Three Commonwealth titles decided in London

Source: Queensberry Promotions

27/11/2022

Three Commonwealth titles decided in London

Hamzah Sheeraz TKO2 River Wilson-Bent....  Hamzah Sheeraz is the new Commonwealth middleweight champion following a destruction of River Wilson-Bent at London's 02 Arena. Sheeraz, now 17-0, set about his Coventry opponent right from the off with spearing jabs to which Wilson-Bent (13-2-1) had no reply. Sheeraz’s dominance extended into the second round and Wilson-Bent was put down and referee Victor Loughlin decided he had seen enough with 2.55 on the clock.
 
Sam Noakes TKO4 Calvin McCord... A blitz of body shots from Sam Noakes in the fourth round saw the Maidstone man realise his goal of a perfect 10 wins and 10 KOs with the stoppage of the previously unbeaten Calvin McCord to win the Commonwealth lightweight title. After pretty much dominating the first three rounds, the 25-year-old Noakes went for the jugular in the fourth and McCord went to the canvas on four occasions before referee Victor Loughlin had seen enough after 2.14 of the round.
 
Dennis McCann TKO8 Joe Ham... Dennis McCann is the new Commonwealth super bantamweight champion following a breaking down of Joe Ham. In what was a mature performance, The Menace was more measured and patient in his work from his typically wide stance. Ham had few answers and was in trouble on each occasion McCann chose to let his hands go in the fourth, fifth and eighth. The eighth turned out to be the last when a right uppercut stunned the Scot and the follow-up assault convinced referee Marcus McDonnell to wave it off with 2.28 on the clock. McCann moves to 14-0 while Ham slides to 17-4.
 
ADDITIONAL RESULTS
 
‘Big Bang’ Pierce O’Leary won a rugged, hard-fought victory over Emmanuel Mungandjela (16-4-1). The Dubliner moved to 11-0 and, at first, it looked like it might be a speedy night’s work when a massive right from O’Leary saw the Namibian touch down. Mungandjela, while for the most part being overwhelmed, still chose to engage in a firefight and O’Leary took more shots than his trainer Alan Smith would have liked. He actually recovered well in the fifth round and enjoyed some success, but then ended up grounded again just before the bell following a left hook topping up a big right. Mungandjela continued to show remarkable defiance and bravery, looking like he might be out in the ninth when he was rocked again by the right hand of O’Leary. He saw it through until the end when the scorecards read 99-90, 99-89 and an unlikely 96-92.
 
Tommy Fletcher made it a professional treble with a win in his third fight against Jiri Krejci (1-3-2). He also made quick work of his Czech opponent and the fight was over when the Norfolk Nightmare ripped in a short and devastating left uppercut that left Krejci out for the count after 2.19 of round one.
 
Sonny Liston Ali successfully negotiated his fifth professional fight and comfortably outpointed Georgi Velichkov (3-7), winning all six rounds.