WBO, IBF, IBO, WBA heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk is not necessarily disappointed with the fallout of his recent negotiations to make an undisputed fight with WBC world champion Tyson Fury.

The two sides were in deep negotiations for months, attempting to finalize a fight for April 29 at Wembley Stadium in London.

Usyk shocked a lot of people by accepting a 70-30 monetary split in Fury's favor.

However, the two sides were unable to agree on the monetary terms for the rematch - which eventually led to their discussions crumbling.

According to Usyk, he eventually grew tired of the entire process dragging on and decided to walk away.

"I am very happy, by the way. Even though it sounds weird, I am very happy that this fight is not happening and I am going home. You’ve got to understand me, I trained for three months straight," Usyk explained to Volodymyr Kobelkov, according to The Mirror.

"Then I get to come back home and spend time with my children and I just enjoy myself. It was supposed to happen, God tells me this was supposed to happen. I see that nothing is happening, he is trying to play with us, and I told him: 'That's it, goodbye. He wants to copy Muhammad Ali, but it's a bad copy."

Usyk is now under the gun with three sanctioning body obligations. He has three mandatory defenses hanging over his head.

The first mandatory in the schedule, is WBA 'regular' champion Daniel Dubois. Both sides have already begin discussing that bout. The next mandatory, is potentially the IBF's top man Filip Hrgovic, with the WBO's mandatory challenger currently being interim-champion Joe Joyce.