Outside of sneaking of in clandestine fashion again, like he did to Florida, he isn't fighting anyone.Nightmare Roy wrote: ↑24 Nov 2023, 20:55It's just nonsense, he's going nowhere near EnissRedback Rasta wrote: ↑24 Nov 2023, 15:57Benn starting to rival Zelenoff as the ultimate gym warrior without a cause.
Conor Benn - What Next?
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Redback Rasta
- Welterweight
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- Joined: 19 Jul 2015, 18:53
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
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Redback Rasta
- Welterweight
- Posts: 2907
- Joined: 19 Jul 2015, 18:53
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Word is Eubank now looking elsewhere and as a consequence, so is Benn.
This Benn saga is just going from bad to bizarre.
This Benn saga is just going from bad to bizarre.
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Conor was calling out Boots Ennis recently.Redback Rasta wrote: ↑26 Nov 2023, 20:52 Word is Eubank now looking elsewhere and as a consequence, so is Benn.
This Benn saga is just going from bad to bizarre.
Please let that happen he will get taken apart.
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margaret thatcher
- Featherweight
- Posts: 39212
- Joined: 22 Jul 2019, 15:43
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
calls out boots, prob end up fighting someone like cody crowley at absolute tops. i think that's the highest they'd go.
or do the whole 'look i stopped him faster' thing they lovee and face the guy who boots just brutally bashed up for 10 rounds
or do the whole 'look i stopped him faster' thing they lovee and face the guy who boots just brutally bashed up for 10 rounds
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Redback Rasta
- Welterweight
- Posts: 2907
- Joined: 19 Jul 2015, 18:53
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
I'd rather he continues to have to live through his gym videos. Like Zelenoff does.Monzon83 wrote: ↑26 Nov 2023, 22:12Conor was calling out Boots Ennis recently.Redback Rasta wrote: ↑26 Nov 2023, 20:52 Word is Eubank now looking elsewhere and as a consequence, so is Benn.
This Benn saga is just going from bad to bizarre.
Please let that happen he will get taken apart.
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
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- Joined: 12 Feb 2022, 12:45
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Cameron's second comeback fight in Feb, wish him all the best. Lost a lot of weight to get fighting again.
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Controversial
- Heavyweight

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Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Apparently Benn now regretting his bullish stance,
interview with Boxing News
“CONOR BENN says the ‘shame’ he feels he brought upon the family name was the hardest thing about his ongoing clomifene saga.
Benn returned adverse analytical findings for the banned substance clomifene in two VADA tests back in 2022. The first came in July and the second in September.
In the end the findings caused the late cancellation of a proposed fight against Chris Eubank Jnr, which had been all set for that October and has never been rescheduled despite lengthy negotiations.
Instead, what has ensued is a lengthy legal battle to prove his innocence which has so far precluded him from boxing in Britain. He fought Rodolfo Orozco in Orlando last September and this weekend takes on Peter Dobson at the Cosmopolitan hotel in Las Vegas.
There had been discussions about a huge homecoming event against Eubank at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in February but they eventually broke down, which paved the way for this trip to Vegas.
The 27-year-old admits that a fight against Dobson at the Chelsea Ballroom does not get the juices flowing in the same way although there are now clear parallels between he and his father’s career.
Nigel Benn was 22-0 when he lost to Michael Watson in Finsbury Park in the May of 1989. In the wake of that defeat, Benn decided to make his name in America, returning in Atlantic City in the following October in what would be the first of five stateside fights before his clash with Chris Eubank Sr in November 1990.
Incidentally, Conor is currently 22-0 and boxing in America under very different circumstances, given that the British Boxing Board of Control and UK Anti-Doping have appealed the National Anti-Doping Panel’s July decision to lift Benn’s suspension for the two failed tests.
Although he protests his innocence, the Destroyer says he does feel shame for the damage which may have been done to the Benn name since those tests came back positive.
“That was the worst thing,” says Benn, holding back tears, when asked how much of an impact this story may have had on the name forged so masterfully by his dad.
“That was the hardest thing to deal with – the shame. That was the hardest thing. I get so emotional talking about it. It was hard, man.
“Part of me wishes I had done it and that’s the worst thing because I just can’t do anything to change what it is and I just had to accept it. I became accepting that this is what it is, my dad still loves me and I still love him. My son still loves me and I have loads of supporters out there who backed me.
“I pray in five years’ time, 10 years’ time, when athletes start testing positive for this on the regular that people say ‘hold on a minute, Conor was telling the truth the whole time’. That’s my prayer.
“There’s nothing I can do to change people’s opinions. Those who have made up their mind have made up their mind and those who believe me believe me. There’s nothing more I can do.”
On Saturday’s clash with Dobson, he adds: “Is it a little bit of a step back? Yes. Am I excited to be out? Yes. But my goal is to make these fighters look like the fighters they are. Although it can be challenging to get up at 3-4 in the morning and train for a guy like this, I know he is still in the way of those big fights happening.
“This is always going to be a big part of my life. I don’t look at it as bad press, it’s a big topic and it’s a big chapter of my story. Me fighting in Orlando and then now in Vegas, it’s not under the best conditions but it’s a big chapter in the story and I’m liking the way my book is coming along. Although it’s challenging, I can’t wait for the homecoming.”
