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Richard Riakporhe (almost) fulfilled his childhood dream

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Richard Riakporhe will fulfill his childhood dream on Saturday in London, playing at Selhurst Park, home of English Premier League football team Crystal Palace.

But instead of playing for Palace, Riakporhe will try to win his first world title when he fights Chris Billam-Smith for the WBO cruiserweight belt.

“I grew up in south-east London and my dream as a child was to be a footballer and play for Palace,” Riakporhe told ESPN. “I used to play center back and center forward. I was hoping to get into Palace and my friend passed the trials. But when I was 16 or 17, I was told I wasn’t good enough. It broke my heart and I fell out of love with the sport for a while, I stopped following it, stopped playing it and then I got interested in boxing and it wasn’t until I was older that I started getting interested in football again.

Riakporhe (17-0, 13 KO), 34, hopes some Palace players will be in the fight to support him as he looks to end his English rival’s reign in a second title defense.

“I have been involved with Palace for some time now and I know some of the players such as Joel Ward, Will Hughes, Ebere Eze, Michael Olise, Dean Henderson and others,” Riakporhe said. “Some people said they would be at my fight if they weren’t at the European Championships.” Four Crystal Palace players were recently named to the England squad for Euro 2024, which starts on June 14.

Riakporhe said that the energy from fighting in the stadium will be unreal and that the momentum and all the support will be on his side.

“The fight will be in the place where I grew up, and there will be people watching me who want me to win,” Riakporhe said. “You feel that energy when you’re in the ring and Chris knows that because he won that title at Bournemouth Stadium [Vitality Stadium] in front of their own fans. This will be something different for him.”

Riakporhe, who started boxing at the age of 19, is a ponderous hitter who has stopped his last five opponents and defeated 33-year-old Billam-Smith (19-1, 13 KO) by split decision in 2019. Billam-Smith won the WBO belt a year ago by majority decision over Lawrence Okolie, and then defeated Mateusz Masternak in eight rounds in December.

“His last two fights were complex for him, but at this level it won’t be basic,” Riakporhe said. “He found a way to get through, but he took a few shots, which could have a negative impact. I think he will be very tough against me because he knows I can hit difficult.

“The power of the punch will be very critical. It’s a huge mountain for him to climb because he’s going to have to take risks, and it’s just one shot away from me and I’m going into this fight with bad intentions.”

But outside the ring, Riakporhe is a different person. He has a degree in marketing communications and campaigns against the dangers of knife crime after being stabbed in the chest as a teenager.

“Growing up in south-east London, with no positive role models, no opportunities, no silver spoons, was complex,” Riakporhe recalls. “Most people in the area ended up in jail or on drugs; few made it out because there wasn’t much hope. Reiss Nelson, who played for Arsenal, and Jason Euell, who played for Charlton, and Rio Ferdinand, who lived a little further away in Peckham, did well. However, most people become products of their environment, and for me it was quite a challenge to avoid getting involved in certain things.

Riakporhe enters his biggest fight yet and knows there are bigger opportunities ahead of him if he can defeat Billam-Smith for a second time. Undisputed heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk recently said that he plans to return to the cruiserweight division because he believes that maintaining the weight is too much for him.

“I would like to fight Oleksandr Usyk. I want to compete with the best and he is a great player,” Riakporhe said. “When you lose a lot of weight and fluids, it will have an impact on your power and strength, and I’m definitely giving myself a chance to beat it.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if he moved up to a bridge weight [201-224 pounds, a new division between cruiserweight and heavyweight] firstly and I would consider moving up to a bridgeweight because I have always said I wanted to be a multi-weight world champion.”

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Terence Crawford’s next move in the air

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The WBO has granted Terence Crawford’s team a 10-day extension while they try to reach an agreement with Sebastian Fundora. If negotiations fail to produce results by October 10, a portfolio offer will be ordered.

As usual, the title situation is a bit misleading. Fundora won the WBO belt from Tim Tszyu. He also won the vacant WBC crown that night, almost two years after it was last officially defended by unified 154-pound king Jermell Charlo.

Meanwhile, Crawford moved up to 154 pounds in August, taking the WBA belt from Israil Madrimov along with the WBO interim super welterweight title. Now Crawford and Fundora hope to strike a deal that will unify their belt package.

Crawford’s rise is nothing brief of extraordinary. He is already the undisputed champion of two weight classes (four titles are needed to complete both fights), if he defeats Fundora, he will only have the IBF belt, which will be undisputed in three weight classes. Bakhram Murtazaliev currently holds this belt and will defend it on October 19 in a fight against Tim Tszyu. Crawford would be the favorite to win this competition. Suddenly, efforts to make history seem realistic.

Terence “Bud” Crawford and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez

Crawford has long been linked to a cross-weight clash with Canelo Alvarez. This would require Bud to jump several divisions or at least add weight in order to reach a catchweight agreement (which would favor Canelo).

The driving force behind the fight, however, was Saudi power broker Turki Alalshikh. Since “His Excellency” has since publicly fallen out with Canelo, it appears that the Canelo vs. Crawford has now dropped off the radar.

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Confident coach Paul Stevenson tips Peter McGrail to the top

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The perfect left hand that Peter McGrail drove into Brad Foster’s body last weekend couldn’t have been delivered at a better time.

