About Me

If there is a ring or a cage, you can be sure I'll be there...

Friday, 13 July 2012

PUNCH VAUGHAN HAPPY WITH HOLLYWOOD DEBUT - QUOTES




Punch Vaughan showed sparring partner and stablemate Amir Khan how to get the job done Stateside last night, with an emphatic American debut performance in Hollywood, California.

‘The Scouse Mexican,’ now based in LA alongside Khan with Hall of Fame trainer Freddie Roach, devoured his opponent at the landmark Florentine Gardens to get his own American dynasty off to the perfect start.

Extending his professional record to 5-1, the 21-year-old welterweight enjoyed a whitewash points victory (40-36 on all three judges scorecards) against teak-tough South Central LA scrapper Jovanni Rubio.

Speaking exclusively to Mersey Gloves afterwards, Vaughan said: “The fight went well. It was a tough fight, but I won all four rounds so I’m very happy. I fought a tough kid, with Mexican roots, but I hurt him in the first round with a left hook, right hand combination – right down the middle. After that, he started holding so I knew I’d hurt him.

As for his Stateside debut, he added: “It was a great experience to fight in the States. I had a really great camp for this fight. I really benefitted from some great sparring with Amir, Alfonso Gomez and Vanes Martirosyan. Plus, I’ve had great work from the corner too, thanks to Freddie and Marvin Somodio.

“Nothing beats fighting at home, of course, but I feel that my career is best suited to being out in America and so the plan now is to fight out here full-time. It’s a great opportunity for me.”

To celebrate, Vaughan was driving from LA to Las Vegas today, to support Khan in his quest to become the undisputed light-welterweight world champion on Saturday night.

Punch Vaughan celebrating his American debut with
Wildcard trainers Freddie Roach and Marvin Somodio



Wednesday, 16 May 2012

EDWARDS AND SATCHELL READY FOR BIG AINTREE JUMP

Scouse rivals Paul Edwards and Kevin Satchell have a huge fence to clear at Aintree racecourse on Saturday – one another!

Their Merseyside derby title fight has been rewarded with the vacant Commonwealth flyweight championship, which was recently relinquished by former champion Chris Edwards.

It is now the third major title fight topped by the vacant British and Commonwealth title clash between local heavyweight sensation David Price (12-0) against Sam Sexton (15-2) at Aintree's Equestrian Centre.

Former British champ Edwards (9-1) and Satchell (7-0) have put their friendship aside and promoter Frank Maloney, never one to stir things up, is tipping a photo-finish.
Frank Maloney sits between Kevin Satchell and Paul Edwards
ahead of their Merseyside derby Commonwealth title fight

Maloney said: “They are both every good young fighters and ambitious. It is a pick ‘em fight and so hard to pick a winner. When they were matched against each other neither one of them needed to think about accepting the challenge. I hope that whoever wins will get a crack at Chris Edwards for the British belt next, because they will have earned that Lonsdale belt chance.”

In the chief support, Ashley Theophane (31-4-1) defends his British light-welterweight crown - however, it will not be against Wallasey's Steve Williams who was forced to pull out with a chest infection on Monday night.

In another Merseyside derby special attraction, John Donnelly (13-2) collides with Kirkby's Mike Robinson (5-4-3) in a repeat of their thrilling English super-flyweight title fight, while former amateur rivals Johnny Quigley (6-0) and Ryan Farrag (6-1) also feature on the 11-fight card. 

Tickets are selling fast. The are some available priced at £95 (ringside), £75 (main floor) and £55 (floor) from www.frankmaloney.com or www.ticketmaster.com

Friday, 4 May 2012

SMITH BROS OUT – SELKIRK AND FIELDING IN!

Joe Selkirk and Rocky Fielding will hope to close in on domestic title fights later this summer after being confirmed as joint top of the bill main events on a card in Oldham on May 18th. However, the switch is due to both brothers Stephen and Liam Smith seeing their planned big night's both scrapped.

