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Fury promises to give fans 'a real treat' ahead of Dillian Whyte bout
Tyson Fury's vow to retire after Saturday's fight with Dillian Whyte appears to be ringing more true than ever after he confirmed his latest addition to his corner.
The world heavyweight champion has promised that his career is over after his bout against Whyte, no matter the result. And in honour of the historic occasion, he has added his first amateur coach Steve Egan to his corner for his final fight.
Egan thought Fury how to box at the Jimmy Egan Centre in Wythenshawe, Manchester, but he moved on to different trainers in the professional ranks. He has been trained by his uncle Peter Fury and Ben Davison among others, and now is cornered by the Kronk Gym's SugarHill Steward.
But on Saturday night, he will return to his roots, with Egan in his corner at Wembley Stadium in front of a record 94,000-person crowd. "I started boxing at 14, I'm 34 in August," Fury told iFL TV. "I've had a good 20 years.
"How do you know it's the final curtains? I've got the man who started me, Steve Egan. He's in my corner and he's never been in my corner before other than one fight years and years ago and he's back in now for the last hoorah. He said to me, 'you know what? I'm the only person of all these people here who knew you before'. 20 years, now that's loyalty isn't it?"
Fury appears content to finish his career undefeated, having won every world title at heavyweight, but never having unified the division. If he were to