Why Tim Tszyu won't meet his new niece Curiosity before Sebastian Fundora rematch
Tszyu flies out for Las Vegas on Friday afternoon, a little over a week after Nikita's daughter, Curiosity, was born.
And while he can't wait to meet the newest addition to the Tszyu family, Tim says he's too deep into fight preparation to see her.
'I haven't been able to take it all in yet – I've just been so focused,' Tszyu told Code Sports after his last training session in Sydney before he jets out.
'When I finish, and after the fight, it will be different.
'But right now, I'm just hard. I don't feel soft. Kids, babies, they make you slow down. They make you feel soft.
'I don't have that right now.
'I don't have that feeling of, 'Oh, I want to go see a little baby'.'
Tszyu only needs to go back to his fight with Bakhram Murtazaliev in October for a similar example of losing that hardness.
That was when Kostya Tszyu made a surprise fight week appearance, with heart-warming scenes of a long overdue family reunion.
But heart-warming isn't the vibe you want when preparing for a world title fight.
'I don't like to feel soft, or vulnerable before a fight,' he said. 'It's warrior mentality.
'The fact my dad was there, it was a little bit of emotions from that, but I'm more stoic when I get into the ring and before the fight. That's how I like to feel.'
Which is why he doesn't want to see babies or have any more family reunions ahead of his must-win fight with Fundora.
Instead, Tszyu is channeling his old man's cold blooded approach to the fight game.
There are dozens of examples of Kostya's no-nonsense approach to boxing and life. Like waking Tim and Nikita up at 5am to go on morning runs when they were barely teenagers.
Tim reveals another one, this time from Kostya's world title unification bout with Zab Judah in 2001.
Kostya held the WBA and WBC titles, but was the underdog against the flashy IBF champion Judah.
'My dad named the fight 'Destiny' and the whole thing was promoted as 'Destiny',' Tim said. 'It was all roads leading to this one fight, this place.
'Well, Zab Judah had named his daughter Destiny, and she'd just been born, but he had kept it real quiet.
'Dad found out what he'd named his daughter, and at the weigh-ins, he walked up to Zab Judah and whispered in his ear, 'How's your Destiny? My destiny awaits me tomorrow night'.
'And that rattled him. It rattled him big time.
'He was cold-blooded, and that's my mindset right now too.
'I'll always remember that, and that's why, right now, I'm just in a hard, vengeance mode.
'No disrespect to anyone, but it's just kill and vengeance on my mind right now.'
Meanwhile, after hand surgery kept him out of the ring for nearly a year, Nikita will make his long-awaited return on August 20.
After a series of recovery setbacks, he finally returned to sparring this week in preparation for his comeback.
No opponent or venue have been confirmed, but a win will likely see him propelled into a domestic pay-per-view blockbuster with Michael Zerafa in December.
Zerafa and Tim have a long and ugly history, but Nikita says he doesn't buy into any of the drama.
'I couldn't care less what he's said in the past - I say stupid shit all the time,' he said. 'I say things I don't mean all the time. If he meant it, good on him, but I don't care.
'I'm going to be respectful. I've had a long year behind me where I've had some reflection on how I want to conduct myself, and I'm going to try and be an adult...we'll see how long that lasts.'
Nikita suffered numerous setbacks after requiring surgery on his hand following his dramatic ninth round stoppage win over Koen Mazoudier last August, but is confident he'll be fully firing for his comeback.
'I've been punching for a couple of months,' he said. 'I've been punching the heavy bag for about a month. (Punching) heads, one day.
'Usually I don't feel anything, but in the morning I woke up and could feel the injury a little bit. But in sparring yesterday, it didn't hurt, especially compared to March when I really busted it up.
