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The Bad Blood rematch between Leigh Wood and Josh Warrington is approaching

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Nothing is confirmed, but it is increasingly likely that Josh Warrington and his manager Steve Wood will be rewarded soon after months of campaigning.

Wood and Warrington have been calling for a rematch with Leigh Wood since the Nottingham fighter came back from the brink to stop the two-time featherweight champion in the seventh round of their WBA featherweight title fight last October.

Warrington was injured but was on his feet and ahead on all the scorecards when referee Michael Alexander stopped the fight. To add to the controversy, the bell rang to end the round during Alexander’s count, and Warrington and his team believe he should have been given the remainder of a minute of recovery time.

A frustrating eight-month wait for news has done little to dampen Warrington’s enthusiasm for the second leg and it looks like his patience will soon be rewarded.

There are rumors that the fight – which will take place at super featherweight – could headline the first professional boxing event to be held at Manchester’s fresh 23,500-seat Coop Live arena sometime in August.

“Finally. This has been ongoing since completion in October 2023.” Warrington manager Wood said on the Bell 2 Bell VIP Boxing podcast

“We have seen other things and rematches and this is the best and nothing happened. We were told something like this had happened at Nottingham Forest, but it didn’t. Then he was supposed to come to Leeds but Leigh Wood didn’t want to come to Leeds. We were going elsewhere but Leigh Wood wanted too much money.

“Finally – nothing has been decided yet about a date or anything because he was obviously in a little trouble and hadn’t been to the gym – but he obviously accepted the terms. We’re sitting here waiting for our date.

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that things accelerated last week. Jack Catterall and Josh Taylor spent a week in Warrington’s hometown of Leeds ahead of their eagerly awaited rematch, and the event was a timely reminder of just how popular All-British grudge matches are among British boxing fans.

Promoters generally overestimate rather than underestimate the popularity of events, but Matchroom’s Eddie Hearn seemed almost surprised by the level of antipathy and interest that Taylor-Catterall II generated when it was announced earlier this year, with the fight potentially selling twice as many tickets if this has been done before.

The controversial ending to the first fight between Wood and Warrington turned what started as a professional rivalry into something more, and it appears that everyone involved realized it was time to move on and return before public interest waned and things got heated between these two expire.

“It’s dragged on and there’s been a lot of words exchanged between Josh and Leigh Wood, which is a real shame because you don’t need that kind of build-up to support sell the fights because it’s a great fight,” Wood said. “Obviously Leigh Wood thinks Josh doesn’t show him enough respect because he knocked him out, and Josh only talks about what he did with him before he got knocked out, when what really matters is that he got knocked out.

“Let’s hope that happens because they’re both not the youngest, right? Josh is 33 and Leigh is 35. Don’t drag it out any longer, Leigh. You will receive your pension soon. Let’s do it.”

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Boxing

Terence Crawford will spar with KO “childishly” ahead of the massive fight update

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Terence Crawford Riyadh Season

Terence Crawford faced hefty criticism from the promoter of one of his rivals for winning the WBO title, and WBC champion Sebastian Fundora was knocked out in sparring.

The pound-for-pound king commented on the situation in a video posted this week. Crawford told Bernie the Boxer: “If Fundora is licking his chops after my performance against Israil Madrimov, then I should be licking my chops because Madrimov knocked out Fundora in sparring.”

According to Fundora’s promoter, Sampson Lewkowicz, the claims cannot be substantiated. Sampson stated that Fundora’s coach spoke with Madrimov’s coach, Joel Diaz, about Terrance Crawford’s viral statement. During Coach Diaz’s conversation with Coach Fundora, Diaz mentioned that Madrimov’s manager, Vadim Kornilov, was very concerned about false statements Crawford made during a sparring session that took place over five years ago, during which neither of them even touched the canvas.

Sampson added: “Per Madrimov and his entire team have stated that they have nothing but respect for Sebastian Fundora and his entire team and do not disregard lies and disrespect. Coach Fundora responded that “Team Diaz,” Madrimov’s coaching team, is family to him. Everyone has known each other from the Coachella Valley since childhood.

It noted: “The boxing community in the Coachella Valley is extremely tight-knit. We all respect each other for the work we put into our boxers. Coaching etiquette is an unwavering rule that we all follow. There are many ways to fight professionally without fabrication and frustration. Let me repeat: Madrimov and his team are God-fearing people and it is very unlikely that they would ever speak ill of Sebastian Fundora, his sparring sessions and the team. No amount of facts or truth will convince a simpleton that he is wrong.

Lewkowicz urged Crawford to step in and admit he was wrong.

“Terence Crawford should apologize for his naivety,” Lewkowicz said. “A great master like him should be above this kind of childishness.”

The bad blood that exists between both camps could intensify a planned bidding war between Fundora and Crawford for a potential unification of the WBA, WBO and WBC titles.