There seems to have been a genuine change in Benn’s perspective on the situation after a period of hostility and spikiness to those who questioned his innocence. In particular there was a public spat with the BBBoC, who he accused of impeding his ability to clear his name due to their ‘conduct of an unfair and biased procedure’. In keeping with that, he relinquished his license with them voluntarily back in October 2022.
But now, more than 16 months on, it is a calmer Benn who reflects on the fall-out, admitting that he regrets his initial stance on the situation.
He adds: “Whether I’ve gone about it the right way or not, whether I’ve retaliated, middle fingers to everyone… I’m a fighter so I retaliated and I regret that massively.
“Rather than just taking a back seat, letting it digest and then presenting the evidence.
“It has been painful. I just want closure on this. I thought it was closure when I won the first hearing and the appeal is based on no new evidence. It’s just frustrating because it’s dragging on. I don’t know the ins and outs, I let my team deal with it. If I’m involved it will distract me from what my goal and focus is and that’s being the best fighter I can be.”
Mercifully for Benn, he takes the next step on that path this Saturday.”
interview with Boxing News
“CONOR BENN says the ‘shame’ he feels he brought upon the family name was the hardest thing about his ongoing clomifene saga.
Benn returned adverse analytical findings for the banned substance clomifene in two VADA tests back in 2022. The first came in July and the second in September.
In the end the findings caused the late cancellation of a proposed fight against Chris Eubank Jnr, which had been all set for that October and has never been rescheduled despite lengthy negotiations.
Instead, what has ensued is a lengthy legal battle to prove his innocence which has so far precluded him from boxing in Britain. He fought Rodolfo Orozco in Orlando last September and this weekend takes on Peter Dobson at the Cosmopolitan hotel in Las Vegas.
There had been discussions about a huge homecoming event against Eubank at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in February but they eventually broke down, which paved the way for this trip to Vegas.
The 27-year-old admits that a fight against Dobson at the Chelsea Ballroom does not get the juices flowing in the same way although there are now clear parallels between he and his father’s career.
Nigel Benn was 22-0 when he lost to Michael Watson in Finsbury Park in the May of 1989. In the wake of that defeat, Benn decided to make his name in America, returning in Atlantic City in the following October in what would be the first of five stateside fights before his clash with Chris Eubank Sr in November 1990.
Incidentally, Conor is currently 22-0 and boxing in America under very different circumstances, given that the British Boxing Board of Control and UK Anti-Doping have appealed the National Anti-Doping Panel’s July decision to lift Benn’s suspension for the two failed tests.
Although he protests his innocence, the Destroyer says he does feel shame for the damage which may have been done to the Benn name since those tests came back positive.
“That was the worst thing,” says Benn, holding back tears, when asked how much of an impact this story may have had on the name forged so masterfully by his dad.
“That was the hardest thing to deal with – the shame. That was the hardest thing. I get so emotional talking about it. It was hard, man.
“Part of me wishes I had done it and that’s the worst thing because I just can’t do anything to change what it is and I just had to accept it. I became accepting that this is what it is, my dad still loves me and I still love him. My son still loves me and I have loads of supporters out there who backed me.
“I pray in five years’ time, 10 years’ time, when athletes start testing positive for this on the regular that people say ‘hold on a minute, Conor was telling the truth the whole time’. That’s my prayer.
“There’s nothing I can do to change people’s opinions. Those who have made up their mind have made up their mind and those who believe me believe me. There’s nothing more I can do.”
On Saturday’s clash with Dobson, he adds: “Is it a little bit of a step back? Yes. Am I excited to be out? Yes. But my goal is to make these fighters look like the fighters they are. Although it can be challenging to get up at 3-4 in the morning and train for a guy like this, I know he is still in the way of those big fights happening.
“This is always going to be a big part of my life. I don’t look at it as bad press, it’s a big topic and it’s a big chapter of my story. Me fighting in Orlando and then now in Vegas, it’s not under the best conditions but it’s a big chapter in the story and I’m liking the way my book is coming along. Although it’s challenging, I can’t wait for the homecoming.”
There seems to have been a genuine change in Benn’s perspective on the situation after a period of hostility and spikiness to those who questioned his innocence. In particular there was a public spat with the BBBoC, who he accused of impeding his ability to clear his name due to their ‘conduct of an unfair and biased procedure’. In keeping with that, he relinquished his license with them voluntarily back in October 2022.
But now, more than 16 months on, it is a calmer Benn who reflects on the fall-out, admitting that he regrets his initial stance on the situation.
He adds: “Whether I’ve gone about it the right way or not, whether I’ve retaliated, middle fingers to everyone… I’m a fighter so I retaliated and I regret that massively.
“Rather than just taking a back seat, letting it digest and then presenting the evidence.
“It has been painful. I just want closure on this. I thought it was closure when I won the first hearing and the appeal is based on no new evidence. It’s just frustrating because it’s dragging on. I don’t know the ins and outs, I let my team deal with it. If I’m involved it will distract me from what my goal and focus is and that’s being the best fighter I can be.”