'We're good. We'll be fine.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Brad Scott goes scorched Earth on umpires after Nate Caddy collision
Essendon coach Brad Scott delivered a scathing review of the umpires after the collision involving Bombers' forward Nate Caddy. Caddy was streaming forward during Essendon's 41-point loss to Gold Coast on Saturday afternoon when he crashed into the umpire. The emerging forward, who kicked three goals, was not seriously injured in the accident but needed 15 minutes to get his breath back. The incident comes just days after the AFL introduced potential suspensions to players who repeatedly make contact with the officiators. Scott launched a stern defence of Caddy when asked if he thought the collision could spell match review panel. Watch the incident in the video player above 'I've lost count of the amount of times I have contacted the AFL about moving the umpires out of the corridor (middle of the ground),' Scott said. 'They sprint into the corridor and they stay there – and that's clearly where we want to get the ball. 'Even when I was at the AFL I tried to move them out of the corridor and they still wouldn't move out of the corridor. 'We've been at them and at them and at them to move out of the corridor and the last response I had from Steve McBurney (umpires chief) was, 'Just pretend they're invisible'. 'Well, he wasn't invisible and unfortunately it took the wind out of Nate Caddy, it took 15 minutes to get him going again. 'Whose fault is it? Certainly not Nate Caddy's. And particularly given we put this on the agenda to move the umpires out of the corridor and they refuse to do it.' Essendon won the free kick count but should have had another in a high tackle free kick to first-season forward Angus Clarke. Scott doubled down on his review of the umpires, saying the reason the fourth umpire was introduced was to gain clarity on both sides of the contest. 'Not only that, the arc then tells our doctor to check on the umpire and assess the umpire,' he said. 'And it's Nate Caddy's fault? I don't expect him to have anything to answer for that. 'Part of the reason for the four umpires was so they didn't get blind sighted, so you can have an umpire on each side of the contest. 'Angus Clarke clearly got taken high in the forward 50, the umpire is on the other side and pays holding the ball. 'Now that happens but the reason we have four is so the umpire on the other side of the contest can see it and it would make sense if the umpire was on four quadrants on the outside. 'But they insist on running into the corridor and they're coached that way, then we have a player collide and it's the player's fault.'

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Angela Jones extends lead in Brisbane jockeys' premiership with Winx Guineas victory on The Three Hundred
Angela Jones has put one hand on the Brisbane jockeys' premiership crown with her dominant victory in the Group 3 Winx Guineas on Saturday at the Sunshine Coast. The talented hoop went into the meeting, the last of the Queensland winter carnival, on 62 metro victories – three ahead of her nearest rival Emily Lang. And she extended her healthy lead to five wins after saluting on King Yoshi in an earlier Benchmark 80 sprint (1200m) and then on the Adrian Bott and Gai Waterhouse -trained The Three Hundred in the $300,000 Winx Guineas (1600m). Jones will serve a 10-day suspension following Saturday's meeting for careless riding which stemmed from last weekend's Group 1 Tattersall's Tiara on Floozie but she will appeal the severity of the ban at a Queensland Racing Appeals Panel hearing on Monday. There was dramatic news earlier on Saturday when reports emerged that jockey Ryan Maloney had hurt his back while steering Caspernova to a runner-up finish in the race won by Jones on King Yoshi, and he was unable to ride favourite Mister Bianco in the Winx Guineas. Sensationally, Gold Coast trainer Paul Shailer could not find a suitable replacement jockey and he was forced to scratch Mister Bianco from the $300,000 race. The Three Hundred ($11) won by 1½ lengths ahead of $34 roughie Ramp It Up and Towoomba galloper Apuntar ($6.50) on the Soft 6 track. Three hundred reasons to cheer! 🥳 The Three Hundred leads all the way in the G3 Winx Guineas at @SCTurfClub! Ange Jones with a winning double. @GaiWaterhouse1 @TrilogyRacing1 â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) July 5, 2025 Jones said she was grateful to receive support from the powerful Waterhouse/Bott stable. 'You know their horses are fit,' she said. 'Maybe he wasn't putting it all into his races when he gets back so we really made a point that if we can get him away cleanly, we'd send him to the front and he'd be winning. 'We were able to do that – lovely and relaxed – and he is a different horse when he doesn't have other horses to look around at. 'It was a super dominant win today. 