Al Bernstein: “Tyson Fury came back and honestly he looked better than he did before”

10 Submitted by on Fri, 21 December 2018, 02:10

Showtime boxing announcer, Al Bernstein, is one of the most recognizable commentators in the sport, having called some of the biggest fights in the history of boxing. Bernstein had worked for ESPN for 23 years before moving to Showtime championship boxing in 2003.

In part 1 of my “On The Ropes” boxing radio interview with Al Bernstein, I discuss with him the Wilder vs. Fury bout, that was popular with fight fans at Coral sign up promo code who wanted to place a bet on the fight. Berstein also talks about twelfth round knockdown and breaks down how he thinks a rematch might play out. Here is what Al Bernstein had to say.

Jenna J: The last fight you called ringside was Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury and you have had a few weeks to reflect on it, what were your thoughts on the bout?

Al Bernstein: It was a pretty extraordinary atmosphere and the fight itself turned out to be very exciting with Tyson Fury boxing superbly — better than most people even thought he could possibly do.

I mentioned during the fight that I’ve only seen two fighters who were off for that kind of layoff in which they suffered personal decline, one was Johnny Tapia who was out of the ring for several years with terrible drug abuse problems and he came back and he was better than he was before he left. I can say the same thing for Tyson Fury, who of course suffered drug addiction issues, mental health problems, and he came back and honestly he looked better than he did before. 

Deontay Wilder hung in there and registered those two knockdowns, the second of which looked for all the world like it was going to end the fight. It was an extraordinary night, and obviously there was much debate over the draw.

Jenna J: The one moment people still talk about when it comes to this fight is when Tyson Fury looked like he was knocked out cold in the twelfth and somehow got up. Did you think he was done when that happened?

Al Bernstein: Yeah, in my brain I thought, “Oh my god, he’s not getting up from this.” But like Lazarus rising from the dead, he did. Afterwards with Paulie Malignaggi, we re-timed the knockdown, and I know some people are saying it was a long count, but I don’t think it really was. From the time the referee went to count on him, which wasn’t long after he got knocked down, we put a stopwatch to it and it was 9.5 seconds when he got up. I don’t really think he got a long count. I know some people think he did but it didn’t appear that way.

Jenna J: With all the buzz after the fight, there is a lot of talk about a rematch. If a rematch does happen who would you be favoring now based on what you saw from each of them?

Al Bernstein: The fight probably ended up being in the black because I think they were shooting for about 250,000 for their break even point, from what I’ve been told. So it was successful in that regard. They had a huge crowd in Los Angeles for the fight. I’m guessing there will be a rematch.

I actually expect Fury to be in a little better shape because he only had the two tune up fights going into the fight against lesser opposition. He was obviously in great shape to be able to go twelve rounds and survive those knockdowns. I think in some ways we can see Fury being better.

Wilder claims he figured out why he was overthrowing his punches and rushing things — and of course he was able to solve Fury twice, and he made the point that Fury had to be perfect for twelve rounds and he only had to be perfect for one second. That actually didn’t turn out to be true because he was perfect for two seconds when he scored those knockdowns and he couldn’t finish Tyson Fury. I think the rematch will go off as a 50-50 proposition.

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10 Responses to "Al Bernstein: “Tyson Fury came back and honestly he looked better than he did before”"
  1. gggfan says:

    Fury looks as good, I am not sure he was better. I guess being humbled by life maybe made him more level headed in the ring.

  2. AdonisCreed says:

    I think he looked as good as against Klitschko. He was about the same with a body that showed the time out of the ring.

  3. […] “I mentioned during the fight that I’ve only seen two fighters who were off for that kind of layoff in which they suffered personal decline, one was Johnny Tapia who was out of the ring for several years with terrible drug abuse problems and he came back and he was better than he was before he left. I can say the same thing for Tyson Fury, who of course suffered drug addiction issues, mental health problems, and he came back and honestly he looked better than he did before,” Bernstein told On The Ropes Boxing Radio. […]

  4. […] “I mentioned during the fight that I’ve only seen two fighters who were off for that kind of layoff in which they suffered personal decline, one was Johnny Tapia who was out of the ring for several years with terrible drug abuse problems and he came back and he was better than he was before he left. I can say the same thing for Tyson Fury, who of course suffered drug addiction issues, mental health problems, and he came back and honestly he looked better than he did before,” Bernstein told On The Ropes Boxing Radio. […]

  5. R_Walken says:

    If the rematch happens it’ll be the same as before

    If Fury can outbox Wilder without getting touched he wins if Wilder hits Fury with the hammer Wilder will win

    I’m a fan of Fury but his reluctance to talk about a immediate rematch makes me think he knows he escaped that fight by the skin of his teeth with the KD in the 12th and wouldn’t be suprised if he’s still waking up in the middle of the night in cold sweats having nightmares about that KD

    Fury’s profile has done a 180 as most feel he won the fight but if a rematch happens and Wilder catches him ( which there is a very good chance and he probably wouldn’t be getting up this time ) he’ll lose whatever momentum he’s built from the first fight

  6. hugh grant says:

    In reality it’s 60-40 in furys favour. But if fury don’t want to be favourite and feels he performs better as underdog let it be 51-49 in wilder favour.

  7. The plunger man says:

    Because fury seemed to be out cold we automaticallly assumed he would not wake up and beat the count but it was not as long as some of the 10 counts i have seen and each time i watch i see him getting to his feet at the 9.9 mark and if he is upright and astute he can fight on…wilder fans just trying any reason to try and avoid the fact the big dosser totally outclassed by fury.
    I saw wilder actually get a 30 second count added on to a minutes rest last time he boxed ortiz….30 seconds for the big dosser jeez

  8. johnbook says:

    I timed it and also got between 9 and 10.
    Many count 1 when he hits the canvas when that is zero.

    But it’s hype that he was unconscious. When the camera zooms into his face at 3-4 sec, you could see his eyes were to his right looking at the ref. He was either never unconscious or at most for a second or two.

  9. tokon says:

    The count was not long. However the ref did seem to give Fury “extra time” on his feet, recovering, before waving Wilder on.

  10. _Rexy_ says:

    I’m glad the fight was in the USA. With all of the talks of “home cooking” a UK ref would have waived that off the second Fury hit the canvas. That fight deserved to see the last bell

  11. Oshio says:

    It’s laughable how anyone would cook up delayed counting to justify Wilder’s terrible performance. Wilder was outboxed and outclassed by a half-fit Fury that is what it is… Wilder fans should deal with it

  12. Froch_uppercut says:

    Anything to do withe that hyped and protected ducker is always about an excuse for something.

    Excuses coming out of his arse why he won’t fight AJ, excuses for everything. I hate that phony twat. Assuming Fury is in the pub again, what excuses will Wilder come up with for fighting Breazeale instead of a mega lucrative fight for all the belts?