Tag Archives: Tyson

Tyson Fury vs. Francis Ngannou: How a heavyweight boxing champ ended up in a ring with an MMA star – The Athletic

  1. Tyson Fury vs. Francis Ngannou: How a heavyweight boxing champ ended up in a ring with an MMA star The Athletic
  2. ‘This is what heavyweights do’: How Mike Tyson helped make Francis Ngannou’s dream fight against Tyson Fury a reality – ESPN ESPN
  3. Tyson Fury vs. Francis Ngannou Predictions, Boxing Picks & Betting Odds Sports Illustrated
  4. Tyson Fury vs. Francis Ngannou: Fight predictions, odds, undercard, expert picks, preview, start time CBS Sports
  5. JEFF POWELL: Is Tyson Fury’s showdown with Francis Ngannou the real deal? Only time will tell – but the Gypsy Daily Mail
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Tyson Fury explains why he is fighting Francis Ngannou | First Take – ESPN

  1. Tyson Fury explains why he is fighting Francis Ngannou | First Take ESPN
  2. Carl Frampton on what Francis Ngannou must do to beat Tyson Fury in heavyweight fight – ‘Easier said than done’ Eurosport COM
  3. ‘NGANNOU HITS REALLY HARD! Fury doesn’t wanna get NAILED by him’ – JOE JOYCE Seconds Out
  4. John Fury Predicts Son Will Sustain Heavy Damage Against Francis Ngannou: ‘He’s Going To Get Knocked About’ MMA News
  5. Joe Joyce WARNS Tyson Fury “You don’t want to get HIT by Francis Ngannou!” reveals sparring insight! Fight Hub TV
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Francis Ngannou Vows To Knock Down Tyson Fury In Fight, ‘Gonna Hit The Canvas’ | TMZ Sports – TMZSports

  1. Francis Ngannou Vows To Knock Down Tyson Fury In Fight, ‘Gonna Hit The Canvas’ | TMZ Sports TMZSports
  2. Deontay Wilder predicts Tyson Fury-Francis Ngannou fight to be boring ClutchPoints
  3. Mike Tyson says fans underestimating Francis Ngannou against Tyson Fury: ‘Why can’t he give Tyson a capable f… MMA Fighting
  4. Weeks After Whistleblower Alleges U.S. Government of Finding Non-Human ‘Biologics’, Mike Tyson Reveals His “Mars and Aliens and Spaceships” Aspirations EssentiallySports
  5. Francis Ngannou Vows To Knock Down Tyson Fury In Fight, ‘Gonna Hit The Canvas’ TMZ
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Francis Ngannou after booking Tyson Fury fight: ‘For some reason, I always prove Dana White wrong’ – MMA Fighting

  1. Francis Ngannou after booking Tyson Fury fight: ‘For some reason, I always prove Dana White wrong’ MMA Fighting
  2. Oleksandr Usyk has finally given his honest thoughts on Tyson Fury vs Francis Ngannou GIVEMESPORT
  3. Francis Ngannou to get ‘multiples’ of UFC career earnings in one bout with Tyson Fury Bloody Elbow
  4. Jake Paul lauds Francis Ngannou for landing big-money Fury fight MMA Junkie
  5. “Hopefully more fighters follow suit” – Jake Paul lauds Francis Ngannou for ‘creating history’ by leaving UFC and receiving biggest payday Sportskeeda
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Meet Joe Joyce, the heavyweight that is a fight away from facing champions Tyson Fury, Oleksandr Usyk – ESPN

  1. Meet Joe Joyce, the heavyweight that is a fight away from facing champions Tyson Fury, Oleksandr Usyk ESPN
  2. Joe Joyce vs. Zhilei Zhang • FULL WEIGH IN & FINAL FACE OFF • BT Sport & Top Rank Boxing Seconds Out
  3. Joe Joyce: It Could Go 12, I Don’t Plan On Doing That, Though; It’s a Long Time To Be In The Ring BoxingScene.com
  4. I KO’d a man 30kg heavier than me in sparring and my style has been compared to Mike Tyson… talkSPORT
  5. Joe Joyce vs. Zhilei Zhang fight prediction, odds, start time, undercard, preview, expert picks CBS Sports
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Chris Tyson, MrBeast Sidekick, Reveals Gender Journey on Social Media – Rolling Stone

