Ricky Burns stops Kevin Mitchell to retain world lightweight title
A sensational performance by Ricky Burns in Glasgow ended Kevin Mitchell's hopes of taking his WBO world lightweight title.
The 29-year-old Scot had his Essex opponent down twice in the fourth round before the referee stepped in.
The three previous rounds were stunning in their intensity and ferocity.
How the fight unfolded
Round One: After a fairly cautious opening, the fight exploded into life during the final 30 seconds. Mitchell, having landed a nice body shot of his own, was caught by a good right hand from Burns. An even round, possibly shaded by Mitchell
Round Two: Burns stepped up a gear. After a great combination in the opening minute, Burns stunned Mitchell with a big right to the chin
Round Three: Mitchell , desperate to show he was not seriously hurt by the punishment he was taking, beat his chest and goaded Burns into hitting him harder. At one point, Burns landed five or six good shots without reply
Round Four: Despite being advised by his corner to better disguise his main weapon, the left hook, Mitchell was quickly picked off. A beauty of a left from Burns left him on the canvas. A second knockdown quickly followed and the referee stopped the bout soon after
Mitchell caught Burns on occasion with his quick punching but the taller, broader champion looked in control after an evenly matched first round.
The bout had been hyped to the heavens and the first round did not disappoint, with both boxers charged by the electric atmosphere created by 10,000 fans and stoked by legendary MC Michael Buffer.
Burns clubbed Mitchell, 27, with a right but took a heavy hit in return, just one of several painful opening exchanges.
Mitchell, with the cross of St George emblazoned on his shorts, was on the receiving end of a thunderous right hook from the Scot in the second round, as Burns began to edge ahead.
The ferocity of the punches left one wondering how the pair could be such good friends away from the ring.
An outstanding little warrior, Mitchell thumped his chest in defiance after being pinned against the ropes and beaten about the head in the third.
And with his flashing fists there was every chance he could land a succession of blows to upset the home crowd.
This he did briefly in the fourth but that was between moments of belligerence by the reigning champion.
Kevin Mitchell“He done the job on me tonight. He's very fit and very strong”
A thumping left by Burns, from Coatbridge in North Lanarkshire, put Mitchell down and after the ref's count of eight he never truly looked like lasting until the bell.
Burns moved in to finish the contest after his opponent went down for a second time and Terry O'Connor did the right thing in ending the contest before the brave man from Dagenham took any more punishment.
After the fight, Burns said: "The whole build-up went perfectly. I've been feeling so much stronger. My confidence is there too, but I felt so much stronger.
"I said I'll try and suss him out in the first round. When I had him on the ropes I wanted to rough him up and it worked.
"On Monday I'll be on the phone to Frank Warren. Hopefully we can push for a unification fight, it would be a dream come true."
Mitchell was keen to praise his rival: "He done the job on me tonight. He's very fit and very strong."
Interview - WBO world lightweight champion Ricky Burns
Promoter Frank Warren said of Burns: "This guy is going to unify titles. He'll fight again this year.
"There aren't many guys in the world at his weight. He should be proud of what he's done for Scotland."
On the undercard, Scott Harrison continued his comeback with a 60-53 points win over Nottingham's Joe Elfidh , a late stand-in.
Elfidh recovered well from a first-round knock-down and wobbled the 35-year-old Scot with a right in the final round.
Former British and Commonwealth featherweight champion John Simpson retained his Celtic super-featherweight title with a second-round stoppage of Merthyr's Dai Davies.
Edinburgh's John Thain took his record to eight consecutive wins by outpointing Lee Noble from Barnsley 60-55 in their light-middleweight bout.
Another boxer from Scotland's capital, cruiserweight Stephen Simmons, won all six rounds against Bulgarian Tayar Mehmed.
And Stockton-on-Tees' Bradley Saunders proved too strong for the Slovakian Ivan Godor in a six-round lightweight contest.
The referee stopped the fight after two knock-downs in the third. Godor's subsequent balancing on one leg to display his readiness to continue cut no ice with the official.
Follow Keir Murray on Twitter.
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Comment number 24.
yomi24th September 2012 - 22:27
Burn's continues to impress. I really like watching the guy. He's not quite technically perfect; but he's got all the core skills, he clearly takes his training camps seriously, and he and his coach seem to be spot on with regards to fight strategy.
I think he'd be a handful for any of the top guys at LW. Here's hoping we get to see him fight one of them.
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Comment number 23.
Chris Wilby24th September 2012 - 10:41
As an Englishman, all I can say is that Burns is the much better fighter! The Scots have a real champ on their hands here and I hope he unifies the titles. Congrats, Ricky, you have a new supporter.
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Comment number 22.
JH_5523rd September 2012 - 16:03
Burns should fight in America next a good victory over there will see him get the proper recognition he deserves , the British / English media hyped up Mitchell as a superstar it was nice to see him put in is place.
Ignore Harrison he,s had his time
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Comment number 21.
Lintonator23rd September 2012 - 15:03
If Mitchell won he would be all over the sports news today, the english commentators on 3 occasions kept saying naming Mitchell when it was Burns doing the damage. Burns is Scottish and deserves better for what he has achieved. Billy Nelson what a trainer..
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Comment number 20.
pixies723rd September 2012 - 14:23
Well done Ricky, onwards and upwards now. He deserves a big cash fight now. Excellent fighter, even better person. Brilliant.
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Comments 5 of 24