Tyson Fury’s appearance at the UFC event held at the White House over the weekend sent an immediate signal through the combat sports world, raising questions about his relationship with Zuffa Boxing and complicating an already murky promotional picture surrounding his anticipated heavyweight fight with Anthony Joshua.
Fury had not set foot in the United States for five and a half years, a prolonged absence tied to his prior association with a figure identified by law enforcement authorities as an alleged organized crime boss. His return to American soil, made possible according to his manager through the intervention of Saudi Arabia’s top entertainment official, placed him alongside the UFC’s chief executive and President Trump at one of the most high-profile combat sports events in recent memory.
A contract that does not exist, according to Fury’s camp
The speculation that followed centered on whether Fury had signed with Zuffa Boxing, the emerging promotional entity co-founded by the UFC’s chief executive and the Saudi official who has emerged as one of the most powerful figures in global boxing. Fury’s manager moved quickly to shut that down, stating categorically that no contract exists between Fury and Zuffa Boxing.
The clarification did not entirely close the door. The manager acknowledged that the Saudi official was responsible for facilitating Fury’s return to the United States and confirmed that the same official would serve as Fury’s promoter for the remainder of his career. That relationship gives the Saudi side significant influence over where and how Fury fights, which means the question of Zuffa involvement in the Joshua bout remains genuinely unresolved regardless of what any single contract does or does not say.
The UFC executive teased an announcement about the Joshua-Fury fight without providing specifics, adding fuel to speculation that his involvement goes beyond commentary.
Two promoters, one fight, and no agreed location
The promotional structure around Joshua versus Fury has been contested for months. Joshua’s promoter has been explicit that the fight is planned for the United Kingdom in November and that neither Zuffa Boxing nor its co-founder has any role in the event. Joshua is scheduled to return to the ring in late July before the big fight, using that bout as preparation.
Fury’s side has not fully aligned with that version of events. His manager acknowledged that much remains unsettled and deferred to the Saudi official, Netflix, and the various promotional teams involved as the parties who would ultimately determine where and when the fight takes place. The number of stakeholders with a potential claim on the bout, including two separate promotional organizations on the Joshua side, Fury’s promoter, Netflix, and potentially Zuffa Boxing, makes a clean resolution difficult to visualize.
What Fury’s return to the US actually signals
Fury‘s physical presence in America matters beyond the promotional politics. It demonstrates that his legal situation, which had kept him out of a major market for years, has been addressed to the point where he can travel freely. That change opens up the possibility of the fight taking place on American soil, a scenario that would dramatically increase its commercial potential and that several parties involved would find financially attractive.
Whether the November UK plan survives the competing interests of everyone involved remains to be seen. The only certainty is that the fight will happen, and that almost everything else about it, including who profits from it, who promotes it, and where it is held, remains genuinely unresolved.