  1. Chris Tyson, MrBeast Sidekick, Reveals Gender Journey on Social Media Rolling Stone
  2. MrBeast YouTuber Chris Tyson Is Undergoing Hormone Replacement Therapy Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Chris Tyson responds to speculation about his gender following new MrBeast video Dexerto
  4. “MrBeast should be telling Chris this is not okay” – Controversial streamer Sneako gives his hot take on Chris Tyson being on HRT Sportskeeda
  5. MrBeast YouTube Star Chris Tyson Undergoing Hormone Replacement Therapy: ‘Saved’ My Life Entertainment Tonight
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Tyson Fury confident Tommy Fury knocks out Jake Paul, expects rematch ‘for even more money’ – MMA Junkie

  1. Tyson Fury confident Tommy Fury knocks out Jake Paul, expects rematch ‘for even more money’ MMA Junkie
  2. ‘IF TOMMY LOSES TO JAKE PAUL, HE’S DONE!’ – Tyson Fury KEEPS IT REAL in Saudi Seconds Out
  3. Video! Jake Paul, Tommy Fury mic’d up for intense staredown: ‘I can’t miss that nose’ MMA Mania
  4. Badou Jack: “I’m The Real Main Event On Sunday. People Who Know Boxing Know That” East Side Boxing
  5. TYSON FURY: Top Boxers are JEALOUS of Tommy Fury & DELUSIONAL for Picking Jake Paul to WIN! Seconds Out
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Hundreds of workers leaving Tyson Foods as company closes offices: report

Hundreds of employees at Tyson Foods have decided not to relocate to the company’s headquarters in Arkansas next year as the company consolidates its corporate offices.

The workers are reportedly from two of its largest business units, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Tyson announced in October that it planned to close its offices in Chicago, Downers Grove, Ill., and Dakota Dunes, S.D.

Those corporate employees work in the prepared foods, beef and pork divisions. About 1,000 employees total work in those locations, the company has said.

CHICAGO FACES MORE CORPORATE DEPARTURES AS TYSON FOODS MOVES TO ARKANSAS

A sign hangs above the Tyson Foods offices in Chicago, Illinois.  ( (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images) / Getty Images)

Tyson set a deadline of Nov. 14 to decide if they would relocate.

About three-quarters of the 500 employees in Tyson’s South Dakota office told the company they wouldn’t make the move.

More than 90% of the employees in Tyson’s Chicago office have declined to relocate, people told the Journal.

Nationwide, the meat company has about 120,000 employees, with about 114,000 of them working in production plants.

Tyson headquarters in Springdale, Ark.  (AP Photo/April L. Brown, File) / AP Newsroom)

TYSON FOODS LATEST LARGE BUSINESS TO FLEE CHICAGO, WHAT SPARKED THE EXODUS?

.”I’m confident the plan we have in place ensures business continuity and positions us for long-term success,” said Tyson Chief Executive Donnie King in a statement. “We knew there would be a variety of responses when we announced the consolidation of our corporate locations.”

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
TSN TYSON FOODS INC. 60.76 -0.62 -1.01%

Some key managers have planned to leave instead of relocate including the leader of its beef and pork unit.

Tyson Foods Inc. signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

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Tyson’s beef and pork division makes up almost half the company’s $53 billion in revenue in its 2022 fiscal year. 

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Tulsa King is an undercooked fish-out-of-water mob story

Sylvester Stallone as Dwight “The General” Manfredi
Photo: Brian Douglas/Paramount+

When the trailer for Tulsa King premiered during the NFL’s week six broadcast of the Buffalo Bills vs. the Kansas City Chiefs, the league’s early season heavyweight title bout, it seemed more than apt: The show promised a punchy, swaggering, sporting choice of violence, featuring the television debut of Sylvester Stallone, and offering the most stout shoulder and jutted jaw this side of the gridiron. Sly’s goateed jaw protrudes as if chiseled out of mossy stone, his voice tumbling throatily almost through marbles, eyes half shut, part tough-guy disinterest and part brawny boxer brain damage, his biceps prominently featuring an unnatural highway system of veins. The series poster promises one star at the top, one name needed: “Stallone.”

