Sunderland Echo

SUGAR RAY THE INSPIRATIO­N

SUNDERLAND FIGHTER KELLY’S MEETING WITH AMERICAN LEGEND DROVE HIM ON TO FIRST TITLE SUCCESS

- By Liam Kennedy liam.kennedy@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @LiamJKenne­dy23

A chance meeting with boxing hall of famer Sugar Ray Leonard inspired Sunderland’s Josh Kelly to secure his first profession­al title.

And the Wearside welterweig­ht even admits he tried a few of the American legend’s moves during his WBA internatio­nal welterweig­ht title win over seasoned pro Carlos Molina on the undercard of Anthony Joshua’s heavyweigh­t unificatio­n bout against Joseph Parker.

“Meeting Sugar Ray Leonard gave me a weird feeling,” Kelly said of his encounter with the American legend prior to his recent Cardiff bout.

“I just knew it was meant to be. I knew I had to do the shuffle when I was boxing.

“When I started to win the fight, I then started to try and do a bit of what he was like.

“But you can’t copy the greats. I was just trying to be my own little version.

“I never really get starstruck. I got a little rush when I met him.

“He rated me, so that has taken me back a bit.”

Leonard, who was ringside for the event, staged in front of 80,000 people at the Principali­ty Stadium and shown live on Sky Sports Box Office, would no doubt have been impressed by Kelly’s hand speed and swiftness of movement. He totally outclassed and outboxed his experience­d opponent, so much so that it made it look like a bad match. In truth, it was anything but, especially in Kelly’s sixth fight in the pro game. “Not many people will step up after six fights and take a world champion on,” said Kelly, who has an offer to take on Frankie Gavin in his North East return, which will be at Newcastle’s Metro Radio Arena on June 16.

“Just beating him is good enough for me. I know he is getting on, but I think I put in a decent performanc­e.

“It was a learning curve for me. I got caught a bit and my chin got tested.

“He was not a massive puncher, but everything he threw was hard.”

Kelly will headline alongside lightweigh­t Lewis Ritson, from North Tyneside, who is lighting up the domestic scene with his devastatin­g knockout power.

Under the spotlight is not a natural place 2016 Olympian Kelly feels comfortabl­e in, but he strives to get better and better. “I am my biggest critic,” he added. “At heart, I am an introvert. I have to switch on fight night.

“I am much more happy going out for a drive. I’ll be hiding away, you’ll not see me for months now.

“All I can say is thank you for the support from everyone on the night.

“It meant a lot.”

 ??  ?? Josh Kelly makes life tough for Carlos Molina in Cardiff. Picture by Lawrence Lustig/Matchroom
Josh Kelly makes life tough for Carlos Molina in Cardiff. Picture by Lawrence Lustig/Matchroom

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