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Tyson Fury: How Manchester fighter has built his following – and plans to break America

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Fury made his WWE debut at October’s ‘Crown Jewel’ pay-per-view event in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Under the tree, his best-selling book. On the radio, a festive duet with Robbie Williams. On TV, adverts for his forthcoming reality series.

As jolly, bearded faces of Christmas go, Santa had a rival this year. Tyson Fury was, and is, everywhere.

He may lack the showreel of brutal knockouts boasted by famous namesake Mike. He might not be a clean-cut, on-message corporate dream, like heavyweight rival Anthony Joshua. And he is not a Ricky-Hatton style figurehead who commands a whole city of loyal fans, either.

Fury, 31, has made his own success story. The self-styled ‘Gypsy King’ from the Traveller community has defied logic, won over the public and come up smiling as boxing’s clown prince, now preparing for another big fight in the US – a rematch with Deontay Wilder on 22 February.

So how has he done it? And what can Las Vegas expect next?

“To be a boxer, just some random boxer who’s talented, ain’t enough,” Fury told BBC Radio 5 Live in November.

“It’s enough to win a fight but it’s not enough to sell tickets, it’s not enough to do pay-per-view, it’s not enough to be noticed and for people to talk about you outside of boxing.”

Fury’s first piece of crossover content, in March 2009, was entirely accidental.

In his fourth professional fight, he beat 32-year-old journeyman Lee Swaby at the now-defunct Aston Arena.

Backing his opponent against the ropes in the fourth round, Fury threw an uppercut. Swaby, from behind his peek-a-boo guard, ducked in anticipation. The punch glanced off Swaby’s forehead and deflected, at full momentum, into Fury’s face.

Tyson Fury – I had to let go of my “outlaw” character

Two million plus views on YouTube followed. Long after the headline result was forgotten, a moment of high farce in a low-profile fight lived on.

In the 11 years since, Fury, whose ringcraft, reach and defensive skills now make for bigger victories, has been a relentless and innovative seller of himself.

A stand-up stint for Sport Relief in 2012, taping over his mouth in protest at a British Boxing Board of Control fine in 2014, a news conference dressed as Batman in 2015, another with an entourage of five cheerleaders in 2016, buying 1,000-euro rounds of drinks for fans, ring walks inspired by Apollo Creed and Mexican Independence Day, impromptu karaoke, dressing-room visits from his celebrity mates, UFC, WWE and a home-made social-media output that apparently comes direct from the big man’s fingertips, unfiltered by PR safety nets.

“Boxing is different to many sports,” says sports marketing expert Nigel Currie.

“If you are a Premier League footballer, you are on the big stage every Saturday or Sunday to maintain your profile. As a top-level boxer you could go a year, 18 months without a major fight.

“It’s a complicated, calendar-less sport and it’s tricky to maintain a regularly high profile. In the old days you would have to call a press conference to announce your plans and sell yourself to the press. Fury has a pretty modern and pretty intelligent approach – with social media these small details and antics can be picked up and spread far beyond a traditional boxing audience.”

How on earth did Tyson Fury end up singing a duet with Robbie Williams?

Fury always had the imagination to pull a stunt and subvert boxing’s po-faced beef-heavy norms. Where other fighters generate more threats and menace than a mob movie, Fury veers dramatically off-script.

His claim earlier this month to be preparing for the Wilder rematch, by masturbating seven times a day was typically outlandish and entirely in character.