Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
He saying no broken jaw
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
Nokeithmoonhangover wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 06:52Don't you think he could be in hospital because his jaw is broken?
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
his jaw aint broken
all talk
all talk
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MightyWarrior
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
They both looked absolutely f*cked in the last few rounds, especially that insane 12th. They should both be in hospital. Reminds again how brutal this sport can be.
If his isn’t broken, I wouldn’t have been surprised if it was - some of those 160lb punches that landed and the uppercut a couple of times
And I don’t know how Eubank got through that, he didn’t look himself at all, even before the first bell
If his isn’t broken, I wouldn’t have been surprised if it was - some of those 160lb punches that landed and the uppercut a couple of times
And I don’t know how Eubank got through that, he didn’t look himself at all, even before the first bell
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keithmoonhangover
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
Didn’t look broken
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Ruthless-RKO
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handsofstone
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
Rewatched the fight this morning after watching it half pissed and with company last night, I had it a draw initially but 115-113 Eubank Jr this morning and it tbf it was a better fight I gave it credit for , Benn started faster, more explosive jumping in and out of his attacks , wasn't clean but was quicker out the blocks than Eubank who looked like he felt a right hand in the 3rd which has him holding, Eubank came into things in the 4th and began timing Benn on to counters with the jabs, uppercuts and hooks, Benn kept doing as he was but his work lost steam and Eubank looked about as polished as I've seen him, made good use of his jab which you don't always see, Benn got dawg though and kept trying, it became a war of attrition down the stretch and Eubank was the one who came out on top, had a good 12th and stunned Benn with a big left, great action in the last round and Eubank deserved it imo
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keithmoonhangover
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
It was being talked about in the post fight press conference.Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 08:25Didn’t look broken
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
By who?keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 10:59It was being talked about in the post fight press conference.
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
Connor BennJimmy2025 wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 11:19By who?keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 10:59It was being talked about in the post fight press conference.
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
I'm gonna run back the full fight at some point soon, but I did catch the highlights. Looked like a pretty solid action bout.
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
no evidence for the broken jaw
but im confident its all talk
there was no signs at all he had a broken jaw either
probably someone telling benn 'yeah you broke his jaw', and theyve ran with it
im sure ring has posted the jaw wasnt broken aswell
but im confident its all talk
there was no signs at all he had a broken jaw either
probably someone telling benn 'yeah you broke his jaw', and theyve ran with it
im sure ring has posted the jaw wasnt broken aswell
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Ruthless-RKO
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
Seeing comments from casuals to suggest Eubank got it so they could have their father/son moment.
Honestly FB casuals are the worst. Majority I come across wanted and thought Benn won
Honestly FB casuals are the worst. Majority I come across wanted and thought Benn won
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
CHRIS EUBANK JR DEFEATS CONOR BENN IN BRUTAL, 12-ROUND WAR TO MAINTAIN FAMILY'S UNDEFEATED RECORD
Nearly 35 years after his father made it 1-0 against the Benns, Chris Eubank Jr maintained his family’s undefeated record with a unanimous decision against Conor Benn at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
Eubank Jr dropped to his knees as the decision was read out, with all three ringside judges scoring it by the same 116-112 scoreline in the main event of The Ring’s first ever fight card.
This was always much more than a boxing match, with a rivalry steeped in the history of these feuding dynasties of British boxing. November 18, 1990 was when Eubank Sr drew first blood with a ninth round stoppage of Nigel Benn before they drew the rematch outdoors at Old Trafford in October 1993.
Young Conor had vowed to settle the score on behalf of his dad by jumping up two weight classes in order to beat Junior and chalk up a victory for his family. But he was denied by the stoic son of Chris at a different Premier League football stadium.
Make no mistake, these were 12 hard rounds for both men in a fight that crossed not only generations but also weight classes. Eubank Jr, drained down to 160lb and then held at 170lb fight morning weight by a contractual rehydration clause clearly felt the effects, guzzling water seconds before his ringwalk. Benn, meanwhile, carried his extra poundage for only the second full 12-round distance of his career.
Both hurt at times, both visibly exhausted in certain moments of the fight and, on the basis of their refusal to buckle, both a credit to their family names.
At around 8:30pm, there had been an instantly iconic moment in modern British boxing, as Eubank Sr first arrived at the stadium. As he got out of the car, his son emerged from around the side of the vehicle to be reunited with his father.