Stephen was due to headline a card at the Liverpool Olympia on Friday May 11th, defending the WBO Intercontinental super-featherweight belt, while Liam was pencilled in to headline the card in Oldham. But both of their scheduled opponents have pulled out injured, forcing one card to be scrapped and the other to be recast.

A statement detailing all of the changes was released by Frank Warren Promotions this afternoon. Here it is in full...

"With the late cancellation of the BoxAcademy show at the Troxy that was due to take place tomorrow in London and injury problems on other shows, Frank Warren Promotions and Queensberry Promotions have made some changes to their forthcoming schedule of events.

"The Frank Warren show at the Liverpool Olympia on Friday 11th May, headlined by Stephen Smith's WBO Intercontinental super-featherweight title defence against Francisco Urena, has been cancelled after Urena pulled out injured.

"Liverpool stars Joe Selkirk, Rocky Fielding and Paul Butler, who were featuring on the undercard, will now go on the debut Queensberry Promotions BoxAcademy show which will take place on Friday 18th May at the Oldham Leisure Centre.  

"Ronnie Heffron had to withdraw from his clash with Liam Smith on the Oldham card due to a hand injury, so unbeaten light-middleweight star Selkirk will now joint-headline alongside super-middleweight ace Rocky Fielding, in separate 10-round contests.

"Unbeaten Liverpool light-middleweight talent Smith will go on the Newport Sports Centre card on Friday 25th May which is headlined by Lee Selby's Commonwealth featherweight title defence against Patrick Okine. 

"In addition, Frank Warren has confirmed a show for Friday 1st June at the York Hall, Bethnal Green, headlined by new Commonwealth middleweight Champion Billy Joe Saunders and Stephen Smith will be on the undercard.

"Saunders stopped Tony Hill inside an explosive 30 seconds at the Royal Albert Hall last Saturday night to win the title and will be making the first defence of the belt."

Friday, 27 April 2012

TONY BELLEW TITLE FIGHT EXCLUSIVE

British light-heavyweight champion Tony Bellew believes boxing must clean up its act in order to see the glory days of the Eighties return to the ring.
The Scouse ‘Bomber’ is furious after being forced to sit on the sidelines for six months since losing a narrow decision to WBO world champion Nathan Cleverly, and is promising to make up for lost time live on Sky Sports this evening.
Returning to the Liverpool Echo Arena, Bellew makes the first defence of his Lonsdale Belt against former European champion Danny McIntosh in a ‘Puncher vs Puncher’ showdown that has got fight fans nationwide licking their lips in anticipation.
And in an exclusive interview with Mersey Gloves, Bellew promised a painful end to the Norwich fighters challenge, while also hitting out at the cowardice of Cleverly and a complete lack of support from his promoter Frank Warren... 

MG: How did the fortnight delay affect your fight camp preparations?
TB: “I had to ease off, and I put a pound and a half back on, to allow for the delay. My coaches gave me a couple of days off, and it was frustrating then, I was on the verge of peaking, I was at the top of the mountain. I was just a step or two away from being right on it. But I took the necessary steps to ease off it, and now I feel great again. I’m back where I was and where I need to be. I’m happy. My fitness is good, I’ve enjoyed the camp.”

You’ve been uncharacteristically the silent man since your narrow world title defeat against Nathan Cleverly, why did you go into hiding?
“I never. I’ve just become the forgotten man. I feel like I’ve been punished for that performance, I’ve been left on the sidelines while others have been getting two or three dates and fights. I’ve been left to rot. I’ve been in the gym since January. I went on holiday after the fight, but I’ve had just seven full days out of the gym since September 15th. First I was getting ready for January 28th, then that fell through, and since then I’ve been left in limbo. I honestly feel like I am being punished for a great performance.”

