Manchester will finally say goodbye to one of its most beloved sporting heroes when two-division world champion Ricky Hatton is laid to rest on Friday.
Hatton, a popular larger-than-life figure who unified the welterweight division and also won the world welterweight title, was found dead at the age of 46 at his home in Hyde on September 14.
The funeral procession will start at 9.45am BST from the Cheshire Cheese Pub – Hatton’s venue – and make its way to Manchester Cathedral, with thousands of people lining the streets to reflect on his life and times.
The procession includes stops at Hatton’s boxing gym and the AO Arena, where he had some of his best nights, with the highlight undoubtedly being his victory over the celebrated Kostya Tszyu on a raucous evening 20 years ago to win his first world title.
After a private memorial service at noon, a memorial march will head to the Etihad Stadium, home of Hatton’s beloved Manchester City.
The news of Hatton’s death was announced just hours before the Manchester derby at Eastlands Stadium, and just before kick-off, City and United players and fans reacted with a minute’s applause.
It was just one of countless tributes paid to “Hitman”, including from former world heavyweight champions Frank Bruno, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua, fellow Briton Amir Khan, venerable foe Manny Pacquiao and Hatton’s hero Roberto Duran.
Hatton’s action-packed style earned him 45 wins and three losses in 48 contests, but it was his down-to-earth demeanor that particularly endeared him to fellow professionals and fans around the world.
Proof of this was the tens of thousands who followed him to Las Vegas, where he fought two of the best pound-for-pound fighters of his era, Floyd Mayweather and Pacquiao, and stories of British fans chanting “there’s only one Ricky Hatton” and drinking Sin City became boxing folklore.
Hatton suffered his first professional defeat when he was stopped by Mayweather in 2007, and a brutal second-round knockout by Pacquiao two years later hastened his decline from top-level boxing.
A failed comeback attempt against Vyacheslav Senchenko in 2012 was the first public admission that Hatton was struggling to cope in retirement.
He was a tireless ambassador for mental health charities, as well as Manchester-based Barnabus, which supports homeless and vulnerable people, and in a bid to fill the void, he became a successful trainer.
After participating in a scoreless match against Mexican Marco Antonio Barrera in 2022, Hatton announced in July that he would return to the ring in a professional fight in Dubai in December.
He returned to training and his family said he was “in a good place” and “excited about the future” before his death, in what Greater Manchester Police said were no suspicious circumstances.