Eubank Jr had revealed this week that the pair have not spoken properly for years. His father had also labelled his son’s decision to hit Benn with an egg during one of their face-offs a ‘disgrace’ and insisted he would not be part of the event. Somewhere along the line, though, he had a change of heart.
When the video of the moment was shown on the big screens inside the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, a cheer went up as if Spurs had just scored a last-minute winner. In an instant, the stage was finally set.
Shortly afterwards, in the bowels of the stadium, Billy Joe Saunders was prevented from entering the Eubank changing rooms to inspect the hand-wrapping process. As revealed by The Ring this week, Conor Benn had made contact with the two-weight world champion, one of Eubank Jr’s most bitter rivals, so he could ask him to head into his opponent’s changing rooms in an obvious attempt to unsettle him.
But Eubank’s security, headed by hulking manager Elliot Amoakoh aka Napper, blocked the door and refused to let him in, causing a melee picked up by a number of broadcasters at the scene.
It was just the latest vignette in the long-running Eubank-Benn feud, started by their famous fathers, who both won world titles at middle and super-middleweight. The sons had been first scheduled to meet in October 2022 only for Benn to fail two VADA tests, forcing the cancellation of the encounter during fight week.
But two and half years on, they finally met here in the main event of Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves, which took place at a sold-out Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the most anticipated fight in Britain this year.
The excitement levels inside the packed stadium had reached fever pitch by the time the two fighters emerged. First came Benn, to a chorus of boos, flanked by his father Nigel to the same ‘Dangerous’ track the Dark Destroyer used to walk to. Moments later, Eubank followed, with Tina Turner’s Simply the Best, synonymous with Chris Sr, ringing around the stadium.
There was rapturous applause for the two dads when they were introduced by Michael Buffer but then it was finally over to their offspring for the third clash between these two famous fighting families.
They were straight down to business, with Eubank firing out a hard double jab and Benn attempting amn early left hook. Eubank, who missed the middleweight limit by less than an ounce at Friday’s weigh-in, appeared to settle better of the pair. But Benn did manage to find a home for his right hand with 30 seconds left of a frenetic opening round.
The size different was notable between Benn, who has spent most of his 23-fight career at welterweight, and Eubank Jr, who has flitted between 160 and 168lbs. Eubank was therefore using his jab to good effect throughout the second to keep Benn at bay, but the 28-year-old came very close with a number of his trademark slashy, arcing shots which had helped him secure 14 KOs before tonight.
Benn seemed to have Eubank hurt early in the third with a hard left hook, which forced Eubank to hold. But he did so with a smirk and talked in Benn’s ear as they were pulled apart by referee Victor Loughlin. Benn finished the round by landing a thudding short right hand but Eubank held it well.
Chants of ‘Eubank’ went up around the stadium as he landed a right uppercut which snapped Benn’s head back. The pair seemed in almost constant conversation throughout the round, which ended with another good jab from Eubank.
As they rose from their stools at the start of the fifth, they were already talking to each other and referee Loughlin brought them together and told them to hold their tongues and get on with the fighting. After such a fast start, Benn’s pace noticeably dropped in the fifth and Eubank took advantage by re-establishing his jab and controlling the distance.
Early in the seventh, another right uppercut fro Eubank landed and he followed it moments later with a left hook as he began to turn the screw. Benn, perhaps feeling the effects of being his heaviest ever, was struggling to see the attacks coming much less move out the way of them. Nigel Benn, at ringside, simply told his son to ‘stop f***ing about’.
And he heeded that advice in a huge eighth round, during which he hurt Eubank with a right hand just behind the ear and then continued to apply the pressure until the final bell. Eubank looked hurt and appeared to unravelling but up he stayed.
By now it was Eubank who looked tired and static and to make matters worse he sustained a cut above his right eye from a clash of heads in the ninth which immediately seemed to bother him. Eubank, never lacking toughness and heart, stood and traded throughout an action packed 10th and ended the round pinning Benn against the ropes and unloading with hooks with both hands.
The 11th was pure action as they stood head-to-head in centre ring and traded although the fatigue for both was evident. But Eubank, from somewhere, found a second wind in the 12th and surged through the gears in search of a stoppage. Midway through the round, Benn looked on the brink of defeat as a series of Eubank hooks found the target, snapping his head from side to side. Somehow, he held on.