That must be hard to swallow, especially after a fight that could easily of gone the other way?
“Exactly. I could easily of gotten the decision against Cleverly and would have been the new world champion. And make no mistake, I would have been thrust straight into a rematch that would definitely of happened by now. Yet he gets the decision and the things that were agreed upon before the fight, like if it was close, are ignored. And now all of a sudden nobody wants to come near me now. I haven’t heard nothing from my promoter and I get the feeling they just want me to rot. But listen, I’m a strong person mentally, I’m a determined person and nothing will break my spirit. I am determined to become a world champion and nobody is going to stop me getting what I want out of this sport.”

Danny McIntosh is up next then. How does his style compare with Cleverly, and do you think it will suit you to face another big puncher?
“For each fight we’ve had, since I’ve gone back home to (coaches) Mick (McAllister) and Mark (Quinn), we’ve had a game plan. Ovill McKenzie second fight we knew was going the distance so I was going to box and use lateral movement, base everything off the jab. Then the Cleverly fight we knew we were going into a high octane affair, a massive fight with everything based around a huge workrate. Maximizing the output. It wasn’t as much about boxing, it was about getting usper-fit to be conditioned to deal with anything that he’s got.
“We had a gameplan also of sticking out the jab and nailing him with right hands as he came in, and to be fair if my right hand hadn’t broke in the second round I truly believe I would of knocked him out with that right hand. But it is what it is, that’s boxing and I get on with it. But I still maintain I won that fight – boxing for 10 rounds with one hand. He had no answer to my jab, and if I were able to land right hands on the back of those double jabs I’d of knocked him out. But listen, you don’t cry over spilled milk and I’ll go again.
“Its not like I’ve needed to go back to the drawing board. I proved then that I am a fighter with world class capabilities – I’m there or there abouts. And I’ll show that again against Danny McIntosh.”

Trash talking aside, how highly do you rate McIntosh?
“He comes with big credentials. He’s a former European champion, and he’s gone abroad and knocked people out. He’s been around and  stopped the ever-durable  Tony Oakey, so he is dangerous. And I do respect him for what he’s got and what he is. But make no mistake I’m going to take him apart at the Echo Arena on Friday night. He’s just not going to live with  what I’ve got. I’ve got a gameplan that 100% he will not be able to live with, I know that for a fact. When I start touching Danny he’ll have flashbacks of being back in Germany, flahsbacks  of being back in the ring with Cleverly, and he’s just not going to want to be in there with me. I’m going to completely dominate this fight, and ultimate smash him to bits.”

Tony Bellew and Danny McIntosh collide at the Echo Arena in Liverpool tonight


How does that make you feel, when you fight for a world title and lose a close decision, then eventually you come back and are matched with a former European champion – and a dangerous puncher – while the guy who kept the belt is matched up against two opponents ranked well outside of the world top 50?
“How do you think I feel? The guy has had two soft touches lined-up, against a guy ranked 54 and a guy ranked 80-odd, while I get back in with a former European title holder who can really bang with the right hand. You’d think that I was actually the winner and he was the loser… How does that make me feel? Well, it’s sad really and I believe that its wrong that they are conning boxing. That’s how I look at it. They’re conning the fans. But what can I do? If Cleverly is happy fighting that level of opponents then he’s showing the mark of the man he truly is.
“I fought Ovill McKenzie in the first fight and I wasn’t happy with my performance, and I told him in the ring, ‘We’ll do a rematch.’ And I think he thought I was talking a load of cobblers, but I don’t want to scrape past people. I don’t want there to be any doubts in a decision and, for me, the first McKenzie fight was too close. So I gave him the rematch and proved my point when he was totally outclassed for 12 rounds the second time. And that’s the mark of me.
“I said I would give him the rematch and I stuck by my word. Me and Cleverly agreed to do it again if our fight was close, and it doesn’t come much closer than the first fight, but where is he? If he’s happy to put his head on his pillow at night then something’s not right. I go to bed some nights and think, ‘I done enough, at worst it was a draw.’ So how can he sleep and think, ‘I’m happy with that. I scraped by someone and was fortunate to get a decision.’ I’m a man, I’d want to prove to everyone that I was better than him. And I am willing to go again with him any time.
“I’m happy to go on record and state that if I ever have a close fight with anyone, anyone, I will give them a rematch. I never want to scrape by anybody. I want to beat everybody convincingly. I either want the knockout or I want a clear points victory. And if that takes a rematch every now and again, then so be it. Like with Ovill McKenzie, I’ll do it. But it’s obvious that Natan Cleverly doesn’t have the same opinion as me. If he genuinely thinks he beat me in second gear then he should definitely fight me again, because a rematch with me makes more financial sense than anybody else. It’s a far more marketable fight to face me again than to face anybody else. It’s a no brainer for me.”