Mercifully for Benn, he takes the next step on that path this Saturday.”
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
- Posts: 9671
- Joined: 12 Feb 2022, 12:45
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
he drones on does Benn. Never has one with so little in his head, said so much.
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
He's going down the mental health route now in an interview with Helwani. Hopefully he loses to Dobson and fades away into obscurity.
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Hopefully we don't see him again after Sat, but can't see it. I'll be watching all the boxing Sat, but I won't be watching Benn, can't stick him. Sounds pathetic that doesn't it
I just genuinely can't be messed with his pitiful boxing career.
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
His old man should just tell him not to worry about PED shame.
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Yep don't think his old man was much different in that department either , two of a kind anyway , both got a chip on there shoulder and inflated opinion of themselves , The old man may be a british superstar , but i distinctly remember at the time there being better fighters around than him that he never / would'nt face , , Just not a big fan of either of them , seniour should just bog of back to Aust , and take his son with him ,
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CaptainSpacerod
- Welterweight
- Posts: 3302
- Joined: 15 Dec 2015, 03:21
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Today he’s calling for fights with Haney, Ortiz and Ennis.
“Any welterweight is not a concern for me. Any top American fighter - anyone - no problem,"
He sounds a bit desperate now. Bills to pay but no big fights in the pipeline
“Any welterweight is not a concern for me. Any top American fighter - anyone - no problem,"
He sounds a bit desperate now. Bills to pay but no big fights in the pipeline
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Which boxers did Benn say he wouldn't fight. He didn't come across as the type of boxer who would dodge some one.coneye wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 05:47Yep don't think his old man was much different in that department either , two of a kind anyway , both got a chip on there shoulder and inflated opinion of themselves , The old man may be a british superstar , but i distinctly remember at the time there being better fighters around than him that he never / would'nt face , , Just not a big fan of either of them , seniour should just bog of back to Aust , and take his son with him ,
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Controversial
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9152
- Joined: 13 Jul 2002, 18:29
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
I don’t think he explicitly said he wouldn’t fight anyone, he fought some tough Americans like DeWitt, Barkley and McClellan whereas Eubank didn’t. I guess the criticism was neither fought guys like Toney or RJJ. Eubank was tough as they come but didn’t really push himself to fight the big names, I remember Hearn talking about signing Eubank and he said Eubank had three demands, no southpaws, no unbeaten fighters and no opponents under the age of 25.MasterG wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 10:17Which boxers did Benn say he wouldn't fight. He didn't come across as the type of boxer who would dodge some one.coneye wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 05:47Yep don't think his old man was much different in that department either , two of a kind anyway , both got a chip on there shoulder and inflated opinion of themselves , The old man may be a british superstar , but i distinctly remember at the time there being better fighters around than him that he never / would'nt face , , Just not a big fan of either of them , seniour should just bog of back to Aust , and take his son with him ,
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
- Posts: 9671
- Joined: 12 Feb 2022, 12:45
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Eubank Sr has popped up on TalkSport calling for Benn to fight Harlem, and explaining that he can't say how or via who, but only Eubank can get Benn his BBBoC licence back.
Eubank made everyone 100s of millions and is possibly the messiah.
He's utterly bonkers.
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CaptainSpacerod
- Welterweight
- Posts: 3302
- Joined: 15 Dec 2015, 03:21
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
He's mad as a March hare. Why do they give him airtime ?SeanBrennan wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 12:19
Eubank Sr has popped up on TalkSport calling for Benn to fight Harlem, and explaining that he can't say how or via who, but only Eubank can get Benn his BBBoC licence back.
Eubank made everyone 100s of millions and is possibly the messiah.
He's utterly bonkers.
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margaret thatcher
- Featherweight
- Posts: 39212
- Joined: 22 Jul 2019, 15:43
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
probably for that reason
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
- Posts: 9671
- Joined: 12 Feb 2022, 12:45
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Just called out Sugar Ray Robinson for a mega fight in Billericay.
Don’t this one will happen either….
Don’t this one will happen either….
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Counter-puncher
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 39141
- Joined: 20 May 2008, 11:41
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Controversial wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 10:57 I remember Hearn talking about signing Eubank and he said Eubank had three demands, no southpaws,
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SeanBrennan
- Bantamweight
- Posts: 9671
- Joined: 12 Feb 2022, 12:45
Re: Conor Benn - What Next?
Benn fought , beat and lost to some great fighters , but he did'nt go anywhere near the top dogs , Toney and Jones , , good fighter , well matched , and exciting to watch , but far far bigger name in the UK and Britain than he actualy was elswhereMasterG wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 10:17Which boxers did Benn say he wouldn't fight. He didn't come across as the type of boxer who would dodge some one.coneye wrote: ↑01 Feb 2024, 05:47Yep don't think his old man was much different in that department either , two of a kind anyway , both got a chip on there shoulder and inflated opinion of themselves , The old man may be a british superstar , but i distinctly remember at the time there being better fighters around than him that he never / would'nt face , , Just not a big fan of either of them , seniour should just bog of back to Aust , and take his son with him ,