
Conor Benn gives ‘scared' Chris Eubank Jr strict timeline after rematch ‘falls apart'
In April, Eubank Jr outpointed Benn in a thrilling contest at London's Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where their rematch is – or was – intended to take place in September.
However, it was suggested on Thursday by Benn and Eddie Hearn, his promoter, that plans had been shelved, with 'The Destroyer' stating that 'this rematch falling apart had nothing to do with me'.
With further goals of world title glory in his sights, Benn has added that he will not stand around waiting for Eubank Jr to agree on a revised date.
''I'm not waiting,' he told Sky Sports. 'I'm not waiting around. I feel like my career has sort of been on hold to give the fans this fight, and I'm glad that the fight delivered, but now I've got to just tick the box off on my personal goals, which is winning a WBC world title.
"It's either [moving back down to] 147lbs for me or the rematch. I'm ready to honour my side of the agreement, which was a two-fight deal [at middleweight] and it's safe to say he's scared. He almost lost. It could have gone either way. To a welterweight."
There are claims that Eubank Jr is seeking a rematch with Benn in November, a date which Riyadh Season and Sela are considering, according to Ring Magazine.
Benn's April defeat by Eubank Jr marked a unique extension of their fathers' rivalry in the 1990s, when Chris Sr beat Nigel Benn before the Britons fought to a draw in their rematch.
Benn's sentiment on the situation echoes that of Hearn, who told talkSPORT on Thursday: 'Obviously, we have a two-fight deal with Chris Eubank Jr. His Excellency [ Turki Alalshikh ] has told Eubank that 20 September is the date.
Enjoy 185+ fights a year on DAZN, the Global Home of Boxing
Never miss a fight from top promoters. Watch on your devices anywhere, anytime.
See Schedule
ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.
'As I understand it, there has been a little bit of radio silence from Eubank. Part of me feels like he might not fight again. Obviously, that was a very taxing fight with Conor Benn.
' Hamzah Sheeraz is now in place to fight [Saul] 'Canelo' Alvarez if he comes through [Terence] Crawford, so Eubank is in limbo if he doesn't take the Conor Benn fight.
'Maybe physically, he doesn't want to go to war again. If he doesn't, the whole world wants to fight Conor Benn right now.'
The Greenwich-born bruiser has even urged Eubank Jr, 35, to retire from the sport to prevent the rematch saga from being drawn out.
"Take it, take it. Just take the win. Take the win. Your dad didn't want the rematch of my dad," he said.
"Sail off into the sunset. You're done, and you move on, and I move on and secure my legacy of winning the world title.'
If a rematch does not go ahead, Hearn has touted Shakur Stevenson as Benn's next opponent, who outpointed William Zependa on the undercard of Hamzah Sheeraz's title eliminator with Edgar Berlanga on Saturday - which Sheeraz emerged victorious in.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
Tense moment Jake Paul squares up to Oleksandr Usyk in ring after heavyweight champion's win over Daniel Dubois
JAKE PAUL had a bizarre confrontation with Oleksandr Usyk after the heavyweight star's victory over Daniel Dubois. Usyk, 38, only needed five rounds to knock Dubois, 27, out on Saturday at Wembley and become undisputed heavyweight champion for the second time. 3 3 3 After the Ukrainian superstar extended his undefeated streak to a staggering 24 fights, Paul, 28, stepped inside the ring to confront the victor. The two men had a tense face-off in front of the packed crowd in London with the controversial YouTuber looking to tease a future clash between them. But it all turned rather strange later on social media when the Problem Child challenged the undisputed boxing champion to an MMA fight. Paul tweeted: "Congrats to one of the greatest heavyweights of all time @usykaa on a huge win. "I respect you a lot. Now we do an MMA match for the world @MostVpromotions." Fans were left baffled and stormed the comments' section to state the obvious. One fan tweeted: "So you box MMA fighters and now you wanna fight MMA against boxers?! Make it make sense." A third wrote: "Boxes old age retired people Wrestles real world class boxers. Must be opposite day." This one said: "Wait, he's a boxer, and you're a boxer, right? Why not errrm box?" SunSport reporter Wally Downes Jr gives his verdict on Oleksandr Usyk's stunning KO rematch win vs Daniel Dubois And that one stated: "So when it's and MMA legend, you box. When it's a boxer, you do MMA." Ever since crossing over to boxing, Paul has mainly shared the ring with retired athletes - mainly from MMA - who never boxed. The social media sensation also had a highly-publicised and controversial bout last year with a then 58-year-old Mike Tyson. The promoter has only faced one active boxer in Tommy Fury, to whom he lost. Usyk vs Dubois round by round as brutal knockout cements Ukrainian's place in history OLEKSANDR USYK cemented his name in the list of all-time boxing greats as he became a three-time undisputed champion with a fifth round knockout win over Daniel Dubois. Usyk dropped Dubois multiple times as he put any doubts about his first win over the Brit to bed by cementing the repeat and avoiding the revenge. Here, SunSport's Jack Figg gives his round-by-round verdict... ROUND ONE Usyk looks light on his toes, swaying side to side, Dubois plants his feet and walks forward. Stiff jab from Usyk appears to almost wake Dubois up and the Brit responds with a one-two. Usyk searches to the body with a left, blocks a right hand from Dubois and ends the round with a menacing combo. Usyk 10 Dubois 9 ROUND TWO Dubois lunges in with a right hand, Usyk expertly takes half a step back and responds with a counter left. Another right misses from Dubois and he takes a left cross which has him on shaky legs. Already Usyk is finding his rhythm, making Dubois miss and certainty making him pay. Usyk 10 Dubois 9 (Usyk 20 Dubois 18) ROUND THREE Usyk staggers back after a right hand from Dubois - maybe more off balance than hurt. Dubois charges forward with a left hook, right hand but Usyk covers up well. Huge left hook lands on the button from Usyk, sweat sprays off Dubois face. Usyk 10 Dubois 9 (Usyk 30 Dubois 27) ROUND FOUR Right uppercut lands on Usyk's belt-line in a genuine case of dejavu from low-blow gate in their first fight. Dubois traps Usyk in the corner, lands a right but the Ukrainian legend slips off before any troubling damage can be done. Left hand lands for Usyk but Dubois grabs on and closes the distance, smart defence to cap off his best round so far. Usyk 9 Dubois 10 (Usyk 39 Dubois 37) ROUND FIVE Right hook followed by a left hand lands for Usyk has Dubois teetering backwards. Dubois comes forward, charging at Usyk and the two trade off in the corner but DOWN GOES DUBOIS after a counter right hook. He makes it to his feet but is dropped with another left hook and the fight is over! Dubois fails to beat the count and Usyk is once again undisputed heavyweight world champion. Usyk wins by KO


