The undefeated lithe Cameron “The One” Vyong detained Jordan Flynn in 7 rounds for the empty title WBO Euro Lightweight on Friday evening at Planet Ice, Altrincham in Chesire, Great Britain.
(Loan: Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing)
VUPG, 8-0 (4), knocked out Jordan Flynn, 11-1-1 (1), at 1:08 Seventh of the planned 10 rounds, for the empty title WBO Euro Lightweight.
In the third round, the law from VUPG on the chin meant that Flynna’s gloves affected the canvas on 8-hlagunks from judge Howard Foster. In the fifth round Flynn landed with a solid body right in a close round. In the seventh round, with VUPG on the chin, Flynn shocked, who was on his feet when Judge Foster called the stop.
BBBOFC English Master Super Middle Reece Farnhill, 11-1 (4) lost to Marek “Boo Boo” Dickinson, 8-1 (2) according to ten rounds of a unanimous decision.
In the second round, Farnhill shook Dickinson right on the chin in the middle of the round. In the third round, Farnhill was cut to the right eye. From the fourth to the eighth round, Dickinson controlled the action, having a Farnhill in defense from cutting.
In the tenth and final round Dickinson continued the landing of Farnhill to win a skewed fight.
The results are 98-93, 98-92 and 99-92. Michael Alexander was a judge.
2024 Olympian PAT “Bomber” Brown, 1-0 (1) knocked out Federico “Pumba” Javier Grandone, 7-5-2 (3) at 0:55 Fourth of the planned sixth round.
In the third round they mixed it well. In the fourth round, Grandone was on his feet, receiving 8-hlagunjowe from shots from Brown. A few seconds later, Brown landed a few blows in the head and body when Judge Darren Sarginson waved him.
SUPER WELTER SOLOMPAW William Crolla, 8-0 (6), defeated Emmanuel “EZ” Zion, 6-4 (3), a six-story decision.
In the first round of Croll Outlanded Zion. Zion returned well enough to take the second round. In the fourth round of Croll changed from Southpaw to Orthodox, passing by Zion.
In the fifth round Zion did enough to take a round. In the sixth and final round they both had their moments. Crolla seemed to perform a close fight. Judge Darren Sarginson shot him 58-57.
SUPER WADZKA Average Taylor Bevan, 2-0 (2) knocked out Southpaw Alec Makovec, 5-3-1 (3) at 2:15 the first of the planned six rounds.
In the first round, Bevan landed on the upper left corner, throwing Makovec face down when judge Darren Sarginson calculated him.
Lightweight hefty Connor Tudsbury, 2-0 (1) defeated Robbie Connor, 3-5-2, by decision of six-time points. In the first three rounds, Tudsbury was an aggressor and a developed Connor. Judge John Lathan scored 60-54.
WWadzka WięDnia Liam “Dynamo” Taylor, 28-2-1 (14) defeated Jamie “The King” Stewart, 4-11-40, by a decision on six rounds.
In the third round Taylor collected Stewart because of the ropes from a lot of blows. In the sixth and last round of Stewart hung there, being at the end of Taylor’s combination.
“Derrick James, he started getting a little more players and a little more buzz, and I feel like our communication has changed,” Charlo told Brian Custer.
Charlo said that as James built a larger stable, there was less hands-on time spent with him and more trying to control the gym environment. He claimed that James wanted things done his way, including telling players to remove dogs from the gym during training sessions and changing the atmosphere that helped build their success.
Charlo has been out of the ring since his loss to Saul Alvarez in 2023, and James recently split from Errol Spence Jr. A coach once considered one of the safest hands in the sport is suddenly facing public criticism from two of his biggest names.
“He wanted it his way,” Charlo said. “Coach needs us. Don’t overdo it, coach. Serene down, coach. I was your first champion.”
He also pointed to his camp leading up to the Alvarez fight, saying the support around him wasn’t the same when he needed it most.
“You don’t enter into a world title fight like that,” Charlo said.
Charlo still believes he can regain his spot in the junior middleweight division, and talks about a possible fight with Sebastian Fundora are ongoing later this year. His confidence hasn’t changed, but his patience with ancient alliances has noticeably changed. Sometimes a rift begins when success changes the room.
However, ‘AJ’ instead maintained that he would prefer a warm-up fight first, with the Londoner expected to return to action in July, ahead of a long-awaited meeting with his arch-rival in November.
I’m talking to talkSPORT BoxingHamed was looking forward to this match and suggested that a draw could be on the cards.
“Who do I think will win the fight between AJ and Fury? Well, that is the question and everyone wants to know.
“Years ago, Tyson had this awkward style for me where he could make AJ look stupid, that’s true. Now everything has changed. Tyson seemed to have backed off a little bit.
“But with Tyson Fury you never know, maybe one night he’ll show up and box amazingly and do what he did to Wilder. Those first few rounds [against Makhmudov]I was a little disappointed that he didn’t go from the start.
“This is going to sound crazy to you, but would it be unbelievable if I said it could be a draw?”
It is unclear whether Fury will also fight in the summer or whether he will avoid risking a lucrative romance with Joshua and wait patiently on the sidelines.
Ben Whittaker’s next few months are already taking shape following his quick knockout victory in Liverpool, and Adam Smith outlines a busy summer schedule that should finally see the delicate heavyweight fighter face stronger tests
Smith said Whittaker is expected to return to the United States in overdue June on the Jaron “Boots” Ennis card, then return to the UK in the summer for a major date in his hometown of Birmingham.
Whittaker stopped Brian Suarez in two rounds last weekend and performed brilliantly throughout, adding another early finish to the stretch that helped rebuild attention around him after his first fight with Liam Cameron ended in a draw.
Smith said the June outing would support expose Whittaker to a wider audience ahead of a bigger national night later in the year.
“He will fight at the end of June in America at the Boots Ennis gala. That’s good. Show him to a global audience. Then he will come back here in overdue summer, maybe early September and fight in Birmingham in a huge fight,” Adam Smith said in an interview with Sport Boxing.
Smith also named British opponents who could be next, naming Lyndon Arthur, Brad Rea and Craig Richards as possible options once Whittaker returns home.
Smith believes that in the long term, bigger domestic fights with Joshua Buatsi and Anthony Yard should come within the next year if Whittaker continues to win.
“Buatsis and Yards need to be delivered within the next 6-12 months.”
Whittaker has had a lot of notoriety since turning pro, but the activity and matchmaking are looking more grave now. The next two fights should tell more than the first ten.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
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