Coming back to the McIntosh fight again then, you have a new set-up with new promoters – who won the purse bid – involved in your career for the first time. How has the process been working with Dave Coldwell and Eddie Hearn?
“Dave Coldwell has done great, and it’s refreshing to see him doing really well. But it’s also really refreshing to see Eddie Hearn coming on board as well, to say, ‘You know what I’ll work with you Dave. Let’s give it a go and see how it goes.’ And for me that’s really great. I keep saying it that boxing needs to become a transparent sport. Everybody needs to be able to see what is going on and how things are moving. The sooner boxing gets to that the better. At the moment boxing is still very cloak and dagger. At the moment my manager is telling me one thing, my promoter is telling me another – and my manager and promoter are the same guy! So how does that work?
“It’s very behind closed doors and hush, hush, but I think both Dave and Eddie are very transparent. They’re telling people what is there, what’s on offer, we do this here and this is how we do that. This is what is available to you, this is what is available to me. That makes this, this makes that, and you’re due this. I am happy with that. And I am not saying I want all the pie to myself, not for one minute. But what I am saying is that if I’m creating a good pot then it’s only right that a good chunk of that pot goes to me, and the promoter, and the other fighter and to the managers or whatever. But I just like to know what was in the pot in the first place.
“I don’t like being told, don’t worry wants in this pot, don’t worry what he’s getting, don’t worry what everybody else is getting. You’re getting that – and for me, that’s wrong. That’s why boxing needs to become transparent… Very much like the way the UFC is.”

The Ultimate Fighting Championship announce immediately after every event what the gate made, how many tickets were sold and who is getting paid what wages. Are you saying you’d like that to happen in boxing too?
“And that’s fantastic. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe you should announce exactly what everybody has received in wages as that’s a little bit tough. But, if that’s what boxing needs to clear it up then I’m all for it. I really am. The sooner we all start knowing exactly what these big fishes are getting, what these fighters are getting, is better for me.
“If boxing wants to get back to the glory days, the Benn-Eubank days, the ITV days, then boxing needs to become a sport that people can believe in again. Fans need to know what they are seeing and that they are going in to see a fair fight, where both fighters are happy going into a fight. Rather than one fighter going into a fight unhappy with what he is getting, but unable to do anything else because there is nothing else he can do in life.”

How has this situation then affected your relationship with Frank Warren, your manager and promoter?
“Listen, on a personal level I’ve got a good relationship with Frank Warren. Frank Warren is a very hard man to dislike. He’s a good fella. He’s sound, Frank’s cool. But I just feel like they’ve forgot about me, that’s what I feel like. I’ve been forgotten about. As I say, Frank is a very hard person to dislike. When you speak to him personally he’s a good guy, a good fella. But it is what it is. I’ve just got to get on with it. Frank’s my manager and promoter, even though he’s not promoting this fight… See it’s a hard thing for me to answer because I don’t understand how certain purse bids get won, when I know that I generate more money that what is being bid. So for me, that’s a little bit crazy. I can’t get my head around that. How can somebody fighting in a small arena in Wembley, against a fighter who he’s already beat, be generating more than I do… I don’t know, I don’t understand it. This is boxing, it’s politics…
“I just want to be treated fairly, like the other fighters on Frank’s books. And right now I’m not being treated the same. I mean, look at the TV channels, look at the press releases. Has anybody seen a press release from Frank Warren’s office about me in the last six months? That’s all that needs to be said. And that’s the biggest office in the country for banging out releases… All that needs to be asked is, ‘Why is that?’"


