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When is Misfits 22? Date and full fight card for Darren Till vs Luke Rockhold

When is Misfits 22? Date and full fight card for Darren Till vs Luke Rockhold

Daily Mirror16 hours ago
Darren Till and Luke Rockhold will go head-to-head in a blockbuster showdown in the main event at Misfits 22 in Manchester next month
Darren Till returns for his third fight this year and will take on former UFC middleweight champion Luke Rockhold.

The 'Gorilla' made his professional boxing debut back in January and scored a devastating knockout victory over Anthony Taylor. Four months later, he returned to the ring, taking on former UFC contender Darren Stewart. The Liverpudlian would go on to cruise to a decision victory.

As for Rockhold, the UFC icon retired from MMA back in 2022 after suffering a defeat to Paulo Costa. The American was quick to try his luck in other sport as he took on Mike Perry under the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship banner, but would go on to lose in the second round. Last year, the 40-year-old made his Karate Combat debut against Joe Schilling and went on to score a destructive knockout in the third round. And so, here is everything you need to know about Misfits 22....

When is Darren Till vs Luke Rockhold?
Misfits 22 will take place at the AO Arena in Manchester on Saturday, August 20. While official fight times are yet to be confirmed, it is expected to start at around 5pm UK time (12pm ET / 11am CT / 9am PT). In the main event, Luke Rockhold will likely make the walk to the ring first at around 10pm UK time (5pm ET / 4pm CT / 3pm PT) with Till set to follow immediately after. The two stars will then touch gloves just after 10.20pm UK time before the first bell sounds. The fight should not start later than this but could be brought forward if the undercard fights are completed earlier than expected.
How to watch Darren Till vs Luke Rockhold on TV and live stream
The showdown between the pair will be streamed live on DAZN in over 200 countries across the globe. It remains to be seen whether the fight card will be streamed live on pay-per-view. A month-to-month subscription with the popular streaming service will cost fans £14.99.
Full fight card and undercard
Darren Till vs Luke RockholdTony Ferguson vs Salt PapiDillon Danis vs Warren SpencerJoey Essex vs Numeiro
*full card subject to change
Quotes corner
Darren Till:"I can take every shot. Look at the shots I took from all the guys I fought at middleweight. No one knocked me out. Nobody knocked me out at middleweight, and I fought all the best guys. [Robert] Whittaker, Dricus [du Plessis], all them guys, [Kelvin] Gastelum. I laughed at everyone and I've got a f***ing chin. You got battered by Mike Perry, and let me just tell ya, I'm not even looking for the Mike Perry fight now. He's that much of a bum. He's the biggest bum out there. He's a bum."
Luke Rockhold:"I can move better than anybody… on my feet. I can hit harder than anybody with both of my hands and I am working hard and I ain't getting tired. I think people have got a false representation of my last fight in the UFC. Obviously, I looked tired and old… I was f****** off for three years. During COVID, I was living like Darren Till. These last three or four years since, I have been working hard. I have a here and there, but I wake up the next morning, I run and work and I am diligently being a better man everyday and I am in shape. I am excited to go out there and perform."
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Katie Ledecky captures yet another gold in signature event at swimming worlds
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  • The Guardian

Katie Ledecky captures yet another gold in signature event at swimming worlds

Katie Ledecky has ceded a tiny bit of ground in other events, but she's still unbeatable in the 1,500-meter freestyle. She won it again Tuesday in the swimming world championships in Singapore, finishing in 15 minutes, 26.44 seconds. Simona Quadarella of Italy took silver in 15:31.79 – a European record – with bronze for Lani Pallister of Australia in 15:41.18 in a very quick-paced race. The schedule The swimming portion of the World Aquatics Championships takes place from 27 July through 3 August at the Singapore Sports Hub. The heats start at 10am local time (2am GMT, 10pm ET). The semi-finals and finals start at 7pm local time (11am GMT, 7am ET). The full schedule is available in PDF format or on the World Aquatics website. How to watch In the United States, coverage will be available on NBC and streaming service Peacock. In the United Kingdom, Aquatics GB holds the UK rights to stream events. In Australia, the Nine Network will provide broadcast coverage throughout the championships. In Canada, events will be broadcast live on CBC, with streaming options via CBC digital platforms. For other countries and full international broadcast listings, visit the World Aquatics broadcast page. Additionally, the World Aquatics Recast channel will re-air all sessions of the meet, heats and finals for a fee. 'I was just trying to get out fast, but comfortable enough that I could go from there,' Ledecky said. 'I'm happy with the time and happy with the swim.' 'I love this race,' she added. 'It was the race I broke my first world record in 2013. Lots of great races over the years.' Ledecky was ahead of her world-record pace through 1,250 meters, pushed early by Pallister. It was Ledecky's second medal in these games after taking bronze in the 400 free behind Canadian Summer McIntosh. 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The United States team have been battling what officials called 'acute gastroenteritis' picked up at a training camp in Thailand before arriving in Singapore. American head coach Greg Meehan said much of team had turned the corner. 'We're taking it a day at a time,' he said in an interview with American network NBC. 'Obviously, this is not how we thought the first few days of this competition would go. But I'm really proud of our team, our medical staff working overtime. You don't want your medical staff working overtime.' 'If you were in our team area you would never know that the overall majority of the team has gone through something over the last few days,' Meehan added, saying the team 'vibe' was good. McIntosh, who won two gold medals the first two days, did not race on Tuesday, Day 3 of the competition. She will face Ledecky in the 800, maybe the most anticipated race of the worlds. 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Katie Ledecky captures yet another gold in signature event at swimming worlds
Katie Ledecky captures yet another gold in signature event at swimming worlds

The Guardian

time13 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Katie Ledecky captures yet another gold in signature event at swimming worlds

Katie Ledecky has ceded a tiny bit of ground in other events, but she's still unbeatable in the 1,500-meter freestyle. She won it again Tuesday in the swimming world championships in Singapore, finishing in 15 minutes, 26.44 seconds. Simona Quadarella of Italy took silver in 15:31.79 – a European record – with bronze for Lani Pallister of Australia in 15:41.18 in a very quick-paced race. The schedule The swimming portion of the World Aquatics Championships takes place from 27 July through 3 August at the Singapore Sports Hub. The heats start at 10am local time (2am GMT, 10pm ET). The semi-finals and finals start at 7pm local time (11am GMT, 7am ET). The full schedule is available in PDF format or on the World Aquatics website. How to watch In the United States, coverage will be available on NBC and streaming service Peacock. In the United Kingdom, Aquatics GB holds the UK rights to stream events. 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The numbers speak to Ledecky's dominance, the most decorated female swimmer in history who has been on top for more than a decade. With Tuesday's swim she now owns 25 of the top 26 times in history in the 1,500. Her time Tuesday was the fifth fastest, not far off her world record of 15:20.48 set in 2018. It was her 22nd gold medal in a world championships and her 28th overall. Add to that nine Olympic gold medals and 14 overall. If you're not counting, that's 42 Olympic and world medals – 31 gold. Watching from the stands was new International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry. She was joined by former president Thomas Bach. Coventry was an Olympic gold-medal winner for Zimbabwe in 2004 and 2008 in the 200-meter backstroke. The Americans had the top qualifying times going into four finals and won one gold and three silver medals with very close finishes in all three. 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Ben Askren returns to hospital in concerning update after double lung transplant at 41
Ben Askren returns to hospital in concerning update after double lung transplant at 41

Daily Mail​

time15 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ben Askren returns to hospital in concerning update after double lung transplant at 41

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