Crawford was expected to walk away from the auction scheduled for October 10 and take the rest of the year off. This scenario would allow Fundora to face Errol Spence. But since Lewkowicz said, “There’s no need for a champion like Crawford to engage in school gossip,” the multi-tasking champion may believe he has something to prove.

Lewkowicz concluded by saying that it is likely that there will be a Crawford vs. Fundora fight.

“The fight will already take place. Trying to ridicule the unified world champion by spreading stupid rumors is bad business for Crawford. You are 37 years senior. Instead, devote your time to training. You’ll need it.

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Quinton Randall defeats Janelson Bocachica in a close welterweight fight

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In a welterweight crossroads on Friday, Quinton Randall prevailed over Janelson Bocachica with a unanimous decision victory at the Red Owl Boxing Arena in Houston, Texas.

The scores were 99-91, 97-93, 96-94, all for hometown fighter Randall (15-2-1, 3 knockouts), who continues his winning streak to two after losing consecutive decisions to undefeated fighter Brian Norman Jr. . and Gor Yeritsyan over the past year.

Randall, 33, showed excellent speed and punch selection against 25-year-old Bocachica, repeatedly beating him to victory.

– I’m not feeling well, man. Not my best. He is a dog. He is a warrior. I knew he would come to fight. I knew he would come to fight [and] “I appreciate him for even accepting the fight, knowing he’s away from home and knowing this is my home,” Randall said after the victory.

“But honestly, no matter where we were, we would have gotten the same result.”

For Bocachica (17-3-1, 11 KO), the defeat extended his winless streak to five, following decision losses to Alberto Palmetta and Roiman Villa, a draw against Shinard Bunch and not competing against Norman in his previous fight in March. Bocachica hasn’t won a fight since February 2021, when he defeated Mark Reyes Jr. split decision.

Randall says he plans to return to the ring on December 7 at the same venue.

“This is just the beginning, man,” Randall said. – You haven’t even seen my ceiling yet. You haven’t even seen me at my best. I need more fights like this on a regular basis so that you all can see the absolute best version of me and if we can achieve that, I believe I will be a world champion by the end of next year.”

The ten-round fight was the highlight of the latest installment of Red Owl Boxing’s “Boxfest” series and was broadcast live on DAZN.

In the co-main event, Tipton Walker Jr. (10-0-1, 6 KO) defeated Marquis Moore (11-2, 7 KO) by unanimous decision, with the scores being 77-75 on two cards and 78-75 on the third.

It’s the fourth straight victory for 28-year-old Walker, of Benton Harbor, Michigan, whose only blemish was a draw in 2019 with professional spoiler Clay Collard.

Also in action, Houston native Giovanni Marquez (11-0, 6 KO) remained undefeated, defeating Thomas Guillemette (8-3, 4 KO) in the second round to remain undefeated. Marquez, 23, dropped Frenchman Guillemette with a right hand, forcing the referee to stop the fight after Guillemette got to his feet on unsteady legs.

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Nick Ball is not worried about Ronny Rios: “I am the perilous one”

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Nick Ball was in good spirits at today’s final press conference ahead of his first defense of the WBA featherweight title against Ronny Rios.

Ball will face Rios next Saturday at the M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool in front of a wild crowd. Ball will return to boxing in his hometown for the first time since 2020, and has spent his last two fights in Saudi Arabia – his first was a controversial draw with WBC champion Rey Vargas, followed by a victory over Raymond Ford to win the world title.

Ball is thrilled to have the opportunity to fight in front of his beloved Liverpool crowd and will share the stage with four of his stablemates from Everton’s buzzing Red Triangle gym.

“This event is huge, isn’t it, that it’s in Liverpool, my hometown,” Ball told BoxingScene. “Everyone supports me, they will come out to support me, and in previous fights they were not able to come. So this one they can, so I have to put on a show for them.

“The gym is flying, we are all flying in the gym together and we are going to put on a show for everyone who comes. It will be a special evening.”

Ball has become one of British boxing’s biggest talents in recent years, and his promoter, Frank Warren, has plans for him to become one of British boxing’s top stars. Such plans could go up in smoke if Ball lost to Rios on Saturday night.

Rios, now 34, is a veteran and will be making his third attempt at a world title. At today’s press conference, Rios was vocal about how his experience would be the key to victory. But Ball isn’t worried about that.

“Every opponent is perilous,” Ball said. “Boxing is boxing and when you go in there it’s perilous, you know. We all know this is what we signed up for, but I don’t focus too much on how perilous it could be. I’m the one worried about that, not him.

Ball and many boxing fans believe he should defend his two world titles on Saturday night after being awarded only a draw by the WBC against Vargas in his title fight. The current WBA champion has plans to win the celebrated green belt he was denied, as well as his remaining titles, if he defeats Rios on Saturday.

“I want the one who has the belts,” he said. “Yes, take it [WBC] belt, they will become united and undisputed, so yes, first place. Of course, I’m the world champion now, there are three more belts, I have to get them.”

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