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June 30, 2010 Huge Photos
(JUNE 30) Nigel Benn and Steve Collins
performed the Prizefighter Super Middleweights draw at the Covent Garden
Hotel in London ahead of the June 30 event on Sky Sports. Patrick
Mendy makes Prizefighter history as the youngest boxer to take part in
the show, and he kicks-off the night against Dudley’s Sam Horton, a
fighter full of confidence after a positive showing against James DeGale
for the WBA International super middleweight title.
The winner of that fight will face a semi-final against either Waltham
Abbey’s Daniel Cadman and Birmingham’s Eddie McIntosh in the second
quarter-final.
The third quarter-final pits unbeaten Welshman Jeff Evans against
Sheffield’s Peter Fedorenko, fighting for just the second time since
almost a decade out of the ring. The winner of that fight faces the
victor of the final quarter-final, where public vote winner Tony Salam
from Stoke Newington takes on English super middleweight champion Paul
David from Northampton.
The legendary duo, whom both held the world super middleweight title in
their illustrious careers and locked horns in two colossal title fights
in the mid-90s, and both men were full of praise for Barry Hearn’s
eight-man, one night tournament.
“It's a terrific format and it's breathed new life into boxing,” said
Benn. “Three threes? That would've been great for me, get it over
quickly – that’s right up my street, you don't want to be holding
anything back it's guns blazing from the beginning to the end. You can't
leave anything in the tank.”
Irishman Collins echoed Benn’s sentiments and was in no doubt as to the
importance of the event in British boxing today.
“It springboards them into stardom,” said the Irishman. “It's a lot of
risk but it's a shortcut to fame. It's a great concept; the whole idea
is terrific with fans watching eight contenders put it all on the line
to become a champion in the space of a couple of hours. The winner then
becomes a recognised name, his career goes up and he gets new people
coming to his fights. There is nothing about it that's negative – the
whole thing is a positive for boxing and it would've been great had it
been around when I was fighting as there were a lot of good boxers who
never got the chance to show what they can do.
“It's a lot of pressure all on one night - you make one mistake and you
are out,” said Collins. “People say it's like an amateur fight but it's
not at all, you have to squeeze an awful lot into those three round and
in the professional game over 10-12 rounds you have time to make
mistakes and you can still come back from behind.
“When I fought I knew the fighter I was up against” said Collins. “If he
was a tall guy, I'd have sparring partners who were tall and so on, but
on one night you can have a southpaw, a short guy, a fast guy, a tall
guy, the only way to prepare for this is to get as much unorthodox and
unpredictable sparring as you can and try to squeeze as many different
things into your preparation as possible. Me? I'd have won it! You
cannot anticipate what is coming your way, so you have to get fit and
expect the unexpected.”
THE DRAW
Quarter-final one – Patrick Mendy v Sam Horton
Quarter-final two – Daniel Cadman v Eddie McIntosh
Quarter-final three – Jeff Evans v Peter Fedorenko
Quarter-final four – Tony Salam v Paul David
Tickets for Prizefighter Super Middleweights are available now at £35
(unreserved), £60 (ringside) and £100 (VIP) – call Matchroom Sport on
01277 359900.