A swing and a miss from Eubank provided a split second of respite for Benn, who finished the fight still swinging. Almost immediately, the dads were in the ring too.
“This was because of you,” Conor told Chris Sr. “So thank you.”
Nearly 35 years after his father made it 1-0 against the Benns, Chris Eubank Jr maintained his family’s undefeated record with a unanimous decision against Conor Benn at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
Eubank Jr dropped to his knees as the decision was read out, with all three ringside judges scoring it by the same 116-112 scoreline in the main event of The Ring’s first ever fight card.
This was always much more than a boxing match, with a rivalry steeped in the history of these feuding dynasties of British boxing. November 18, 1990 was when Eubank Sr drew first blood with a ninth round stoppage of Nigel Benn before they drew the rematch outdoors at Old Trafford in October 1993.
Young Conor had vowed to settle the score on behalf of his dad by jumping up two weight classes in order to beat Junior and chalk up a victory for his family. But he was denied by the stoic son of Chris at a different Premier League football stadium.
Make no mistake, these were 12 hard rounds for both men in a fight that crossed not only generations but also weight classes. Eubank Jr, drained down to 160lb and then held at 170lb fight morning weight by a contractual rehydration clause clearly felt the effects, guzzling water seconds before his ringwalk. Benn, meanwhile, carried his extra poundage for only the second full 12-round distance of his career.
Both hurt at times, both visibly exhausted in certain moments of the fight and, on the basis of their refusal to buckle, both a credit to their family names.
At around 8:30pm, there had been an instantly iconic moment in modern British boxing, as Eubank Sr first arrived at the stadium. As he got out of the car, his son emerged from around the side of the vehicle to be reunited with his father.
Eubank Jr had revealed this week that the pair have not spoken properly for years. His father had also labelled his son’s decision to hit Benn with an egg during one of their face-offs a ‘disgrace’ and insisted he would not be part of the event. Somewhere along the line, though, he had a change of heart.
When the video of the moment was shown on the big screens inside the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, a cheer went up as if Spurs had just scored a last-minute winner. In an instant, the stage was finally set.
Shortly afterwards, in the bowels of the stadium, Billy Joe Saunders was prevented from entering the Eubank changing rooms to inspect the hand-wrapping process. As revealed by The Ring this week, Conor Benn had made contact with the two-weight world champion, one of Eubank Jr’s most bitter rivals, so he could ask him to head into his opponent’s changing rooms in an obvious attempt to unsettle him.
But Eubank’s security, headed by hulking manager Elliot Amoakoh aka Napper, blocked the door and refused to let him in, causing a melee picked up by a number of broadcasters at the scene.
It was just the latest vignette in the long-running Eubank-Benn feud, started by their famous fathers, who both won world titles at middle and super-middleweight. The sons had been first scheduled to meet in October 2022 only for Benn to fail two VADA tests, forcing the cancellation of the encounter during fight week.
But two and half years on, they finally met here in the main event of Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves, which took place at a sold-out Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the most anticipated fight in Britain this year.
The excitement levels inside the packed stadium had reached fever pitch by the time the two fighters emerged. First came Benn, to a chorus of boos, flanked by his father Nigel to the same ‘Dangerous’ track the Dark Destroyer used to walk to. Moments later, Eubank followed, with Tina Turner’s Simply the Best, synonymous with Chris Sr, ringing around the stadium.
There was rapturous applause for the two dads when they were introduced by Michael Buffer but then it was finally over to their offspring for the third clash between these two famous fighting families.
They were straight down to business, with Eubank firing out a hard double jab and Benn attempting amn early left hook. Eubank, who missed the middleweight limit by less than an ounce at Friday’s weigh-in, appeared to settle better of the pair. But Benn did manage to find a home for his right hand with 30 seconds left of a frenetic opening round.
The size different was notable between Benn, who has spent most of his 23-fight career at welterweight, and Eubank Jr, who has flitted between 160 and 168lbs. Eubank was therefore using his jab to good effect throughout the second to keep Benn at bay, but the 28-year-old came very close with a number of his trademark slashy, arcing shots which had helped him secure 14 KOs before tonight.
Benn seemed to have Eubank hurt early in the third with a hard left hook, which forced Eubank to hold. But he did so with a smirk and talked in Benn’s ear as they were pulled apart by referee Victor Loughlin. Benn finished the round by landing a thudding short right hand but Eubank held it well.
