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Jack Cattell Sparring with Jaron Ennis before Essuman Fighter

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Image: Jack Catterall’s Sparring With Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis Could Impact His November 15 Fight Against Ekow Essuman

Jack Cattell parched Jaron “Boots” Ennis with the former welterweight champion, helping him prepare for his debut of October 11 in 154 against Uisma Lima in Philadelphia.

Cattell Sparring with Jaron Ennis

Sparring that Catterall (31-2, 13 KO) also makes the purpose of preparing him for the clash with Ekow Essuman in Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn 2 Uncard on November 15 at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium, Tottenham in London.

Fans are afraid that the exhausting sparring, which Cattell does with “Ennis Boot, can negatively affect him in the same way that many believe that he hurt the performance of Canelo Alvarez in his defeat from Terenka Crawford on September 13.

DAZN PPV Undercard November 15

  • Jack Catterall vs. Ekow Essuman
  • Adam Azim vs. Zaur Abdullaev
  • Richard Riakporhe vs. Tommy Welch
  • Sam Gilley vs. Ishmael Davis
  • Mikie Tallon vs. Fezan Shahid

Photos defeating Canelo, Gloved, standing next to Ennis in the ring during the camp, indicates that a newborn 28-year-old phenomenon wore a Mexican star during the camp. This, in turn, could leave Alvarez an exhausted, war warrior, from whom Crawford used Alaalshikh Superfight at his Turki at the Allegiant stadium in Las Vegas. Crawford won a 12-round unanimous decision in this fight.

Ringside Take: Catterall’s Ennis Sparring Risk before Essuman

It can only be assumed that Ennis took from him the best part of Canelo, leaving an empty scale, from which the opportunistic Crawford used to win the decision to block the razor. What influence had “Boots” on Alvarez from a challenging sparring? Will he do the same so that Catterall, leaving him sensitive and uncomplicated sacrifice, so that Ekow can feed them?

Sparring with Ennis can be the fall of Cattella, because it may be badly exhausted, beaten and half stunned when he goes with Essusman (22-1, 8 KO) in the fight against the coefficient of November 15.

This is only the second Catteralla fight in the welterweight, and he did not look impressive in his debut in the weight class against the warrior at the national level, Harlem Eubank, July 5. Cattell won the fight with a unanimous decision after him and Eubank were cut off from the clash of the head. Cattell took many penalties in battle.

In the previous fight, Catteralla lost to Arnold Barboza Jr. With a 12-round decision on February 15, 2025, the results were 115-113 for Cattell, 115-113 and 115-113 for Barboz Jr.

Punch Stats for Catterall vs. Barboz Jr.

  • Jack Catterall: 71 300 blows were thrown at 23.7%
  • Arnold Barboza JR: 89 of 434 for 20.5%.

“He will get it in the style of Philadelphia, pulling him out of this British environment and gaining war in the gym, I like this change of the trainer,” said analyst Sergio Mora to make Boxing DAZNResponding to Jacek Cattell changing coaches to Derek “Bozy” Ennis.

“When you are tiny and want to change the trajectory of your career, you need to think about a change, because you only have a career left,” Mora said.

Last updated 28/28/2025

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Gilberto Ramirez leaves with two fights left

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Image: Gilberto Ramirez Eyes Exit With Only Two Fights Left

“I think one or two more fights,” Ramirez told Fight Hub TV when asked about his long-term plans. “I have been practicing this sport for a long time.”

Ramirez, 33, said that while he still wants to continue his career for now, he is already thinking about how his career will end, not how long it can be extended. Ramirez said he has achieved key goals in the sport, including becoming world champion in two divisions, but still wants to perform at the highest level before he retires.

That pursuit begins with Benavidez, a fight that Ramirez believes will define his status and push his name further to the top of the sport.

“I will beat him. That’s my plan, to fight Opetaia,” said Gilberto about his desire to fight former IBF cruiserweight champion Jai Opetaia.

