Tyson Fury reiterated his desire to retire after his recent fight against Dillian Whyte, saying that he would leave because of one person.

Fury proved that he is indeed the Gypsy King by winning against Dillian Whyte through a sixth-round TKO. Now-viral videos show Whyte not being able to stand on his own after Fury landed a brutal blow on him.

Following the match, Fury appeared in a quick interview with BT Sport and shared that he would not return to the ring after his latest victory.

According to the boxing legend, he had to call it a career to focus on his wife of 14 years, Paris.

"I promised my lovely wife Paris of 14 years that after the [Deyonte] Wilder III fight, that would be it - and I meant it," he said while wearing his belt on the ring. "I have to be a man of my word, and I think this might be the final curtain for the Gypsy King. And what a way to go out!"

Tyson Fury Might Still Come Out of Retirement

Fury supported his statement and shared the same comments during his post-fight conference.

During that time, he told the press that he felt happy with his decision to retire. Still, he made it clear that he might still have a WWE appearance or exhibition fights.

"I'm going to go out with my wife, me kids. I've spent a lot of time on the road, I've been away a long time. I've fulfilled everything I've wanted to fulfill, and I'm going to retire as the only second heavyweight champion after Rocky Marciano to retire undefeated," he said.

Meanwhile, his wife Paris said that Fury might have one more fight if he faces Anthony Joshua or Oleksandr Usyk.

According to the matriarch, it is more believable when her husband revealed that he left his door for a comeback, saying that Fury does not need to be more famous.

Paris added that Fury's future match would be a unification fight since he no longer has anything to prove.

Jeff Powell, meanwhile, wrote an article for The Daily Mail noting that Fury needs one more win against Joshua or Usyk to join "IMMORTALS." Fury usually claimed to be the greatest heavyweight of all time, but the boxer eventually downgraded his own title and called himself "one of the greatest," instead.