Tyson Fury trained for 16 weeks in Thailand, beat Arslanbek Makhmudov at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and called out Anthony Joshua.
His breakfast throughout that entire period cost £5 and came with a fruit salad.
The heavyweight’s go-to morning meal during his gruelling camp in Pattaya has been revealed by Fraser’s Sports Bar, where Fury ate regularly during his stay, as reported by CreatorZine.
The plate, now officially named “The Tyson Fury,” clocks in at 1,500 calories and is on special for April at B199.
What’s on the plate

Three scrambled eggs. Two sausages. Two slices of brown toast slathered in crunchy peanut butter.
A fresh fruit salad on the side. Coffee and soda water with lime juice to wash it down.
It is not complicated. It is not glamorous. It is a very large breakfast that costs less than a sandwich at most London train stations.
For a man preparing to return to the ring at 37, it apparently did the job.
A regular at Fraser’s

Fury was not just a customer. He was a fixture.
The bar confirmed that the boxer and his team, including Joseph Parker, trainer Sugar Hill and several members of his camp, were regulars throughout the 16 weeks.
A spokesperson for Fraser’s said:
“A big thank you for making Fraser’s Sports Bar one of your go-to places whilst here in Thailand, it’s been a pleasure having you all. Thanks for talking to our customers and signing autographs and taking photos. You have all been courteous and polite whenever you came to visit us.”
Why it matters

Athlete diet content is one of the most consistently searched and shared categories in fitness media, and a boxer’s training camp meal carries particular intrigue because the stakes are visible. Fury won his comeback fight.
The breakfast is now a menu item fans can order themselves. For sports bars, restaurants and creators in the fitness space, an endorsement this organic, a famous athlete simply eating at your establishment for four months, is more valuable than any paid partnership.
The £5 price point makes it shareable for a different reason: it punctures the assumption that elite athletes eat exclusively from expensive meal prep companies.

Fury returned to the ring on 11 April with a win and has since called out Anthony Joshua.
Whether the breakfast continues into the next camp remains to be seen, but Fraser’s Sports Bar has presumably printed the menus already.










