Tyson Fury is a 6-foot-9, 250-pound fashion plate who makes a sartorial splash whether he's walking into a boxing ring or a news conference.
He has been Batman, Apollo Creed and a lucha libre wrestler, and he's pushing the envelope again this week ahead of Saturday's showdown with Deontay Wilder.
Fury kept calling Wilder a "dosser" during their first fight on Dec. 1, 2018 -- "dosser" is a disparaging British term for a homeless person. And Fury reminded Wilder of that expression this week with a suit that has "You big Dosser" stitched into it.
.@Tyson_Fury's so serious about Wilder being a big Dosser that he had a suit made 🤣 #WildervsFury2 (via @osunaespn) pic.twitter.com/3DndnR9DBf
— ESPN Ringside (@ESPNRingside) February 20, 2020
The bold looks, which this week also included a suit covered with faded images of Fury's face as a background for one of his sayings, are the products of tailor Nav Salimian, who has worked with Fury the past five years.
Salimian, who is also the marketing director for clothier Claudio Lugli, has worked with UFC stars Conor McGregor and boxer Amir Khan. His work caught the eye of Fury, who wanted something nice to wear for his media tour before facing Wladimir Klitschko on Nov. 28, 2015.
Salimian was in the audience for a Sept. 23, 2015 news conference in London, eager to see Fury attired in one of his suits for the first time.
"And then I saw him come out in the Batman outfit," Salimian said. "I was like, 'Wait, hold on.'
"But he used the Batman outfit to set up the Bruce Wayne look, which was our suit. That's when I realized Tyson has a great sense of humor and charisma. It allowed me to experiment with more colors and patterns. He's egged me on since then, saying, 'Let's go louder, more vibrant' and to steal the show everywhere we go."
Fury has saved some of his more colorful outfits for Las Vegas, including his Creed-inspired walkout number when he fought Tom Schwarz last June.
"I always wanted to come out and do that, but I just needed an event and a good place to do it, and I thought Las Vegas was an opportunity to showcase that entrance," Fury says. "It was really a good one for me, memorable."
But the outfits aren't all about patterns and material.
"A lot of it is reality through art," says Salimian, who doesn't work on Fury's fight-night gear. "It's storytelling about the amazing journey this guy has had.
"Ultimately, you can love or hate the garment, but you can't ignore it."
Sept. 23, 2015: News conference in London promoting Wladimir Klitschko fight
Salimian: "Batman vs. Bruce Wayne. A moment that is solidified in my mind as a turning point in the way in which Tyson and I began to approach garment design. The humor and strategy behind his Batman attire has given us much inspiration over the years, and it will arrive full circle come fight week when he unveils his garments [for the Wilder rematch]."
June 6, 2018: News conference in Manchester, England, promoting Sefer Seferi fight
Salimian: "This Claudio Lugli shirt was the first we designed for Tyson upon his return to the ring, and what better way to do this than create a design which emulates the entire animal kingdom marking the return of the King of the Jungle, The Gypsy King, Tyson Fury. We wanted to make a statement: The takeover begins."
May 13, 2019: News conference in London promoting Tom Schwarz fight
Salimian: "Tyson's entire suit is engulfed in smoke. Underneath his blazer is a patterned shirt, which displays some of the greatest heavyweight boxers of all time, a Mount Rushmore of heavyweights of past and present. It represents legacy, the importance of the lineal status and the notion that no one wants that smoke with Tyson or any one of the legends engraved onto his garments."
June 12, 2019: News conference in Las Vegas before Schwarz fight
Salimian: "Tyson is a boxing historian, someone that has studied the game and wants to etch his name into boxing history as one of the greatest of this generation. The Claudio Lugli suit he is wearing represents bare-knuckle boxers of a bygone era taken from cigarette cards from the early 19th century. Amongst these boxers is John L. Sullivan, widely recognized as the first lineal heavyweight champion."
Sept. 10 and 14, 2019: Faceoff and entrance for Otto Wallin fight
Fury wanted to celebrate Mexican Independence Day, which was Sept. 16, with an homage to the lucha libre wrestlers. The mask was a nod to the WWE's Rey Mysterio.
Oct. 11 and 31, 2019: News conference, walkout for WWE's Crown Jewel
After donning the sport jacket-with-no-shirt look during a news conference in Las Vegas, Fury paid tribute to the local fans with his attire during his walkout at the WWE event in Saudi Arabia.
Jan. 13, 2020: News conference in Los Angeles for the Saturday's bout
Salimian: "Dripped in watercolor patterns exhibiting iconic moments of Tyson's career thus far, this two-piece suit-and-shirt combination may be our proudest. It demonstrates the ultimate highs and the lows. From images of Tyson rising from his 12th-round knockdown [in his first fight against Wilder] to him cheering whilst gripping multiple world titles. His story is well documented, and the art we have created is a depiction of his reality. A story that will go down as the greatest comeback in sporting history."
Jan. 25, 2020: News conference in L.A. for Saturday's bout
Salimian: "Colorful, loud, vibrant and unforgettable. It's hard to work out whether we are talking about Tyson's floral suit or his charisma and personality. The synergy is there and has always been there from the beginning of our relationship as his tailors."