* Tickets for ‘The Big Bang’ will be available to purchase on the door tonight, priced at £30, £40, £60 and £80, with a small number of VIP tickets at £150. For more info ring the box office on 0844 8000 400. 

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

STEPHEN SMITH DEFENDS TITLE IN LIVERPOOL

Stephen Smith returns to his home city on Friday 11th May to make the first defence of his WBO Intercontinental super-featherweight title against tough Spaniard Francisco Urena at the Liverpool Olympia.

The 26-year-old is determined to stay on track for a rematch with Lee Selby, who inflicted the first loss on Smith's record last September to also take the Scouser’s British and Commonwealth titles in one of the biggest domestic upsets of 2011.

'Swifty' roared back with back-to-back first round wins over Arpad Vass in February and Ben Jones last month to win the WBO interim belt, and he’ll be keeping an eye on rival Selby who defends his titles two weeks later in Newport.

And the former Rotunda ABC amateur star is aiming to make it a hat-trick of first rounders against Urena, who has never been stopped in 21 fights. Smith said: “I’m looking forward to returning to Liverpool to fight in front of my loyal home fans again and give them a good performance to show that I’m back to my best.

“Urena looks like a tough challenger, but I haven’t seen too much of him yet, from what I’ve heard he likes to come forward which will play into my hands.

Stephen 'Swifty' Smith returns on May 11th


“It would be great to stop him in the first round, like the last two have gone, but I don’t go in looking to end things early it’s just the way things have worked out and if I see an opening I go for it.

“Of course, I want the fight with Selby again to have the chance to reclaim my titles and to put things right and I know I’ll get him down the line. I’m fighting regularly, keeping sharp and improving all the time so when I do face him I’ll beat him.”

The Olympia undercard features unbeaten super-middleweight Rocky Fielding in an eight-rounder; unbeaten light-middleweight prospect Joey Selkirk; Ellesmere Port super-flyweight talent Paul Butler, plus Liverpool’s Andy Coulqhoun and Lyndon Newman.

* Tickets are priced at £30, £40 and £60 and are available from Frank Warren Promotions on 01992 550 888 and Olympia Box Office on 0151 263 6633.

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

STEPHEN 'SWIFTY' SMITH Q&A

After bagging British and Commonwealth featherweight titles after just a dozen pro starts, former white hot amateur star Stephen Smith was widely touted to advance to major international honours.
However, after a shock loss to Barry's Lee Selby in front of his home crowd last September, the popular Scouser has re-grouped and is on a mission to avenge the loss and reclaim his titles.
Smith returns to action this Saturday night in Munich, Germany, on the undercard of Dereck Chisora’s WBC world heavyweight title challenge against Vitali Klitshcko in an eight-rounder against Arpad Vass.

What are you hoping to get out of the exercise?
"I’m fighting a Hungarian, Arpad Vass, over eight-threes. Apparently he’s won seven of nine and stopped five. (The 25 year old was outpointed over six by Belfast flyweight Luke Wilton and stopped in two by ex John Murray victim Andriy Kudryavtsev). It’s an opportunity to get back to winning ways, become a winning fighter again.
"It’s an absolute privilege to be on such a huge bill and it’s going to be great experience. It’s a bill I’d like to be at as a spectator so to actually be part of it in a small way adds to the incentive. There’s going to be a lot of people watching so it’ll be an ideal platform to announce that I’m back, then push on from there.
"I boxed overseas many times as an amateur, often against hostile crowds so I’ll not be fazed by going to Germany. I boxed in front of sell out crowds every day at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre when I won the Commonwealth Games in 2006.  It’s far more exciting, more motivating, than boxing down the undercard of some British show. I have to prove that last time was just a blip and none of the ambition has gone out of me."

