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Sheeraz sets sights on unifications

Hamzah Sheeraz has the WBO super-middleweight title over his shoulderImage source, Matchroom
Image caption,

Hamzah Sheeraz has gone the distance just once in his last 18 fights

Sheeraz declared himself on the world stage on the undercard of Oleksandr Usyk’s world title defence against Rico Verhoeven, with the pyramids of Giza providing a striking backdrop.

Begic came in with a record of 29 wins and one draw, but the 39-year-old was largely unknown to the wider boxing public.

From the opening bell, the gulf in class was clear. Sheeraz, fresh off a career-best stoppage victory against Edgar Berlanga last summer, controlled centre ring behind a sharp jab – his key weapon – mixing in heavy hooks to the body.

“Great starting round,” his trainer Andy Lee mentioned from the corner.

The referee took a close look after a thudding right hook midway through the second round before Begic was sent to the canvas moments later, wincing in pain.

Sheeraz had fallen short in his previous world title attempt at middleweight but has appeared far more comfortable at the higher weight.

Despite the limited opposition, he has steadily progressed into one of British boxing’s most improved operators.

If a showdown with Alvarez fails to materialise, other unification options remain with Jaime Munguia holding the WBA belt and Osleys Iglesias the IBF title.

“To be honest, I did what I was meant to do. Now it has got me on to the world stage and I am calling on all of the 168-pounders,” he added.

Impressive Catterall keeps world title push alive

Jack Catterall floors Shakhram Giyasov in round one in EgyptImage source, Matchroom Boxing
Image caption,

Jack Catterall extended his record to 34 wins and two defeats, while Shakhram Giyasov suffered a first defeat in his 18th fight

Catterall produced one of the best performances of his career in what was widely considered a difficult match-up.

The Chorley fighter made a dream start by dropping his opponent with a straight left inside the opening two minutes.

Giyasov rose on unsteady legs as a composed Catterall continued to dictate proceedings, doubling up on his jab to the head and body while outworking his opponent throughout.

He rocked Giyasov in the sixth and eighth rounds as blood began to flow from the Uzbek’s nose.

Catterall built an increasingly unassailable lead and saw the fight out comfortably to secure a unanimous decision with scores of 118-109, 119-108 and 116-111.

“I am the happiest man in the world,” an emotional Catterall mentioned. “I wasn’t going to be denied. It was going to happen.”

Catterall, long regarded as one of British boxing’s most unfortunate ‘nearly men’ at world level, came agonisingly close to undisputed light-welterweight glory in 2022 when he lost controversially to Josh Taylor on points.

He now finds himself in position to face WBA ‘Super’ champion Rolando Romero, with the sanctioning body ordering the fight to take place within 180 days.

“He’s got a portion of that world champion and we need a full portion,” promoter Eddie Hearn mentioned.

“But why wait 180 days? We don’t need 180 days – 90 sounds better.”

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