TOMMY Furyâs dad has waded in on his relationship with Molly-Mae Hague, saying his son has âput her through some s**tâ.
Speaking in the new series of At Home With The Furys, John, 60, who is also dad to heavyweight champion Tyson says: âMolly is a lovely person, but she canât help the life sheâs been brought up in, itâs contrasting to ours.
âBut sheâs put up with some s*** hasnât she, so fair play to her â sheâs not a bad girl.
âIâm also going to be there to support them. Letâs see what happens.â
The prospect of Tommy and Molly-Maeâs upcoming marriage is also raised by John, but Tommy hinted heâs in no rush to walk down the aisle, even if that jars with his familyâs culture.
Asked if heâs thought about tying the knot, Tommy says: âWhat difference would it make now?
âWeâve got a baby together, we live together.â
The couple got engaged in 2023, but briefly split in August 2024 after the boxer was embroiled in a cheating scandal, which he blamed on severe alcohol dependency.
âI delved into alcohol a bit more than I should have. I had my own personal battles with that, and obviously, that caused Molly to take a step back.
âWe werenât together for a period of time, and things were tough.
â2024 was the hardest and most lowish year of my life, but you learn a lot in them years.â
Tommy and Molly-Mae, both 26, share a daughter Bambi, three, and are expecting their second child in June.
Tommy, who won two high-profile fights against Jake Paul and KSI since the first series aired, also gave his take on parenting.
He said: âI try and raise Bambi how Iâve been raised as itâs the right way.
âItâs why we tell her, you have to sit on that chair while youâre eating, youâre not having this, youâre not having that, youâre not having chocolate for breakfast â thatâs not how you do it. Youâve got to put them right havenât you?â
Tyson has experienced his own problems with booze following his 2015 win over Wladimir Klitschko.
Although he still drinks, heâs cut down hugely, but he understands why Tommy has given up for good.
He said: âI think Tommy along with myself has to be committed to something.
âNothing is easy unless you want to do it, if you want to stop drinking, you stop drinking. But first you have to admit thereâs a problem.â
And Tommy, who was four months sober at the time of being, insists heâs reaping the rewards after overhauling his lifestyle.
He adds: âIâm a changed man. Right now in my life Iâm very determined to stay on that straight and narrow.
Would I ever go back to the drink, absolutely not.
âThe only thing I can do myself is keep myself fit and healthy





