Sam Eggington eyes rematch after bagging TKO
Sam Eggington would ‘100 per cent’ welcome a rematch with Ted Cheeseman in 2021 after finishing this year with a TKO victory over Ashley Theophane.
Eggington, returning to the ring after the loss of his IBF International light-middleweight title to Cheeseman in August, dispatched 40-year-old veteran Theophane in style.
The Stourbridge fighter landed a huge body shot to end the fight in the sixth round after being on the front foot from the opening bell against his 13-year senior. And when asked about what comes next and a potential rematch with Cheeseman, Eggington said: “I’m ready to go.
“If you get me a six-rounder next week, I’ll be there.
“I’m always ready to go, more so lately than before.
“I’m staying ticking over and always in the gym, so I’m always ready to go as long as the phone’s ringing.
“If the fight (with Cheeseman) is there, I’ll take it, without a doubt. But I’ve lost before and we’ve just got back on the horse and always pushed bigger, so that’s what we’re doing now.
“We lost against Cheeseman, somehow, and now we’re just pushing on. If the Cheeseman rematch comes up, 100 per cent you will see me there.
“If it don’t, there’s not much I can do about that.”
Eggington has been linked with a fight against Floyd Mayweather protege Adrien Broner.
But while having the eventual goal of being in world title contention, he said: “I don’t flick through rankings – I’m not that person. I’ll leave it to the team now. What the team comes up with, I’ll go with. They’ve steered me right up to now.”
For now, Eggington is fresh off his 29th professional victory. He vowed to stop Theophane before the final bell and kept his word with a powerhouse right.
Theophane – also forced into a count in the second – survived the initial count, but despite rising to his feet the referee waved off the contest.
“I feel good. I’m not bouncing off the walls. It’s a good win to end the year, but I’m looking to push on,” added Eggington. “All credit to Ashley, who came over and did his part. It was a good fight. It was genuinely trickier than I thought it was going to be.
“I couldn’t get through with much, but the ones I did get through I could feel was enough.
“I couldn’t get through with a lot, to be honest, so it was a good learning fight more than anything. It was good. I was comfortable, don’t get me wrong, but when you’re trying to break someone up, you’re over-thinking things. You’ve just got to be ready to react, but it was a good fight and I’m happy.
“He’s a good operator and he has boxed at the top, so it’s a good win.”
Anthony Joshua was happy to let his boxing do the talking on Saturday after he secured a stunning ninth-round stoppage over Kubrat Pulev to remain on course for a 2021 meeting with Tyson Fury.
In the ring for the first time in 12 months, rustiness was one of many potential problems for the WBA, WBO, IBF and IBO belt-holder ahead of Saturday night’s fight.
With Joshua’s shock defeat to Andy Ruiz Jr in June last year still a fresh memory, Pulev stated he was out to take the world heavyweight champion’s crown and prevent the dream twin-clash with fellow Briton Fury next year.
It proved to be merely talk and even though the Bulgarian showed admirable durability to get off the deck three times, he eventually slumped to defeat following a lethal left-right combination from the 31-year-old Joshua, who is now 24-1.
“I started this game in 2013, I have been chasing all the belts, I’ve been dealing with mandatories, so of course I want a challenge,” Joshua told the fans inside Wembley’s SSE Arena.
“For me I stuck to what I know best – boxing, looking at where I am going to put my shots and putting them together. When they are successful, they are successful, but like I said it is less talk, more action.”
Joshua’s uppercut did the most damage to Pulev and on more than one occasion made him topple like a stack of blocks in Jenga - the game the Sofia-born boxer played regularly during his time in Matchroom’s bio-secure bubble at the Hilton Hotel.
When he was not goofing around, the 39-year-old was preparing for his second shot at the world title - after losing to Wladimir Klitschko in 2014 - and the chance to fulfil the wish of his late father, who dreamed of a world heavyweight champion son.
After much mutual respect in the week, a fiery weigh-in on Friday reshaped the battle line, with Joshua warning the veteran then that he needed to talk less.
Pulev insisted come Saturday “the new” would be heard inside an arena, which hosted 1,000 spectators in the first UK boxing event to have fans in attendance since March.
In the end, what was seen on more than one occasion was the mandatory challenger hitting the deck - twice in the third round and again in the ninth.
After he rose again, Joshua did finally land the knockout punch with a slick combination to add a second loss to his opponent’s record.
Back in Saudi Arabia 12 months ago, the Watford-born fighter had displayed a discipline not seen before to wrestle back his belts off Ruiz Jr, but this was a return to past glories with one more deadly finish to put on the list.
Joshua’s knockout record now stands at 22 from 25 bouts. It is a hugely impressive ratio and yet there was an added level of maturity about his display at Wembley Stadium’s sister venue of the SSE Arena.
He could have gone for the kill and overcommitted in the middle rounds after an explosive third, but stayed patient and eventually his chance came with Pulev barely able to register a legitimate punch in the contest.
Next up could and should be WBC holder Tyson Fury, who said on social media: “I want the fight, I want the fight next and I will knock him out inside three rounds.”
Joshua told DAZN Boxing: “Respect to Tyson Fury, he is a talented guy, got loads of fans and he will make for good competition when the time is ready.”
Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter, wants it, the two boxers do and so does Bob Arum, who represents the Gypsy King.
Hurdles in the way include WBO mandatory challenger Oleksandr Usyk and a trilogy between Fury and Deontay Wilder if it is enforced.
But the consensus is the ‘Battle of Britain’ will be set up next.
A principle agreement has been in place since the summer and with all four key figures ready to strike a deal, one of the biggest fights in British boxing history is on the horizon.