As he ships a package the man behind the counter asks, “Any flammable liquids or firearms?” and the audience is supposed to feel a collective guffaw, a notion of, “Dude, this is Rambo!” We are all in on the joke, in on all of the pedestrian one liners from the trailer: “If I stopped eating every time somebody tried to hurt me I’d be a skeleton.” He is coy and he is rugged, he is out of place but unto himself, he is only a gray hair in a suit, but, in the words of Mickey, he is still very much a “greasy, fast, 200-pound Italian tank.”

For all the noise and bravado, though, the Red Bull and fist pumping vibes that seem to frame the energy of hungover Saturday afternoon frat house fare, what is easy to miss, aside from the promise of “From the Creator of Yellowstone,” is that the show was helmed by one of the most original and promising writers in Hollywood. Taylor Sheridan wrote Sicario in 2015, a twisty, criss-crossing, paranoid, and depraved look at the war on drugs, at machismo, at shady government dealings, at, well, shady personal dealings, in a picture as confounding and fractured and dark as could be expected of a major release. He was then nominated for Best Original Screenplay for 2016’s Hell Or High Water, an impeccably structured bit of neo-Western crime noir that would make the Coen brothers jealous. It’d be almost easy to overlook Wind River, a windswept and chilly and chilling thriller much more hopeless than Hell. In just a few years, as a writer, the man originally known as playing David on Sons Of Anarchy seemed to have channeled and repackaged a special modern blend of Cormac McCarthy and Larry McMurtry, with a sprinkling of Sam Peckinpah and the spirit of early Warren Zevon. His voice is lean and unsentimental, accompanied by a vision full of menace and the darkness just beyond the reaches of a prairie campfire.

Here Sheridan pulled a different type of trick, penning the original story of Tulsa in just three days, supposedly, before handing the project off entirely to Terence Winter, the writer and producer known for work on The Wolf Of Wall Street, Boardwalk Empire, and, yes, The Sopranos. Winter acts as surrogate showrunner and seems grateful for such an entirely new entree for a mafia story. “Mobster in cowboy country,” is how he describes it, specifying this particular variance of fish out of water, yet we are comfortable miles from Steven Van Zandt repurposing Silvio Dante for Lilyhammer.

Allen Coulter directs the first two episodes, in an act of full commitment to the David Chase antihero oeuvre. (Max Casella shows up too, in a seeming winking nod to Sopranos acolytes.) As we open, Stallone’s Dwight Manfredi is found leaving prison, scoffing at the new Manhattan of Apple stores and VR headsets, on a path to rectify the sins of his past, build a new life, accrue something of a new crew. “I married this life, I’m gonna see if it married me back.” At his welcome home party, he comes in hot, though. “Don’t stand behind my fucking back,” he barks, wasting no time getting down to the ludicrous business, his fists cathartically going thwack and pffff, mixing it up with the beefy men at the head of the family (led by Domenick Lombardozzi), those responsible for his 25-year residence in “college,” as they might call it. All of them are near caricature-level quick to the draw on the chest-puff snarls and the finger-pointing and spittle-inducing toughie platitudes, the pissing contests of former football players in business casual residing in tasteless McMansions. He eventually accepts his “banishment,” that there is “nothing left for me here,” and provides some mild exposition about an ex-wife and a daughter who “hates me.” “Why not?” he asks, and if you’re hungry for more explanation he might tell you he’s in “the none of your fucking business kind of business.”

Sylvester Stallone as Dwight Manfredi and Martin Starr as Bodhi
Photo: Brian Douglas/Paramount+

Either way, he lands in Tulsa with vague assignations dealing with “horse races,” immediately hires a driver (an endearing Jay Will as Tyson), strong arms his way into the medical-marijuana business (fronted by a stoned, deadpan Martin Starr), and bounds the realms between mountainous stoicism and semi-comic violence. Yes, Dwight might use a canteen, thrown like a shortstop turning two, no less, to combat a security guard, but he also might deadpan lament prison’s tiramisu. He uses the threat of a foot stomp, but it’s cooked with a base affability, as he explains “we’re partners,” and persuades with a “don’t make me be an asshole about this.” He is the buddy you like going places with, the one who can befriend any bartender (sad-boy supreme Garrett Hedlund), who throws 100s around like he’s paying off penance for a “lifetime of bad choices,” but can also wax on the finitude of “crossing the Rubicon,” or, say, Arthur Miller versus Henry Miller.

