The Mail on Sunday

Smith Kops a dream bout

- By Jeff Powell

LIVERPOOL fan Callum Smith clinched the WBA world title against George Groves in the desert — and set up a dream appearance at Anfield.

In this new era of stadium megafights, Smith teed-up his boyhood ambition by achieving the first of his lifetime goals.

Some 3,000 miles from home on a night of Saudi Arabian fantasy, he laid gloved hands on his long-pursued world title, the treasured Ring magazine belt and the Muhammad Ali Trophy for winning the inaugural World Super Series tournament.

Not to forget, either, a cheque reputedly for five million dollars.

After this seventh-round knockout victory, Smith is now the No 1 super-middleweig­ht on the planet. So what next for the youngest of Liverpool’s four fighting Smith brothers?

‘Anfield,’ he said, with a smile as wide as the Mersey tunnel. ‘That’s the plan. A fight in my team’s ground. Always cherished the thought of that, too.’

Before the fight, the perceived wisdom was that Smith, 28, might still be a tad short of the big-fight experience to upset Groves.

We were wrong but he did not gloat. He praised Groves by saying that his achievemen­t is all the more satisfying as it came against ‘a great world champion.’

For Smith — in addition to a world title unificatio­n fight against one of the other belt-holders in his Liverpool back yard — the world is his Gulf oyster.

SUPERBIKES: Jonathan Rea created history by becoming the first rider to win four successive world championsh­ips with victory at Magny-Cours. The Northern Irishman recorded his 13th win from 21 races this season to draw level with Carl Fogarty at the top of the sport’s all-time titles list.

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