HEAVYWEIGHT
Fury vs Joshua Is Signed — The Biggest All-British Fight Ever Made
It's done. Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua have signed for the all-British superfight, with tune-ups first. Here's the latest and my prediction for the night.
June 27, 2026
By Luke Parker
- Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua have signed for the long-awaited all-British heavyweight superfight
- Both men take tune-up fights first — Fury returns on August 1, Joshua faces Kristian Prenga
- Luke backs Fury on points or a late stoppage, with Joshua's early power his best hope
The Deal Is Finally Done
Right then, sit down for this one.
Tyson Fury versus
Anthony Joshua is signed. After years of near-misses, broken talks and venue rows, the biggest all-British fight ever made is actually happening. Fury vs Joshua — two of the most famous heavyweights of their generation — sharing a ring at last.
Make no mistake, this is the fight British boxing has been begging for since 2017. It should have happened when both men held belts. It didn't. But better late than never, and the appetite for it hasn't dimmed one bit.
The Tune-Up Fights
Both men get a warm-up first. Fury returns to the ring on August 1 to knock off the rust, while Joshua takes a tune-up against
Kristian Prenga before the main event. Sensible. Neither man has been overly active, and you don't want either turning up cold for a fight of this magnitude.
Let's not beat around the bush — these tune-ups are about keeping the show on the road, not genuine risk. The real business is the all-British showdown that follows.
The Venue Question
One eyebrow-raiser: Fury's deal reportedly contains no UK venue requirement, which throws the door open to a Saudi staging. There's still contractual wrangling in the background, with promoters circling over who can promote what. Classic big-fight politics. But the fight itself is locked, and that's what matters.
My Prediction
Here's where I plant my flag. Both men are coming off losses to Usyk, so neither is exactly in career-best form. But styles make fights, and I fancy Fury. He's the bigger, cleverer heavyweight, and his jab and ring IQ have always given busy punchers fits. Joshua's best route is to land that thunderous right hand early and get Fury out of there before the rounds pile up.
I'm calling Fury on points or a late stoppage if Joshua tires. AJ's power keeps him live for the first six rounds — but make no mistake, over twelve, Fury's the more complete heavyweight. Whatever happens, Fury vs Joshua is the night British boxing has waited a generation for.