“Having a drink is what price me my complete household.”
It’s the first episode of Tommy Fury’s BBC documentary and he’s explaining why his very public break-up with Molly-Mae Hague occurred.
The boxer, whose profile skyrocketed when he went on Love Island in 2019, is sitting in his self-described “huge” home, alone.
A graphic pops as much as say it’s 110 days since Hague and their younger daughter, Bambi, left.
When Hague introduced their break-up in August 2024, Fury instantly started dealing with accusations of dishonest and getting one other girl pregnant.
Fury denied all these “disgusting” claims, and he reveals that after having an operation on a long-term hand damage, he started ingesting closely.
John Fury, the daddy of each Tommy and former heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury, says he informed Hague to go away his son.
“Throughout this documentary a variety of my hardest instances have been documented,” Fury tells BBC Sport.
“[The documentary is about] the way to navigate powerful instances.
“What’s it like behind the scenes of an precise boxing struggle.
“And the way tough it’s to steadiness the whole lot – being a household man, fighter and work life.”
The documentary follows Fury as he charts his means again from psychological well being struggles and extreme ingesting.
The Englishman credit boxing and his daughter Bambi, “the most effective factor in my life”, with serving to him most.
And in Could this yr it was confirmed Fury and Hague had reconciled.
“Coaching was my escape. I might all the time really feel superb popping out of the health club it doesn’t matter what was taking place, even when my life was falling aside,” Fury says.
“My relationship with boxing is because it’s all the time been. I’ve nonetheless received the identical objectives, I am nonetheless hungry.
“I’m nonetheless up at 4 or 5 within the morning working, nonetheless coaching thrice a day. The starvation continues to be there.
“If it wasn’t for boxing, I would not have what I’ve in my life.
“Boxing has opened each single door for me. I owe my life to boxing.”