'It has been a good season and hopefully I get a few more (wins) before I serve my suspension next week.' Waterhouse-Bott stable representative Neil Paine said The Three Hundred had a split personality, but he was glad to see that the three-year-old gelding behaved at the gates on Saturday. 'The problem with this horse is that he's a bugger at the machines,' Paine said. 'We told Ang to keep him warmed up and if he jumps to put him right into the race. 'Over the last one or two starts, he was slowly away and he gets back and starts to lose interest. I was really happy when he jumped and Ang kept pushing forward. 'The pace was a little bit fast early but she pushed him forward and got him balanced once she got him to the lead. 'Gee he surprised me when he kicked away. He is a horse with promise but there's two of them.' The emphatic victory came 10 years after mighty mare Winx won this race, then called the Sunshine Coast Guineas, as part of her incredible 33 consecutive victories before she retired in April 2019. Reigning Melbourne Cup champion Knight's Choice also won the Winx Guineas in 2023, with Jaden Lloyd on board.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Mudgee preview: Trainer David Smith optimistic despite rain threatening Lockdown Gamble's Cup campaign
It will be the rain and not a crushing weight that denies local idol Lockdown Gamble a win in the much anticipated XXXX Cup (1400m). The David Smith -trained gelding boasts an exemplary record at the Mudgee 1400m and towers over his rivals in the Benchmark ratings department. Add in a four kilo claim and Lockdown Gamble seems to have all bases covered, but for one, the weather. 'I am not sure he will get out of third or fourth gear here with the wet conditions but if the track improves, he will be terribly hard to beat,' Smith said. 'He needed the run (last start at Canterbury). He was about five or six weeks between runs and he just got away from us fitness-wise. LOCKDOWN GAMBLE wins the Wellington Cup! Consolation from the Country Championships for @DJSRacing6 as Lockdown Gamble survives a protest from Danish Prince to win the @WellingtonRaces Cup and earn Big Dance ðŸ'ƒ eligibility. Sizzle Minizzle ran a close third. @tabcomau â€' Racing NSW (@racing_nsw) April 14, 2024 The Form: Complete NSW Racing thoroughbred form, including video replays and all you need to know about every horse, jockey and trainer. Find a winner here! 'It was just a sit and sprint over the last 600m and I am quite pleased with how he has come through the run.' Given all of Lockdown Gamble's past heroics, it was only fair to the others that he was afforded 64kg in the XXXX Cup. Not that Smith saw it as an impossible task but has managed to cut the impost down to a manageable 60kg thanks to the whopping claim of young apprentice jockey, Nicholas Hyde. 'I saw an article on him on the Racing NSW (website). I watched him on Cumboogle there at Narromine and I thought he was quite strong for a four kilo kid being able to ride one out,' Smith said. 'That's pretty much what we're after. Once we dropped a few points after that Canterbury run, we thought if we could find a half decent kid who is going to be able handle him, we can pick up another Cups race out here with him.' Smith, meanwhile, is suitably bullish about the prospects of the supremely well-bred mare Champers Girl when steps out in the Oriental Hotel Benchmark 66 Handicap (1200m). Smith's mare was nothing short of the eye-catcher in the race when she finished second to one of Dubbo's most in-form horses - Midnight Dream - at her most recent outing. 'I'm extremely happy with her too,' the trainer declared. 'I think she is probably my best chance on the card.' Borrowed Luck cruises to victory at HUGE odds at Tamworth! ðŸ'° â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) March 9, 2025 Champers Girl, as her name may suggest, is a great granddaughter of Champagne who won the 1998 Mackinnon Stakes, four days prior to her close second to Jezabeel in the Melbourne Cup. Smith's stable of blue bloods doesn't end there. His Mudgee digs are home to Instead who was once part of Sheikh Mohammed's Godolphin racing string. A daughter of Lonhro, Instead is a very close genetic relative of the Hong Kong champion Vengeance Of Rain, AJC Oaks winner Dizelle and her VRC Oaks winning daughter, Pinot. Instead has been holding her form admirably, evidenced by her determined fourth in a deep 2200m Benchmark 58 at Dubbo last weekend. 'I have no hesitation in her backing up and the reason for it is she just likes the wet track,' Smith said. 'The only time I have done it, she was coming off a Coonabarabran win when she stepped up to the mile for the first time at Dubbo and she was only just nabbed on the line there.' Fans of Johnny Cash will be drawn to Smith's participant in the final race, the Wild Oats Country Boosted Class 2 Handicap (1400m), namely A Boy Named Soo. The son of the now Indonesia-based stallion Sooboog has been somewhat hot and cold over his career but is warming up to another win says Smith. 