The Guardian
2 minutes ago
- The Guardian
QPR's Julien Stéphan: ‘The Championship is probably the most difficult league in the world'
Julien Stéphan had been enjoying his break from football for about two months when his wife's patience finally gave in. 'She said to me: 'I hope you will manage again quickly – and very quickly – because I want to see you on the pitch and to see you back in your own environment,'' says the new Queens Park Rangers manager. Stéphan left Rennes for the second time last November and estimates that as well as spending precious time with his two children he watched 20 to 25 games a week as he waited for his next opportunity. That finally arrived last month when the Frenchman took over at Loftus Road from Martí Cifuentes, who has since joined Leicester. But the chance to take a breather after six years as a manager during which he guided Rennes to the Champions League for the first time and led Strasbourg to sixth in Ligue 1 – their highest position since 1980 – was most welcome. 'You need to take time for you and your family,' Stéphan says. 'It's important. But also you need to take time to watch different things, to analyse the game and different games in different leagues and analyse also what you did before and what you want to do after. It's important to start to imagine how you can see the future.' QPR supporters will be hoping that, after a decade largely marooned in the bottom half of the Championship, the club can bring back some glory days under Stéphan. The 44-year-old has heard the stories about QPR being London's best team during the first Premier League season, when a side with Les Ferdinand as their star striker finished fifth in 1993. But Stéphan insists they must live in the present to have a chance of escaping what he describes as 'probably the most difficult league in the world'. 'I know the history of QPR, but now we are in a different period,' he says. 'It's important to remember and to know the history, but it's also important to live in the present and to build for the future. There is work to do with everybody, with the players, of course, with the management, with the CEO, with the owners, and also with the legends of the club. It's the responsibility of everybody.' Stéphan adds: 'We know the expectations from the fans – we need to give everything on the pitch, and we need also to create a strong identity. It's very important, and after that it's football. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose, but you need to give everything.' Stéphan has been so busy since being appointed that he has not had time to move into his new flat near QPR's home ground, let alone explore Shepherd's Bush and the surrounding area. 'Only work, work, work and work,' he says. 'Just hotel and training ground and training sessions …' Stéphan is speaking from a pre-season camp in Girona that has allowed him and his staff, who include the former West Ham, Charlton and France midfielder Alou Diarra as an assistant, to get to know their players before their gruelling Championship season kicks off on 9 August. 'It's the beginning of the process and we need to build step by step all the ideas, the collective ideas and also the relationship between the players and the staff,' he says. Stéphan spent time as a player in Paris Saint-Germain's academy but never made a top-flight appearance for his various clubs before he retired at 27 to concentrate on coaching. By then he had taken charge of Rennes' under-19s for three years and been to university to study Staps (Sciences et Techniques des Activités Physiques et Sportives), the route usually taken by French people who want to become sports teachers. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion 'I just wanted to learn something that could help me with the ideas that I had about development,' says Stéphan, whose father, Guy Stéphan, was assistant to Didier Deschamps for France's World Cup triumph in 2018 and has managed Senegal. 'I didn't choose this job at the beginning to do the same thing as my father but because I wanted to work with young players. And to be honest, at the beginning, I thought that I could do that all my career with the young players. And it was just after 12 or 15 years that I imagined the future differently. Of course, we speak together and he can give me some advice sometimes, but I also need to live my own experience.' The Rennes academy's fabled production line in recent years includes Ousmane Dembélé, Eduardo Camavinga, Jérémy Doku and Desiré Doué – all of whom played under Stéphan, either for the youth sides or the first team, with whom he had two spells as manager, initially as an interim in 2018. He led Rennes to their first trophy for almost 50 years when they beat PSG in the French Cup final a few months later. He knows QPR will find it hard to replicate that kind of production line given that they are competing with so many London clubs for the best talent, but Stéphan thinks there is one advantage they may have. 'A strong point that we can say to families [of young players] is that it's probably easier at 18 or 19 years old to play in the Championship than in the Premier League,' he says. 'And the development of the player can also pass this way. So, yes, play in the Championship. After that, for the best of them, perhaps play in the Premier League. So we can develop this kind of thinking with the family. 'But it's difficult to compare the young players of the academy at QPR with these kinds of players: Ousmane Dembélé, Eduardo Camavinga, Desiré Doué. They're top, top, top, top, top players. Most important is to create the opportunity for the best of them in the academy to have the possibility to train with the professionals and for the best of them also to play in the first team.'