The loss of your British and Commonwealth belts to Lee Selby last September (KO round 8) wasn’t supposed to happen; given it was a voluntary defence in your home city. How do you account for it? It appeared as if you were trying too hard to satisfy the Liverpool crowd. Did you underestimate Selby?
"No. I rated him. I knew he’d be tricky and long limbed. It was never going to be easy. I’ve still got every confidence I can beat Lee Selby because I knew it wasn’t me in the ring that night. If I’d performed, and Lee had just been better, I could accept that but I wasn’t a tenth of what I could be. No disrespect, but I’ve beaten far better fighters than Lee Selby in the amateurs.
"If you remember, I was primed to defend the titles on July 9th (beneath Murray-Mitchell) but, when that show was put back a week, I couldn’t appear because it was our Paul’s wedding and I was best man. The fight was re-made for five weeks later which wasn’t enough time to take a break to let my body rest and recover, and it told on the night.
"If you under train, you can still knock out four or five decent rounds but, having over trained, I felt dead after just two. I had no legs. I’d have preferred to have boxed him but, with nothing happening in my legs, I decided to try and grind him down but it backfired. He was hitting me with jabs I could blatantly see coming and normally would’ve avoided easily.
"There’s nothing much I could’ve done differently. It was just circumstances."

You were on the wrong end of a bad knockout. What affect did it have on your confidence?
"It didn’t dent my confidence or self belief but it hurt my pride and I felt very embarrassed. I’ve never even been over before in my life and I took far bigger shots earlier in the Selby fight. I took too many shots all night but seriously didn’t rate Selby, power wise. The kinockout was purely through exhaustion.
"On the Monday following the fight, I went on holiday to Tenerife for a week but, on my return I dreaded going out for a week, for fear of bumping into fans on the street. Everyone in Liverpool gets behind our fighters and I felt I’d let ‘em down.
"Facing the lads back at the gym was easy. They all understood. Our Paul, who I’ve always really looked up to, has had a couple of similar setbacks but he was the perfect big brother; put his arm around me and gave sound advice."

On the comeback trail... Liverpool's Stephen 'Swifty' Smith


Have you ever had to comeback from such a devastating loss before, in the amateurs?
"Nothing of that magnitude but, when I first moved up to feather back in 2005, I lost three fights consecutively, to Alex Tischenko, the reigning world and Olympic champion, to France’s Daouda Sow, who went on to get silver at 60 kilos at the Beijing Olympics, then to a Swede, in Sweden. That last one was a real bad decision. Nothing was going for me. With the 2006 Commonwealth Games looming, I knew I had to get my act together and won 20 of 21, including the ABA title and Commonwealth Games. The only defeat was in the European Seniors semi-final so I’ve proved my character before."

The Selby loss was your second start under Manchester coach Joe Gallagher. He was criticised after but you were quick to defend him. What has he added to your make-up as a fighter?
"I felt very sorry for the stick Joe took because it definitely wasn’t his gameplan for me to walk Selby down, taking shots. As I say, I just didn’t feel right in my body. I defy anyone to have won, feeling as I felt. I knew my spark wasn’t there in the dressing room but what fighter would pull out at that stage?
Joe’s added more to both my attack and defence and the quality of sparring at his gym, with the Murrays, Anthony Crolla, Scott Quigg, is different class."

