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Arslanbek Makhmudov will make his walk toward the ring for the biggest fight of his life Saturday when he takes on returning former heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London on Netflix.

He does so like many of Fury’s opponents — with two fists, a mouthguard and a battle plan — but also armed with Khabib Nurmagomedov-esque lore, having wrestled bears in his homeland.

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Makhmudov is a product of the same Russian amateur system that spawned former world champions Alexander Povetkin and Sergey Kovalev. He’s 6-foot-6, weighs around 260 pounds, and though Fury would likely have handled him in his prime, Makhmudov has enough skill and experience to step up and cause problems if the Brit has slid from the peak of his powers as much as Fury said former opponents Deontay Wilder and Derek Chisora had after watching them brawl last week.

“I’ve never seen two men slide as much as them two in my life,” Fury, 37, told Inside The Ring earlier this week. “And I’m thinking, ‘Am I f****** next? Is this me?’”

Fury hasn’t boxed since 2024 (two losses to Oleksandr Usyk) and hasn’t won a fight since 2023 — a split decision win over Francis Ngannou in which he had to climb off the canvas just to salvage a controversial decision. His last clean win was in 2022 — to Chisora, someone he’d already beaten twice prior.

Makhmudov, 36, scored 14 consecutive knockouts to begin his pro career and brings 21 wins (19 KOs total) into the bout, along with two losses — both by knockout — to Agit Kabayel in 2023 and Guido Vianello the following year. He is gettable. But he can get you, too.

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The bear

For Makhmudov, boxing a 6-foot-8 opponent like Fury is likely nothing considering he’s happy to grapple with a bear just because a friend dared him to.

In viral footage from February, Makhmudov can be seen dancing from side to side as a black bear goes from all fours, to upright, towering over the heavyweight boxer when it does so. Makhmudov fences with a jab to keep it at arm’s length, and the apex predator opens its terrifying jaw when the fighter’s fingers are on its nose. Makhmudov toys with it like it’s a dog, before taking its neck and going for side control before the clip ends.

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