BBC News
2 minutes ago
- BBC News
Usyk and 'Ivan' - the untouchable duo who can't be beaten?
Oleksandr Usyk introduced Daniel Dubois and the world to his friend 'Ivan' at Wembley on Ukrainian southpaw landed a flush left hook to seal a fifth-round knockout win and become undisputed heavyweight champion for a second arrived for his post-fight news conference an hour after extending his undefeated record to 24, and after a swift night's work was happy to entertain the packed room."My left hook is called Ivan," Usyk said. "Ivan is a Ukrainian name. Ivan is a big guy who lives in a village and works for his family. It's a hard punch, Ivan."The first time 2018 [I named it] was in the USA as a cruiserweight."Dubois had already climbed off the canvas moments earlier following a right hook to the temple, but it was the sequence that followed with Usyk's favoured left that proved was another vintage performance from a master of the craft.A 90,000-strong crowd had been forced to contend with heavy rain at Wembley Stadium earlier in the night, but it was worth persevering to watch the spectacle excelled in all areas - escaping Dubois' attacks with slick footwork, returning with crisp shots on the counter and displaying pure heavyweight triumph has propelled Usyk into a very elite category - he joins Muhammad Ali as the only men to reign undisputed in the heavyweight division on two occasions. Usyk the standout of his generation If it wasn't already clear then it certainly is now. Usyk is the standout heavyweight of his has not just cleaned out his biggest rivals - Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and Dubois - but he has gone all the way round the block and defeated each of them dethroned Joshua in just his third fight as a heavyweight to become a unified champion and it has been an upward trajectory ever easy path is not one Usyk likes to becoming the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era by beating Fury in 2024, Usyk had the option to defend that status by accepting a mandatory defence of his IBF strap against he elected to vacate that title in order to pursue a rematch with Fury and record a second successive victory, before circling back to reclaim the IBF title from Dubois at Wembley."What he achieved today, it was designated by him a little bit more than a year ago," Egis Klimas, Usyk's manager, said."His decision was to vacate the title and let Dubois beat someone, and then to fight for a third time for undisputed. That was his plan a year ago. He is not just a good boxer but he is good mentally."Usyk is head and shoulders above any active heavyweight, with Fury offering his greatest test, while Joshua and Dubois are several rungs down the ladder. Many predicting a win for Dubois on Saturday did so on the basis that Usyk, 11 years the senior of the Briton, must be ready to obviously isn't the where does this victory - his 15th knockout - leave him in the all-time heavyweight rankings?Usyk has eight heavyweight fights under his belt and six of those have been for world an argument that the current era lacks great depth in the heavyweight division when comparing it to the previous the 1960's, 1970's and 1980's the likes of Ali, Joe Frazier and George Foreman dazzled the back further, Joe Louis made 25 successful defences between 1937 and 1948.A place in the top three might be something to consider when we have a completed body of work to assess when Usyk, who could still have a couple of fights left, finally decides to hang up the as an Olympic gold medallist, an undisputed cruiserweight champion and two-time undisputed heavyweight champion, a top-five all-time spot feels right already."I think he's [Oleksandr Usyk] a legend," former world champion Carl Frampton said on Dazn."He can compete in any era. He's beaten everyone and three of the top guys twice." Who can stop Usyk? The list of serious contenders for Usyk is Frank Warren has seen two of his stable - Fury and Dubois - already go down against Usyk, but he has a third candidate waiting in the Parker is the interim WBO champion and kept a close eye on Usyk through fight week and on fight New Zealander is on a six-fight win streak and has previously held a world the other end of the scale is bright young Briton Moses 20-year-old is unbeaten in 12 fights as a professional and has been hailed as the future of the has only gone beyond two rounds in two of his bouts, has 10 knockouts on his CV and has been hailed as the future of the it feels premature to suggest he is ready for the greatest of this one is yet to formulate a blueprint to even get close to defeating a current heavyweight that can match his all-round game has proved impossible and it shows no signs of changing.