It’s a shoot-for-the-stars plan for Ramirez, but you can’t blame him for wanting to fight Opetaia. The biggest obstacle is not only the fight itself, but also where Jai Opetaia currently sits. Jai is now the face of Dana White’s Zuffa Boxing.

At the same time, Ramirez hinted at one last twist before his retirement. When asked about moving up again, he left the door open to a possible heavyweight fight, even admitting that he may not be the biggest fighter in the division.

“Why not?” Ramirez talked about moving up to heavyweight. “That would be amazing.”

If Zurdo loses to Benavidez, his plan for Opetaia will likely evaporate and he may just go straight to the heavyweight event for one last payday before he suspends them.

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Eddie Hearn expects Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2 fight to be canceled and replaced with world title fight

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Eddie Hearn expects Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2 to be cancelled and replaced by world title fight

The final decision may come after the Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao rematch drama ends.

Earlier this year, it was announced that Mayweather and Pacquiao were set to fight professionally more than 10 years after their first meeting, with the event streaming live on Netflix and taking place on September 19 at The Sphere in Las Vegas.

In recent weeks the duel was in doubt, after Mayweather stated that the fight would instead be an exhibition, while Pacquiao continues to insist that it must be a fully sanctioned fight.

Since it is currently unknown whether this will actually come to fruition, this has probably given the clearest signal that this will no longer happen.

Conversation with FightHypepromoter Eddie Hearn said he thinks Netflix can now focus on the WBC welterweight title fight between Ryan Garcia and Conor Benn, essentially replacing the Mayweather-Pacquiao event.

“It’s all a mess. I’m surprised Netflix got into this whole circus… Netflix is ​​modern to boxing, but they need to be a little more solid in the routine because you can’t actually call the fight and it just falls by the wayside and it just doesn’t look great.”

“NO [I don’t believe it will happen]not now. Netflix is ​​only going to do so many fights and the Benn-Garcia fight is now said to be on September 12 or whenever that happens, so obviously this is the fight to replace Mayweather-Pacquiao.

“If it happened Mayweather-Pacquiao, they are committed to that fight, but if it doesn’t happen they will want another fight and from the sound of it it will be Garcia vs. Benn.”

The world title fight between Garcia and Benn has been widely discussed this month, and if Hearn is right, it could spell the end of any hopes of Mayweather and Pacquiao fighting again.

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Junto Nakatani Banking size vs. Naoya Inoue

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Image: Junto Nakatani Banking On Size, Youth Against Naoya Inoue

“I think my size and youth should be a gigantic advantage. It gives me an even better chance to win,” Nakatani told The Ring.

Inoue’s reluctance to make the jump to 126 pounds at featherweight may be the most truthful admission of his physical limitations.

Inoue has fought fighters who hydrated to be hefty, but Nakatani is elevated. At 5’7″ or 5’8″, he has the skeletal leverage of a natural featherweight or super featherweight.

Most of Inoue’s opponents end up with confined time as they have to rush to hit him. Nakatani can theoretically sit outside and throw a punch without putting his chin in the red zone.

The numbers support this belief on paper. Nakatani will enter with a three-inch height advantage, a slight reach advantage and a five-year age difference. He also has natural size from climbing three weight classes, which he plans to exploit for the full distance rather than chasing an early finish.

“This fight will 100% be a war and I think I will win by decision once I overcome everything Inoue throws at me,” Nakatani said.

In his December victory over Sebastian Hernandez, Nakatani was forced into a fierce fight in which both men landed heavily, taking 273 punches in a back-and-forth fight that went the distance. He showed toughness, but also suggested he could get hit when exchanges open up.

It’s not that Inoue is afraid of fighting a bigger opponent, but more that he is a perfectionist who knows that when you lose your physical advantage, you have to rely completely on your endurance. Nakatani is the first fighter in a long time who can actually make Inoue look petite in the ring.

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