'He is going much better than his record suggests this time in,' Smith offered. SHAYNE O'CASS' TOP SELECTIONS BEST BET Race 4 No. 1: LAST LALIQUE Half-sister and stablemate of Dollar Magic. Might just be better than these. NEXT BEST Race 6 No. 6: RED SPECTOR Left a lasting impression when he won at Coffs Harbour back in December. VALUE BET Race 7 No. 2: THE IMPECKABLE Third-up; good draw, good jockey, good prospects. QUADDIE Race 4: 1 Race 5: 1, 4, 8, 10 Race 6: 2, 6 Race 7: 2, 3, 6, 9 JOCKEY TO FOLLOW AARON BULLOCK has a 20.7 per cent winning strike-rate at Mudgee. INSIDE MAIL - MUDGEE DE LOUVIERE (3) is a Matthew Smith trained son of the German Derby winner Sea The Moon who was scheduled to race at Beaumont on Tuesday, only the meeting was washed out. Smith's Irish-bred import blotted an otherwise exemplary copybook with that fading seventh of eight at Wyong last start but he did plenty of overtime up there in a no holds barred 2000m. AVION FURY (1) boasts a plethora of provincial form. Failed last start too but this looks a lovely race for him to bounce back. Maybe BUSH TELEGRAPH (2) wants 2000m now. Bet: De Louviere to win, exacta 3 to beat 1 â– â– â– â– â– RACE 2: McGrath Country Boosted Mdn Plate 1200m GREAT IDEA (2) is a rising six-year-old with just one start on his resume this far; that was on March 9 this year when an eye-catching fourth at Tamworth in a 1200m race at $61. Resurfaced at Scone on June 25 winning a 1000m trial. Good draw, Grant Buckley rides, nice race for him. ANOTHER PEACH (9) has been blessed with what might be a 'winning draw'. She should do no work and thus have no excuses if she can't run up to her best from box three. Mack Griffith's local SILENT ACE (6) is a massive watch. Bet: Great Idea each-way â– â– â– â– â– RACE 3: XXXX Cup (Bm82) 1400m LOCKDOWN GAMBLE (1) has won seven times with six placings in his 31 starts. He is of course trained here at Mudgee where his record at this track and trip is rather impressive; five runs, one win and two thirds. The win was in an 82 and the thirds were in the Mudgee Cup and the CDRA Championships Qualifier. ZULFIQAR (2) was scratched from the Midway at Rosehill to run here. Hasn't been far away his last two. MEDINAH (7) is a Mack Griffith-trained local whose own record at the Mudgee 1400m is almost faultless being three starts for two wins. FLORINO (3) should be very prominent in the run from that alley. Bet: Lockdown Gamble to win â– â– â– â– â– RACE 4: Goree Super Mdn Hcp 1400m LAST LALIQUE (1) is a half-sister to stablemate Dollar Magic. This three-year-old daughter of Star Witness has raced three times so far for a fifth, a fourth and lastly a third, that one at Scone when closing off willingly. That was 1300m, this is 1400m. How perfect could it be. GHAZNAVI (5) remains winless after 16 starts but he has placed five times; two of them have been since he joined the Cameron Crockett. He does look to be getting close but we've said that before. BONNIE AND BRUCE (2) can figure. Bet: Last Lalique to win â– â– â– â– â– RACE 5: Oriental Hotel (Bm66) 1200m CHICO CASINO (8) is a handy horse. The Dean Mirfin-trained four-year-old was an easy winner on debut at home. His record as it stands is 15 starts for two wins and nine seconds, four of them are seconds. We should also point out that he ran in the 2025 CDRA Qualifier and wasn't awful either. Drawn wide but has Aaron Bullock to assist. Stablemate DE FORERUNNER (1) has raced at Mudgee twice for a win and a third. He is the top-rater in the race which has to count for something and the trial was a beauty. GRINS (4), CHAMPERS GIRL (10) and VOIGNER (3) are in medal contention. Bet: Chico Casino to win, Daily Double 1st Leg 8, 2nd Leg 2 â– â– â– â– â– RACE 6: Bisec Hcp (C1) 1200m RED SPECTOR (6) is one of the handful of progeny of Red Henno to have raced so far and all of them can gallop. None better, or faster, than this Jake Hull-trained three-year-old who was just so impressive when he won that 1205m maiden at Coffs Harbour on December 30. Brilliant again in his June 16 trial. PRESSNELL (2), the horse named in honour of the great man himself (Max) has his first run at Mudgee after some tidy efforts away from home. Has plenty of wins in him. WILD SENSATION (5) has drawn well and is in good shape off a recent second at Nowra. â– â– â– â– â– THE IMPECKABLE (2) sent out signs that a win was imminent when he came from well back at the 400m to finish third in a 1400m Benchmark 58 at Tamworth on June 16. That was second-up so it stands to logic that he should be at his peak now for this very suitable race. Gets Chad Lever, good draw and 1400m. PODCAST (3) wasn't too bad in his first Highway attempt at Rosehill on June 14. This is easier of course but made slightly harder than it could have been given a very wide draw, Still, he gets back anyway and has Aaron Bullock to help out.