Boxing News

DANIEL DUBOIS

The power-punching heavyweigh­t sets his sights on Joe Joyce

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AS expected, highly touted young heavyweigh­t Daniel Dubois blasted through Ricardo Snijders with minimal fuss at the BT Sport Studio, needing just three minutes and 20 seconds to dispatch the outgunned Dutchman.

Heerlen’s Snijders – a late replacemen­t for the far more accomplish­ed Erik

Pfeifer – was out of his depth from the get-go. Having primarily competed at cruiserwei­ght, he found Dubois’ punishing power simply too much to handle.

Thudding jabs caused Snijders to backpedal early on, before a booming left hook to the ribs sent him to the canvas. A pair of short lefts downstairs brought about another knockdown, and Snijders was then decked for a third time following a hefty right up top.

There was no let-up from Dubois in the second round. The Greenwich giant, who currently holds the British and Commonweal­th crowns, pounded Snijders’ midriff with a trio of hooks, dropping him to the floor. By this point, referee Marcus Mcdonnell had seen enough. The bout had been optimistic­ally set for 12.

Next up for Dubois is a muchantici­pated battle with fellow unbeaten Londoner Joe Joyce. This rearranged contest is scheduled to take place on October 24 at the O2 Arena.

Double Olympian and ex-commonweal­th flyweight boss Thomas Essomba went into his clash with Sunny Edwards in good form, but he was unable to record his third straight success, as Edwards maintained his lofty ranking with the IBF.

The switch-hitting super-flyweights took a look at each other in the opening round, with the nimble Edwards just edging things. The reigning British champion also did enough to take

the second session on account of his intelligen­t punch-picking. In the third, Edwards utilised fast feints and smart movement to frustrate his Wolverhamp­ton-based foe.

Edwards, with his hair tied up in bizarre bunches, had to fend off some assertive approaches from Essomba in the fourth, which left the Croydon talent with a nick on his right eyebrow. Essomba kept his aggression up in the next round, yet the elusive Edwards remained difficult to pin down.

A whipping left to the midsection found the target from Essomba in the sixth, as Edwards attempted to lure him onto counters. Sunny held his ground more in round seven and stemmed Essomba’s forward march. The duelling duo exchanged words as the action heated up in a close eighth.

In the ninth, Essomba was warned by third man Michael Alexander for hitting after the break, which highlighte­d the Cameroonia­n’s growing frustratio­n with his slippery adversary. Bouncing lithely on his toes in rounds 10 and 11, Edwards pecked and poked at Essomba with point-scoring jabs, as the African continued to press, but mostly to no avail. It was largely the same story in the 12th, with Edwards ending the fight in command.

Terry O’connor (117-111), Phil Edwards (117-112) and Mr Mcdonnell (116-112) all rightly voted in favour of Edwards, who is moving closer towards a potential crack at world honours.

Sam Maxwell, previously a high-class amateur, secured the best victory of his profession­al career so far by inflicting a third successive defeat upon former European titlist Joe Hughes.

With his cultured lead left, Hughes shaded a competitiv­e opener, mixing jabs with uppercuts and hooks. The second was also keenly contested, though the neat-boxing Maxwell finished the session on top. Both worked well off their jabs in the third, a round in which Maxwell scored with a sharp right cross.

The two super-lightweigh­ts traded left hooks to the body in the fourth, yet it was Hughes who seemed to throw the more accurate punches in the frame. Maxwell put his shots together nicely in rounds five and six, but Hughes remained a threat with his biting left hooks, albeit often thrown in singles.

Displaying increased confidence, a vibrant Maxwell connected with crisp combinatio­ns in the seventh and eighth, as the tough and tenacious Hughes stayed tight on his rival. The Malmesbury man targeted Maxwell’s ever-reddening right eye with quality jabs in the penultimat­e stanza, ahead of a fiercely fought final round, during which both boxers had their moments.

After an enjoyable 10-rounder, Liverpool’s Maxwell took a deserved unanimous decision by marks of 98-92 (Mr Alexander) and 97-94 twice (Mr Mcdonnell and Mr O’connor). Hughes, however, certainly played his part. Mr Edwards officiated.

Following a very successful amateur career at Junior and Youth level, Willy Hutchinson has his sights set on a British super-middleweig­ht title tilt in the not-too-distant future. Stepping up to 10 rounds for the first time, the rising Scot made short work of Bolton’s overmatche­d Ben Thomas.

Shedding some rust up at lightheavy­weight, Hutchinson, of Carstairs, forced Thomas to the mat with an educated two-fisted assault. Attacking with precision and making clever use of angles, Hutchinson registered a second knockdown soon after, compelling the man in the middle, Mr Alexander, to halt the contest at 2-09.

Up-and-coming Ladbroke Grove heavyweigh­t David Adeleye used solid jabs and impressive variety to soften up Swindon journeyman Phil Williams.

In the third, Adeleye tore into his usually durable opponent with a series of heavy strikes from both hands, leading referee Alexander to terminate proceeding­s at 2-10. It had been slated for four.

Rounding off this Queensberr­y Promotions card over six was promising Maidstone lightweigh­t Sam Noakes,

who stopped Seaham’s gritty Jordan Ellison, which is no mean feat. A stiff right penetrated Ellison’s guard and floored him in the fourth, before a jolting right uppercut did the same in the subsequent round. This resulted in Mr Alexander calling the bout off at 1-28.

THE VERDICT Bring on Dubois-joyce.

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 ?? Photos: QUEENSBERR­Y PROMOTIONS ?? BLITZ: Snijders finds himself on the receiving end of a ruthless Dubois onslaught
Photos: QUEENSBERR­Y PROMOTIONS BLITZ: Snijders finds himself on the receiving end of a ruthless Dubois onslaught
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 ??  ?? ENTERTAINI­NG: Maxwell [right] and Hughes combine to produce the fight of the night
ENTERTAINI­NG: Maxwell [right] and Hughes combine to produce the fight of the night
 ??  ?? TACTICAL: Essomba [left] tries to ward off Edwards
TACTICAL: Essomba [left] tries to ward off Edwards

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