What are you hoping to achieve in 2012? A return with Selby? How would the outcome be different?
"Provided I come through in Germany, I’m due to fight Ben Jones for the WBO InterContinental title at the Troxy in London on March 2nd. That’s up at super-feather but I’m still a feather; just taking the job to keep busy.
"I want to climb back up the ladder and I want my British and Commonwealth titles back. And I want to get them from Selby, I definitely want him back. I didn’t have to fight him. It was a voluntary defence so I’d like to think he’d be enough of a gentleman to give me a chance. Anyway, he’s as much to prove that, it wasn’t a fluke as I have. I believe Frank has options on us both so it should be easy enough to make. He’s long limbed and very awkward but nothing I haven’t seen before."

Do you still feel that a world title is a realistic expectation or has the Selby defeat made you re-assess your goals?
"Yes, a world title is still my ambition. You have to aim high but I intend getting there by following short term goals. I’d like one (fight) to get the rust off then I’m more than willing to fight Selby or whoever anytime after that.
Right now, I’m not looking beyond anything other than getting my titles back. I’ll not rest until I’ve got ‘em again."

* Stephen Smith’s return and Dereck Chisora's WBC world heavyweight title challenge against Vitali Klitschko can be seen live and exclusive on BoxNation on Saturday 18th February from 8pm.

Friday, 3 February 2012

DODSON HAS SURPRISE FOR McKENZIE


Tony Dodson laughed off the fact he needed a second trip to the scales for the first time in his 13-year career ahead of tonight's Commonwealth light-heavyweight showdown with Ovill McKenzie in Manchester.

Liverpool's former British super-middleweight champion was initially 3oz over the 12st 7lb championship limit, but returned minutes later half a pound inside before saying: "I think I’ll have to invest in some new scales in our house. When I left, my weight was perfect."

He added: "This is nothing to worry about. I made the weight easily and both myself and Ovill look in great shape. It's going to be a good fight while it lasts, and I am supremely confident of taking the belt home to my son at the end of it.

"I have a few surprised up my sleeve and a lot of people are going to be shocked at the performance I produce. I've always been a strong boxer but perhaps have become a little more renowned for my heart and my willingness to stand and fight in recent years. But tonight people will see the real Tony Dodson.

"Camp has gone great, I'm in great shape and I am ready to go to work. For those lucky enough to have tickets in Manchester this will be a performance to savour, while those at home watching on BoxNation are going to enjoy every minute. This will be a defining performance in my career."

Tony Dodson looked trim on the scales yesterday

And what a career it's been. After turing professional back in the summer of 1999, Dodson went on to capture an array of titles, including the Lonsdale Belt, yet many believed that father time had closed in on his 28-6-1 career. Back to back defeats, albeit in fight of the year candidates to local rivals Tony Quigley and Paul Smith, left Dodson stirring into a career abyss. But he's rebuilt himself up at light-heavyweight and is currently on a four-fight winning streak. 

McKenzie represents a step up in class compared to that crop, howeve,r and tonight, once again, represents a major crossroads occasion in the career of one of British boxing's most beloved characters. "I know at 31 that my chances are growing increasingly small, but I also now that I'm doing things now that I haven't done for years," added the 'Garston Warrior'. "Since moving to Oliver's Gym in Salford I've found my love for boxing again and Ovill McKenzie is going to find that out when the bell goes."

McKenzie, meanwhile, captured the Commonwealth belt by knocking out Welsh prospect Jeff Evans in just 15 seconds in Halifax in November and 'The Upsetter' will enter the ring as firm favourite for his first defence. However, he suffered back to back defeats of his own against another Scouser, Tony Bellew, before finally claiming the Commonwealth strap – the latter of which was a systematic 12-round beating in July. Did that performance provide Dodson with a blueprint to defeating one of the most dangerous stalwarts in British boxing?

Tonight's undercard also features to other Merseyside stars. St Helens' former British bantamweight champion Gary Davies, back in the ring for the first time in 14 months, aims to return to the glory trail. While Liverpool-based light-heavyweight, Courtney Fry, is gunning for a massive performance of his own in an attempt to secure a shot at the winner of the main event.

* Tickets are still available on the door at the Bowler's Arena, while the event is also televised live on BoxNation tonight from 6pm.