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David Haye, 40, wins comeback fight and calls out ‘big fat dosser’ Tyson Fury and says he is Gypsy King’s ‘kryptonite’

DAVID HAYE called out ‘big fast dosser’ Tyson Fury after winning his comeback fight and claimed he is the Gypsy King’s ‘kryptonite’.

The British boxing legend came out of retirement three years after hanging up the gloves following his consecutive defeat to Tony Bellew.

David Haye beat Joe Fournier in his comeback fight
David Haye and Tyson Fury in 2013

So it came completely out of left field when it was announced Haye would return to the ring to fight Fournier, the man he once promoted and managed.

The pair, who have enjoyed a friendship for several years and formerly sparred each other, fought over eight, two-minute rounds, opposed to the usual three.

And Haye comfortably won all of the sessions, which included a knockdown in round one following a jab.

Afterwards, he called out old rival Fury, eight years after they were first scheduled to fight each other.

Haye said: “There’s one fighter I’d come back to professional boxing for and that’s Tyson Fury.

“Tyson Fury, that big fast dosser, I know his kryptonite, I know what he can’t handle.

“He’s a dosser, it’s his word, he’s a dosser. And I’m his kryptonite. I know that he knows it, his dad knows it, his uncle knows it.”

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Haye was due to fight Fury in 2013 and then a year later, but was forced to pull out of both following injury.

In the years since, the Gypsy King has gone on to become heavyweight champion twice.

But Haye, 40, accused Fury, 33, of avoiding an undisputed title decider with Anthony Joshua, 31.

He said: “I know he’s avoiding Anthony Joshua, I know he’s trying to put trying to put him on the back burner, he doesn’t want that work.

“I’ll give it to him, I’ll give him that work. He wants to fight, the Hayemaker will come for you.”

Haye had Fournier, a ten-bout novice with no prior defeats, on the floor in round one after just a jab.

He refused to follow up and spent the remaining rounds controlling the action behind his jab, slipping and rolling anything coming back at him.

Haye insisted he decided against going for the knockout to prevent Fury from fearing a fight between them.

He explained: “I didn’t want to scare him away. Of course, I did. If I had let my right hand go, he wouldn’t have taken the fight.

“I know he thinks I’m 40-year’s-old, he thinks I’m finished, I’ve been out the ring, I’ve only had one fight against Joe Fournier.

“He thinks it will be an easy fight and he’s wrong.”