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    Home » Tyson Fury Weight Gain Explained: From Nearly 28 Stone to a 267-Pound Comeback Win
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    Tyson Fury Weight Gain Explained: From Nearly 28 Stone to a 267-Pound Comeback Win

    Jack WardBy Jack WardJune 12, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Tyson Fury’s weight gain

    Tyson Fury frequently returns to a line that functions somewhat like a shield. “I beat everybody with a fat belly.” This January, while sitting in front of a phone camera in Thailand, he repeated the statement, dismissing the usual chorus of admirers who call him fat. The odd thing is that he’s largely correct. His record is difficult to dispute for a man who has never once appeared to be a textbook athlete.

    Fury’s weight has always played a role in his narrative, sometimes making the most noise. He swings from lean and quick to heavy and leaning more than nearly any heavyweight of his era. He weighed a career-high 281 pounds while fully clothed for the rematch against Oleksandr Usyk in December 2024, which was about 55 pounds more than his opponent. He was defeated by points. Many former fighters pointed directly at the additional weight, claiming it dulled the version of Fury that used to dance. The decision was close, and people are still debating it.

    The history that underlies the criticism is what makes it compelling and intricate. Following his victory over Wladimir Klitschko in 2015, Fury vanished for over two years, experiencing a period of depression and substance abuse that he has since publicly discussed. He claims that his weight increased to about 28 stone, or nearly 400 pounds. Amazingly, he returned at all. It is not common for someone to return and win a world championship.

    Therefore, the belly has nothing to do with conceit. It’s entangled in a man who seems to wear his looseness almost as a statement and who has been open about how close he was to failing. He once described being referred to as an athlete as a complete disgrace. That contains a hint of self-defense as well as defiance.

    His inner boxer has always relied on something other than physical strength. Leaning was Fury’s old tactic, which involved resting his massive frame on opponents to control the pace and drain their energy while preserving his own. It functioned flawlessly until it stopped working. The lean had nowhere to go against Usyk, a man who was equally large and much stronger in the clinch. Perhaps his style just reached its limit.

    The questions were different this year. A trimmer 267.9 pounds, Fury announced another comeback, lost some weight, and made a comeback against Arslanbek Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in April. Clearly, he won on all three cards. Against an opponent few would consider elite, but lighter, looser, and back in the win column. The true test of whether the years or the weight are more important is still out there.

    As all of this is happening, it’s difficult to avoid feeling that the discussion about Fury’s body is also a discussion about time. He was never defeated by the belly. The clock could. With a lengthy layoff behind him and rumors of a third Usyk fight circulating, the 37-year-old is once again wagering that the conventional wisdom doesn’t apply to him. Most of the time it hasn’t. You wouldn’t wager the house that it would last forever.

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    Jack Ward
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    Jack Ward keeps an old notebook with worn corners and faint coffee stains, a reminder of when he first began writing about health after watching a relative inch through a long recovery — not dramatic, just quiet progress that demanded patience. He leans toward evidence, listens more than he speaks, and writes with a kind of restraint doctors tend to appreciate.

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