Heavyweight boxer Tyson Fury plans to donate his seven-figure pay for Sunday's (NZ time) showdown with Deontay Wilder to "the poor and to build homes for the homeless".
The undefeated 30-year-old former world champion is expected to earn a career-high purse, when he challenges WBC heavyweight ruler Wilder at Los Angeles' Staples Center.
After being such a controversial figure, he has gained admirers for being so open about his struggles with mental health - and insists there are still others he wants to help.
"I'm going to give it to the poor and I'm going to build homes for the homeless," said Fury, according to the Irish Daily Mirror newspaper.
"I don't really have much use for it, I'm not interested in becoming a millionaire or a billionaire. I'm a boxer, not a businessman, and I'll probably go down the same route as every other boxer - skint at the end of it all.
"You can't take it with you, so I might as well do something with it and help out people who can't help themselves."
Fury's beliefs regarding his personal wealth also come despite his four children and wife Paris being pregnant with another.
"I believe all kids should make their own money in life, because if they don't, they won't appreciate it," he added.
"It's easy to spend someone else's money and the money I've earned is practically blood money. My kids have to make their own living and make their own way in life - they won't be living off my name or reputation, because that's too easy a route.
"You see many of these rich people's kids doing nothing, because they had it too easy. I never had it easy, I had to work for whatever I got.
"I was working from very young - everything I wanted in life, I had to work for."
PA
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