WATCH NOW: Paul Coyte discusses the latest sport headlines June 16 2025
GB NEWS
The boxer was at the centre of the action during the 14th edition of Soccer Aid
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Tyson Fury has broken his cover after leading England to a 5-4 defeat to World XI, following his x-rated speech at Old Trafford on Sunday evening.
Fury, 36, remained so enamoured with his Primark Soccer Aid suit that he wore it to a business meeting the following day.
The former heavyweight champion, who shared England managerial duties with Wayne Rooney at Sunday's charity match, posted on Instagram whilst still sporting the grey outfit.
The 36-year-old said: "Off to a business meeting now, I've got my England managerial suit on, get up! Might get the job, who knows?"
Tyson Fury took to his social media to show fans he was still wearing the same suit he wore on the touchline on Sunday
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Irish retailer Primark has partnered with Soccer Aid since 2021, designing stylish grey suits for England and beige for the World XI this year.
The charity match at Old Trafford saw England squander a commanding 3-0 advantage to lose 5-4 to the World XI.
Wayne Rooney had opened the scoring with the fastest goal in Soccer Aid history, followed by strikes from Toni Duggan and Jermaine Defoe.
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Wayne Rooney scored the quickest goal in Soccer Aid history to put England ahead
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The tide turned dramatically when Carlos Tevez entered the fray, netting four times to inspire the comeback.
Despite his Manchester United allegiances, Fury was effusive in his praise for the former City striker.
"Well done to everybody, especially Carlos Tevez, wow!" Fury said during his morning run. "Banging in hat-tricks and stuff, he's still got it."
The boxing legend's enthusiasm proved rather too colourful for Sunday afternoon television, however.
Fury delivered an expletive-laden team talk that left ITV presenters scrambling for apologies.
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"Seventy-five thousand sell-out. Unicef a great cause," he roared. "Let them know how good we are. We are England. We are f***ing Spartans."
Alex Scott immediately apologised, with the former Lionesses full-back adding: "It's Tyson, we don't know what's going to happen."
Remarkably, Fury swore again during the first half, prompting another on-air apology.
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Scott promised viewers she would "have a word with him afterwards" about his language.
Despite the defeat, Fury remained upbeat about the outcome, focusing instead on the charitable success of the event.
The match raised an impressive £15million for Unicef, marking the 14th annual edition of the charity fixture.
"We didn't get the result they wanted but everybody played well and played hard," Fury reflected. "We raised a lot of money for a great cause. Very proud of everybody who took part."
The retired boxer, who hung up his gloves in January, expressed gratitude to the organisers during his morning run in Lancashire: "Had a fantastic day, big shout out to all the organisers, Unicef and Soccer Aid."