Chants of ‘Eubank’ went up around the stadium as he landed a right uppercut which snapped Benn’s head back. The pair seemed in almost constant conversation throughout the round, which ended with another good jab from Eubank.
As they rose from their stools at the start of the fifth, they were already talking to each other and referee Loughlin brought them together and told them to hold their tongues and get on with the fighting. After such a fast start, Benn’s pace noticeably dropped in the fifth and Eubank took advantage by re-establishing his jab and controlling the distance.
Early in the seventh, another right uppercut fro Eubank landed and he followed it moments later with a left hook as he began to turn the screw. Benn, perhaps feeling the effects of being his heaviest ever, was struggling to see the attacks coming much less move out the way of them. Nigel Benn, at ringside, simply told his son to ‘stop f***ing about’.
And he heeded that advice in a huge eighth round, during which he hurt Eubank with a right hand just behind the ear and then continued to apply the pressure until the final bell. Eubank looked hurt and appeared to unravelling but up he stayed.
By now it was Eubank who looked tired and static and to make matters worse he sustained a cut above his right eye from a clash of heads in the ninth which immediately seemed to bother him. Eubank, never lacking toughness and heart, stood and traded throughout an action packed 10th and ended the round pinning Benn against the ropes and unloading with hooks with both hands.
The 11th was pure action as they stood head-to-head in centre ring and traded although the fatigue for both was evident. But Eubank, from somewhere, found a second wind in the 12th and surged through the gears in search of a stoppage. Midway through the round, Benn looked on the brink of defeat as a series of Eubank hooks found the target, snapping his head from side to side. Somehow, he held on.
A swing and a miss from Eubank provided a split second of respite for Benn, who finished the fight still swinging. Almost immediately, the dads were in the ring too.
“This was because of you,” Conor told Chris Sr. “So thank you.”
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keithmoonhangover
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margaret thatcher
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keithmoonhangover
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
margaret thatcher wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 13:20so is ben shalomkeithmoonhangover wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 12:18Eddie mentioned it as well, and let's face it, they are a lot closer to it than we are.closer to eubank than benn or hearn even
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
That article
"A sold out stadium"
"A packed stadium"
there were entire sections empty and it looked like they had moved people down because the back rows were completely empty. They have lied so much about the selling of this fight it is just laughable.
They can't admit to what our eyes saw, it wasn't full, and there were many tickets available from resellers marked down below the actual sale price.
"A sold out stadium"
"A packed stadium"
They can't admit to what our eyes saw, it wasn't full, and there were many tickets available from resellers marked down below the actual sale price.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
It was a sell out though in terms off all the tickets were sold.
So legitimately they can call it a sell out.
Wasn’t packed though.
So legitimately they can call it a sell out.
Wasn’t packed though.
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
if Turki 'bought' his own tickets, does that still count as legitimate to you?Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 14:46 It was a sell out though in terms off all the tickets were sold.
So legitimately they can call it a sell out.
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
So do you think thousands bought tickets and didn't bother going or just ticket touts buying them up and not selling them ?Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 14:46 It was a sell out though in terms off all the tickets were sold.
So legitimately they can call it a sell out.
Wasn’t packed though.
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smiling assassin
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Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
I wish I knew how to post pictures. I’m good friends with a tout and asked how this fight was selling and he sent me a list of all the tickets that were up for sale the day before the fight. Loads of tickets for £30, £70, and £100rd350lc wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 15:04So do you think thousands bought tickets and didn't bother going or just ticket touts buying them up and not selling them ?Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 14:46 It was a sell out though in terms off all the tickets were sold.
So legitimately they can call it a sell out.
Wasn’t packed though.
Re: Round-by-Round: Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Conor Benn | PPV - 26 April 2025
Answers the question, who'd be a ticket tout eh .smiling assassin wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 15:10I wish I knew how to post pictures. I’m good friends with a tout and asked how this fight was selling and he sent me a list of all the tickets that were up for sale the day before the fight. Loads of tickets for £30, £70, and £100rd350lc wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 15:04So do you think thousands bought tickets and didn't bother going or just ticket touts buying them up and not selling them ?Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 14:46 It was a sell out though in terms off all the tickets were sold.
So legitimately they can call it a sell out.
Wasn’t packed though.
Cheers assassin