&A.
Rivalries.
Special breakfast for a special man.
Tricky stuff.
Who did it best?
Stop. Get some help.
What say you, Paulo Costa?
when UFC offered you a fight with me, you said that you don’t even know my name. Now you are 1-4 in your last 5 fights and you are posting stupid photoshop pics to attract attention. I have unfinished business on February 1st. And after that I am ready to ask @ufc for your head…
— ikram_aliskerov (@ikram_aliskerov) December 21, 2024
Jokes.
JOKES.
Kaan Ofli (11-3-1) vs. Muhammad Naimov (11-3); UFC Saudi Arabia, Feb. 1
Brandon Royval (17-7) vs. Manel Kape (20-7); UFC Fight Night, March 1
The holiday season is in full swing and I hope everyone had a great weekend and you all get to spend time with your loved ones over the next few days and then some.
And if you’re not able to see friends and family, treat yourself and love yourself.
Take care, everyone.
Poll
Who do you want to see Tyson Fury fight next?
-
0%
Francis Ngannou
(0 votes)
-
0%
Other (leave comment below)
(0 votes)
0 votes total
Vote Now
If you find something you’d like to see in the Morning Report, hit up @AlexanderKlee or @JedKMeshew on Twitter and let us know about it. Also, follow MMAFighting on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and like us on Facebook.
Read the full article here