Like Sheridan’s best stuff, Tulsa is a story driven by a character with baggage. It is a familiar against-the-world trope of redemption and second chances and also a geriatric take on the blockhead underdog tale we’ve all known and loved Stallone for since those earliest rounds and those charmingly awkward dalliances with Adrian. Still, the vibe is of much lower stakes, like a medium-burn cruise along with an old friend who’s found new perspective. From the backseat, Dwight ponders the brave new world: “GM’s gone electric, Dylan’s gone public, a phone is a camera, coffee is five bucks, the Stones, god bless ‘em, are still on tour.” Such minor-key riffing and some stoner hijinks fill the long slow Oklahoma drives—wanna see Mickey Mantle’s childhood home?—that themselves buffer the contemplative scene-setting preparing for a glut of preordained violence.

Tulsa King | Official Trailer | Paramount+

But most of the early going is a long way from Winter or Sheridan’s most inspired work and more like something indeed cooked up in a short amount of time, say, in a stir-crazy pandemic weekend, something less apt to get married to than to pass along to a colleague while you go back to your Kevin Costner project (Yellowstone season five premieres the same day as Tulsa King), or your Jeremy Renner project (Mayor Of Kingstown season two premieres in less than two months). It helps if said colleague might overlook the cliche daddy issues that seem borrowed from Rocky V, or the it’s-a-small-world storyline lent directly by one of the most beloved episodes of Sopranos season one.

Still, Tulsa ranks as another sturdy chapter in the volume of prestigious, showy 21st century antiheroism. “Go West, Old Man” is the name of episode one, making thematic motives clear. Here we are, actor and character re-polishing, reawakening in a new background. There is not too far of a line to be drawn to Jeff Bridges’ recent work in The Old Man, another story of a, yes, old man, crafting a new career bookend before our eyes, another leading dog doing it now with gray in the beard, revisiting old tools and tricks while learning some new ones. Stallone, for his part, is actually quite funny, quite often. “If I can change, and you can change…” indeed. It’s a reminder of an American icon so known it’s easy to take him for granted, so one-hue it’s nice to see a flex of different muscles, so undeniably charismatic he’s welcome to take a country ride with.


Tulsa King premieres November 13 on Paramount+.

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Tyson Foods CFO, John R. Tyson, arrested after entering wrong home, falling asleep


New York
CNNBusiness
 — 

In the latest incident of C-suite execs behaving poorly, Tyson Foods Chief Financial Officer, John R. Tyson, was arrested over the weekend after he allegedly wandered into the wrong home and fell asleep in a bedroom.

Tyson, 32, was arrested Sunday morning in Fayetteville, Arkansas and booked into the Washington County Jail at 2:23 a.m.

According to the police report, Tyson, who is the great grandson of the founder of the meat processing giant, was charged with public intoxication and criminal trespass.

Tyson allegedly entered a home that wasn’t his and was found asleep on a bed by a woman who lived there, according to a news report. The woman called the police, who identified Tyson through his driver’s license.

The arrest report said Tyson was released the same day on bond.

“We’re aware of the incident and as this is a personal matter, we have no additional comment,” Tyson Foods

(TSN) said in an email to CNN.

Tyson’s arrest comes on the heels of public misconduct by another high-profile senior executive at a food company.

Doug Ramsey, former chief operating officer at Beyond Meat, left the company last month shortly after his arrest for assault.

Ramsey was arrested in September on charges of “terroristic threatening” and third-degree battery after he allegedly bit a man’s nose following an Arkansas college football game. Ramsey was released on an $11,000 bond the following day, according to court records.

Beyond Meat suspended Ramsey following the incident and he left the company in October.

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