David Haye interview 2013
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Ask David Haye when he's happiest to be training and there's no hesitation. 'I like the last three or four days before a fight,' says the former WBA heavyweight champion when MF meets him a few weeks before his bout with the undefeated Tyson Fury. 'All that hard graft, when it feels like you're ready to cough up blood, your legs are just dead and your back's killing you -- that's all gone. You're just feeling amazing, feeling recharged and ready for a fight. Everything's firing, everything's sharp, everything's quick, my brain's acting fast because I've had months of just eating clean... every fibre of my body is at its maximum. Those last three days before a fight I feel a million dollars.'
Haye, of course, is supposed to be retired. His plan, he always maintained, was to step out of the game gracefully at 30. And he did it -- or at least, he briefly let his boxing licence lapse after a disappointing decision loss to Wladimir Klitschko, in a fight designed to unify the Scrabble board of heavyweight titles. But then there were protracted negotiations to fight Klitschko's brother Vitali, a press-conference brawl with Dereck Chisora, a new licence from the Luxembourg Boxing Association and a bout with Chisora that ended in a fifth-round victory for Haye. Now Haye is definitively back and planning to end Fury's unbeaten run.
'I'd say one of his biggest strengths is his stupidity,' says Haye of Fury. 'It sounds crazy, but the guy's very ignorant, he's very stupid, but sometimes someone ignorant and stupid can be really effective because he doesn't realise what he's doing, so he could throw a curveball at me. I need to be on my A-game.'
http://wn.com/David_Haye_interview_2013
David Haye interview 2013: http://bit.ly/14FXTkN
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/YuLiD6
Follow us on Twitter: http://bit.ly/17GFKXR
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Ask David Haye when he's happiest to be training and there's no hesitation. 'I like the last three or four days before a fight,' says the former WBA heavyweight champion when MF meets him a few weeks before his bout with the undefeated Tyson Fury. 'All that hard graft, when it feels like you're ready to cough up blood, your legs are just dead and your back's killing you -- that's all gone. You're just feeling amazing, feeling recharged and ready for a fight. Everything's firing, everything's sharp, everything's quick, my brain's acting fast because I've had months of just eating clean... every fibre of my body is at its maximum. Those last three days before a fight I feel a million dollars.'
Haye, of course, is supposed to be retired. His plan, he always maintained, was to step out of the game gracefully at 30. And he did it -- or at least, he briefly let his boxing licence lapse after a disappointing decision loss to Wladimir Klitschko, in a fight designed to unify the Scrabble board of heavyweight titles. But then there were protracted negotiations to fight Klitschko's brother Vitali, a press-conference brawl with Dereck Chisora, a new licence from the Luxembourg Boxing Association and a bout with Chisora that ended in a fifth-round victory for Haye. Now Haye is definitively back and planning to end Fury's unbeaten run.
'I'd say one of his biggest strengths is his stupidity,' says Haye of Fury. 'It sounds crazy, but the guy's very ignorant, he's very stupid, but sometimes someone ignorant and stupid can be really effective because he doesn't realise what he's doing, so he could throw a curveball at me. I need to be on my A-game.'
- published: 21 Aug 2013
- views: 4720