The shot hit Foster in the worst possible place at the worst possible time and quickly ended the junior featherweight fight. Thanks to this, fans remembered at the right time what the 28-year-old Liverpool player is capable of.

McGrail was an outstanding amateur, and his talent was so great that fans quickly began to take his victories for granted. Last December’s shocking and sudden loss to relatively unknown Ja’Rico O’Quinn was a major shock.

In April, McGrail (10-1 (6 KO)) came back from defeat, defeating the arduous Marc Leach in comprehensive but understandably watchful fashion and needed an eye-catching result.

Foster is a former British and Commonwealth champion but – at least in terms of results – is in needy form.

The red “L”s on a fighter’s BoxRec page don’t leave much room for nuance and don’t do justice to how close Foster’s defeats were to Jason Cunningham and Rhys Edwards. No one even came close to doing what McGrail did to him.

“I felt like it was on the cards, you know what I mean? He’s been hitting the body well in sparring lately, so that’s been good,” McGrail’s trainer Paul Stevenson told BoxingScene.

“It was always quite an uphill battle because he [Foster] he is good, has great weight and is powerful. He has good tactics. He’s astute and experienced and no one has ever done this to him before. And he was ready for it.

“Obviously this is the best type of finish you can get. All it takes is one shot and we go home in the second round against an opponent like that, because it could be a long night

“I don’t remember who it was now, but someone said he was sort of like what Liam Davies is now when they were supporting and pushing him a few years ago. And his losses were pretty close anyway, right?

In recent weeks, British and European champion Dennis McCann was cleared to defend both of his titles against McGrail.

Given McGrail’s amateur pedigree, the decision was quickly made to jump him through the world rankings, and he bypassed the burgeoning British scene and concentrated on climbing the WBA ladder.

Over the past few years, the outstanding Liam Davies has established himself as a top-10 player in the world at 122 pounds, while McCann has matured and begun to develop into the talent that many predicted he would be when he burst onto the scene as a teenager.

Suddenly, the prospect of facing British rivals became much more attractive to McGrail. Yes, domestic bragging rights would be at stake, but the fights with Davies and McCann would now have global ramifications as well.

“With the Riyadh season you can pay them accordingly, so it makes sense for everyone. Well, certainly for us,” Stevenson said.

“You can go on the British route and you can have really difficult fights to the death for a slight rise in the world rankings, and I just never really liked that route unless you had a boy who you were sure that was his limit.

“With Nick [Ball, the WBA featherweight champion]We didn’t even care about it. We just shot up the WBC rankings.

“But like I said, I think out of the guys you mentioned, we have the best kid in Pete, so the one who will give Pete the best development and the best finances is him.”

As Stevenson mentioned, Riyadh Season is the place to be, and the fight between McGrail – repped by Matchroom – and Queensberry’s McCann looks to be a chance for the second installment of the 5v5 series, pitting fighters from promotional giants against each other.

McGrail’s team is certainly interested.

“I don’t think they want that. “I think he made a bit of noise because Pete didn’t smoke in his last fight and he got beat in his last fight and he probably thinks it’s the right time for him,” Stevenson said. – But of course when he saw her do it [to Foster]now Dennis McCann makes different sounds.

“It’s up to them. We’re doing our thing anyway, so if it’s not them, it’ll be someone else, and if not the Saudi, it’ll be somewhere else, but we’ll just keep making progress and Pete can be world champion for 18 or even 12 months from now. Just see what happens.

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BrianNorman Jr. injured, sidelined on November 8

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Image: Teofimo Lopez Could Face Brian Norman Jr Next for WBO 147-lb Title

WBO welterweight champion Brian Norman Jr. he injured his left hand and will not be able to fight on November 8 at the Scopes Center in Norfolk, Virginia. Norman Jr’s title defense against Derrieck Cuevas (27-1-1, 19 KO) will be postponed to 2025.

Dan Rafael reports that Norman Jr. is off the card and will face Cuevas next year. This would be the first defense of the WBO title for 23-year-old Norman, but it will have to wait.

The November 8 event will still take place, but one of the fights below the card will be moved to the joint event venue. In the main event, lightweight contender Keyshawn Davis will face Gustavo Lemos. ESPN+ will show the event live.

Norman Jr. criticized on social media for not agreeing to a $1.7 million offer to fight IBF champion Jaron “Boots” Ennis in a unification bout on November 9 in Philadelphia.

They think Norman wouldn’t have injured his arm if he had agreed to the $1.7 million deal, which is stupid. Norman Jr. he wanted $2.2 million to fight Ennis in his hometown of Philadelphia.

His father, Brian Sr., said they would have received $1.7 million if the fight had been held in Las Vegas, but that was unacceptable. It was a reasonable way to stage the fight, but Ennis’ management disagreed.

Norman Jr. he’s 23 and in no rush to accept the low offers made to him to fight Ennis. He better turn it down because Boots promoter Eddie Hearn will likely boost that offer when Norman Jr. will attract more attention.

In Norman Jr’s last fight, he knocked out Giovani Santillan last May in San Diego. Won the interim WBO welterweight belt, later elevated to full title.

Last update: 10/01/2024

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