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Home»Boxing»Teddy Atlas Questions Tyson Fury’s Work Rate Ahead of Saturday
Boxing

Teddy Atlas Questions Tyson Fury’s Work Rate Ahead of Saturday

News RoomBy News RoomApril 6, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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Teddy Atlas Questions Tyson Fury’s Work Rate Ahead of Saturday

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Teddy Atlas pointed straight at that issue when breaking down Fury’s position ahead of the fight. He did not question the tools. He questioned how often they are used.

“He will be sporadic with his offense, inconsistent. He will punch and clinch sometimes. He will throw one, two, and be done, and when he does that, he will allow moments to go by and rounds to go by,” Atlas said on his YouTube channel.

That description fits with what has been seen in Fury’s last three outings against Oleksandr Usyk and Francis Ngannou. When Teddy Atlas talks about those “sporadic” bursts, he is essentially describing a fighter who is trying to work with his own gas tank

Under SugarHill Steward, Fury became a destructive, front-foot fighter. It worked against Deontay Wilder because Wilder is essentially a slugger; Fury’s aggression overwhelmed him. But that style is physically taxing.

At 37, Fury seems to have transitioned from a high-volume seeker of KOs back to a clinch-and-rest” specialist, but without the elite footwork he had in 2015.

Atlas still sees a clear path for Fury in his matchup against Makhmudov. The size, the reach, and the ability to control distance should be enough to dictate the fight if he stays active.

“If he’s got anything left, it’s target practice,” Atlas said of Fury facing Makhmudov.

Atlas’s comment about “target practice” suggests that against a slower, more stationary target like Makhmudov, Fury can afford to be inconsistent. But the danger is that this “sporadic” offense isn’t a choice.

If he allows Makhmudov to stay in the fight because he’s too tired to finish the job, he’s playing a dangerous game with a guy who has 19 KOs. He might have gotten away with it against a faded Chisora or a hesitant Whyte, but at this age, it’s risky to do so against a high-pressure puncher like Makhmudov.

“I could see where there could be just sporadic offense, inconsistent offense, and in that way, seconds tick off the clock, and rounds go by,” Atlas said.

Atlas is essentially warning us that Fury is now a four-round fighter stretched across a twelve-round frame. He has to pick his spots because he can’t own the whole canvas anymore.

The punch, grab, and lean strategy Fury now relies on wears down his opponent’s energy, but if they refuse to be held or are physically powerful, it doesn’t work.

Makhmudov is a massive human being with a background in the Soviet school of wrestling and heavy-handed boxing. He isn’t a limited, thin-legged fighter or a small heavyweight. If Fury tries to lean on him to catch his breath, he might find himself in a grappling match he doesn’t have the energy to win.

YouTube video

 

Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist who has covered the sport since 2014, providing ringside reporting and technical analysis of major bouts. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments, and the details that shape high-level competition.

Read the full article here

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