Fact. Maybe it's cause he's extremly dumb or extremly smart, but he wears them down psychologically. Fighters become insecure starting to doubt even their own forces. The pre-fight is the key moment where Fury works them on a psychological level.
He believes in himself. When he says "there is not a man born from his mother who can beat Tyson Fury," he truly believes that sentence. Don't know if it's unconsciousness, tactic or pure simple stupidity, but he believes it. He's so so confident that his opponents are put in psychological subjection. Watch his debate versus Haye. Don't remember exactly in what episode, but there was a passage where Haye was like "Man, I know I can beat him, but he's so sure of winning..."? Something of that sort.
I was thinking this too - Haye dropped out and now Chisora. Opponents living outside the UK are far less likely to suffer any backlash from Fury supporters should they win.
It's just a series of unfortunate injuries that have plagued Tyson's two latest opponents, Haye and Chisora. Haye has always been an injury prone fighter. He got injured on a regular basis during his training for the Klitschko brothers. He had to pull out of fights way back then. Chisora acted a fool and chose to throw heavy punches in sparring so close to fight time and got a hand injury. Pure coincidence. No one is afraid of Tyson Fury. These men are all prize fighters. They only fear losing the prize money. They all possess physical courage beyond the average fans wildest imagination. One hard sparring session with a guy like Chisora would put most of us in the hospital pissing blood.
Haye dumped his pants at the preseer when a lean, fit Fury turned up. Haye was too afraid to even do his usual trash talk. He had to pretend to quit boxing for the rest of his life to get out of the fight. Fury is punching like like an absolute beast these days and was going to flatten Chisora for the 10 count Saturday. Wlad is counting his lucky stars right now.