
Tyson Fury will face Arslanbek Makhmudov on Saturday in London. The bout is scheduled for 12 three-minute rounds.
Fury is expected to make his ringwalk around 22:30. The main card starts at 19:00 on Netflix, while Conor Benn is expected to fight about 21:30.
Live text commentary will begin at 20:00 BST on Saturday, 11 April. It will be available on the BBC Sport website and app, with round-by-round updates for both the co-main event and the headline fight.
The undercard includes Conor Benn vs Regis Prograis, Jeamie 'TKV' Tshikeva vs Richard Riakporhe, and Frazer Clarke vs Justis Huni. The prelims feature fights such as Simon Zachenhuber vs Pawel August, Mikie Tallon vs Leonardo Blanc, and Felix Cash vs Liam O'Hare.
No, there are no titles up for grabs in this fight. Fury and Makhmudov are meeting in a 12-round heavyweight bout, but it is not a world title fight.

Tyson Fury returns from retirement to face Arslanbek Makhmudov on Saturday in a 12-round heavyweight bout in London.
The two-time world champion is back in action after a 15-month absence.
Fury, 37, has his eyes set on a world title shot but has 36-year-old Makhmudov in his way first.
How will Fury look on his return? Can Makhmudov spring an upset?
All you need to know about the fight night is below.
Live text commentary will begin at 20:00 BST on Saturday, 11 April on the BBC Sport website and app.
Conor Benn is the co-main event and round-by-round updates will be available for his fight and the headline act.
The main card is scheduled to start at 19:00 on Netflix, meaning we expect Fury to make his ringwalk around 22:30.
Benn should fight about 21:30.
Tyson Fury v Arslan Makhmudov - heavyweight
Prelims:
Despite only being a year apart in age, Fury and Makhmudov's careers have followed very different paths.
Fury claimed the unified heavyweight title in 2015 by beating Wladimir Klitschko and then the WBC world title in 2020 when he beat Deontay Wilder.
The Briton has the better names on his record, having fought Usyk (twice), Derek Chisora (three times) and Dillian Whyte.
Makhmudov has a win over Dave Allen and Carlos Takam but has two losses in his career, to Guido Vianello and Agit Kabayel.
The Russian has stumbled when asked to step up to genuine contender level and was in truth a surprise opponent for Fury considering his lack of star quality and pedigree.
But he does have one advantage and that is activity. While Fury has sat on the sidelines for 15 months, Makhmudov fought twice in 2025 and 2024 and three times in 2023.
Fury is fighting in his 38th contest, while Makhmudov is in his 24th. There are a lot fewer miles on the clock for the away fighter, who has fought 69 rounds compared with Fury's 254.
While he has fought far less impressive opponents, Makhmudov's knockout rate is excellent at 90% while Fury's is 71%.

Fury is not fighting for a world title.
His bout with Makhmudov will be over 12 three-minute rounds but no titles up for grabs.
Fury's fight with Francis Ngannou in 2023 wasn't for a world title but other than that he has been involved in world championship fights stretching back to 2020.
In his eight world title fights, Fury has five wins, two losses and one draw.
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