
Katie Taylor vs Amanda Serrano 3 LIVE RESULTS: Rivals in main event RIGHT NOW as they settle beef in blockbuster trilogy
English boxer Chantelle Cameron will be looking to set up a meeting with the winner of tonight's main event should she beat the experienced Jessica Camara.
Cameron has already achieved something that Serrano has not in defeating Taylor.
The 34-year-old stunned the world of boxing when she beat the Bray Bomber by majority decision in May 2023.
The pair had a rematch, which Taylor won, but a decisive trilogy bout could be in the making should they both have their arms raised tonight.
Speaking about a potential trilogy fight with Taylor, Cameron said: 'I'm told I will fight the winner of Katie versus Amanda, because I'm the WBC interim champion.
'I don't say I'm confident of getting a third fight with Katie though because the trilogy fight with her should have happened a long time ago. I've fought her in Dublin twice and she told me after the second one in the ring that the trilogy fight will happen.
'I thought it was signed and sealed, I agreed the date and venue, and I was actually taking less money for it than the first two fights. But then I got told she wanted an easier fight next and was fighting her mandatory instead of me.
'She didn't want to fight me again and has she changed her mind? Probably not.'
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BBC News
34 minutes ago
- BBC News
The 'proper English' mantra & how it's lifting Lionesses
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'Showing fight, desire and being hard to beat' The phrase was first used by their 2023 World Cup captain Millie Bright in February when she described their victory over Spain as 'proper English'.Defensively solid, tenacious out of possession and dangerous going forward, it was England coming close to a complete performance in the Women's Nations was also the perfect response to an underwhelming 1-1 draw with Portugal a few days earlier."After the last game, we wanted to be even more connected. We spoke about just being proper English," said Chelsea defender Bright at the time."I mean that fight, and that desire to defend for each other, to work hard for each other and to be hard to beat. It's so important to be hard to beat."Wiegman said the team had "fought for every yard" and it is those messages that are now being repeated in the press conference before the crucial Netherlands game, midfielder Georgia Stanway vowed to show a 'proper England' performance following the France the victory, Lucy Bronze likened the display from defensive duo Jess Carter and Alex Greenwood - and their team work - as demonstrating exactly where did the mantra come from?"We speak about it a lot. After that disappointing result [against France] it was a bit more reinforced," said England forward Lauren Hemp. "We took a step back and remembered why we were all here and how we got here and the journeys that we have been on. We touched on that a lot. "We're here to win and we want to do that. It showed the mentality of the group that we were able to bounce back in the way that we did. "We didn't just beat them 1-0, we beat them convincingly and put in a great performance [and one] that this England team wanted to show."It's about that fight in us, that we all have, and will show in different ways. Everyone on that pitch did their jobs." All about the playing style 'Send it long', 'if in doubt, kick it out' and 'get stuck in' are the types of phrases you will hear in playgrounds and grassroots clubs across the the Spanish have their 'tiki-taka', the English have 'route one' Hannah Hampton produced such goods in the win over the Netherlands, playing a perfect long ball to Alessia Russo, who teed up Lauren James for England's opener. It set the tone for a dominant display. It's not just the Lionesses who strive to play to their identity. The Football Association hired a manager for the men's team who continued to instill the fundamentals of the English DNA, bringing in ex-Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel, despite his rich German Dutchwoman Wiegman in charge, however, the Lionesses' DNA has morphed slightly. Their English fight remains, but their style has adapted. There is no rigid 4-4-2 with this team, but a midfield three, and sometimes three at the are more possession-based and attempt to build up play from the back, using Keira Walsh as a pivot in midfield. If anything, Wiegman's side strive for 'total football' - a Dutch identity from the Johan Cruyff era - a dynamic and creative playing style, which relies on the versatility of players. But in order to do that, England's basics must rallying cry earlier this week was to "stop talking" and do their business on the pitch."Sometimes it's about blocking out the noise, getting on the pitch and getting stuck in," she striker Russo was one of the standout performers against the Netherlands, picking up three assists. Asked what being 'proper English' meant to her, she said afterwards: "It means we'll work hard until we can't run any more and stick together."We know that we are very dominant on the ball. We wanted to return to our roots and we know we're capable of performances like that." Going back to their roots to revive Euro hopes England had less possession in the Netherlands tie than against France (57% compared to 52%), but they won the ball back twice as many times in the final energy from the players was clear to see, with England applying 'high-intensity pressure' in the Netherlands final third on 87 occasions, up from 69 against won 46 out of their 48 duels, having only come out on top in 37 out of 89 in the French dribbled past players at will to provide the creativity, while Ella Toone snuck into pockets of space to link up with the versatility was there too as James, who started as a number 10 against France, played out on the right wing, while Carter moved to centre-back and Greenwood went to yet mixed among the flair was the 'proper English' traits of hard work, tough tackling, caution and countless crosses into the said discussions this week, reminding each other of their roots, what it took to get here and their personal stories, played a valuable part in the Dutch success, which has left them now needing to beat Wales on Sunday to confirm a last-eight place."We want to find out everything that we can do. They're our family here and we're together as a group," added the Manchester City forward."It's been important. You can know every single bit about someone to help you through everything."


BBC News
44 minutes ago
- BBC News
McGonagle back on Donegal bench as Meath unchanged
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
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