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A bloodied Jack Catterall outpointed Harlem Eubank by technical decision in an all-British welterweight bout that ended prematurely because of a clash of heads at Manchester’s AO Arena.
Catterall, 31, delivered a typically cautious performance, controlling the bout with a safety-first approach, but neither fighter was willing to take major risks.
The fighters clashed heads during a tangle in the sixth round. Both sustained cuts, but Catterall’s – above the right eye – was visibly worse.
All three judges awarded the fight to Catterall, with scores of 69-65, 69-66, and 69-66.
“The fight was going how I expected it to go. I was breaking him down,” said the Chorley boxer. “It’s not the way I wanted to win. “
Fighting at welterweight for the first time, Catterall expressed relief at returning to winning ways after a loss to Arnold Barboza Jr. in April – a defeat that cost him a shot at the light-welterweight world title.
Mind games & disappointing early ending

The mind games began before the opening bell, when Catterall sent Conor Benn – who defeated Harlem’s cousin, Chris Eubank Jr, in their April grudge match – to inspect Eubank’s hand-wrapping.
“Didn’t want to miss this,” Benn quipped during the awkward encounter, before returning to Catterall’s dressing room to report, “[Eubank’s] head has gone”, as the pair embraced.
Inside the ring, Eubank smiled nervously through a tentative opening as Catterall, as expected, edged the early rounds with his superior skill and ring IQ, though without fully imposing himself.
Eubank, who has gained through his appearances on free-to-air television, began to land single shots, but it was clear he was second best against the more accomplished fighter.
With career wins over Josh Taylor, Jorge Linares, and Regis Prograis, Catterall’s class was clear.
But the pair tumbled to the canvas in the third, and again in a messy sixth. Then came the accidental clash, followed by Eubank striking the back of Catterall’s head.
The home favourite returned to his corner to have the blood wiped away – an action not allowed mid-round.
Perhaps wisely given the severity of the cut, referee Williams then halted the bout at one second into the seventh, prompting boos from a 5,000 strong crowd.
Cordina’s winning comeback as Atang & Brown shine

Former super-featherweight champion Joe Cordina returned from a 14-month lay-off with a hard-fought points win over Jaret Gonzalez Quiroz to claim the vacant WBO global lightweight title.
The 33-year-old Welshman, who lost his IBF title to Anthony Cacace in May 2024, had to dig deep against the quick-handed and spirited 24-year-old Mexican.
Despite some ring rust, Cordina’s experience and boxing craft saw him through to a unanimous decision, with scorecards of 100-90, 99-91 and 98-92.
Cordina had been set to face Shakur Stevenson for the WBC title last October before the American withdrew through injury.
Back on track, Cordina said he was now hoping to fight again as soon as possible.
Earlier, Australian former WBC featherweight world champion Skye Nicolson, 29, stopped Carla Camila Campos Gonzales in the second round of their super-bantamweight bout.
Manchester cruiserweight Pat Brown extended his perfect professional record with a dominant first-round stoppage of Lewis Oakford.
Just two weeks after securing his second win, the 25-year-old made it three from three in emphatic fashion, landing a series of spiteful, unanswered punches that forced the referee to step in.
Heavyweight debutant Leo Atang was equally explosive, securing a first-round stoppage of journeyman Milen Paunov.
The 18-year-old from York – standing 6ft 6in tall – dropped Paunov, 41, with a punishing body shot before finishing the bout with a clinical flurry.
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