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Josh Warrington Wants To Unify The Featherweight Titles But First He Must Face Kid Galahad

IBF featherweight champ Josh Warrington will make the second defence of his title against mandatory challenger Kid Galahad at the Leeds Arena in the north of England on June 15th.

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IBF featherweight champ Josh Warrington will make the second defence of his title against mandatory challenger Kid Galahad at the Leeds Arena in the north of England on June 15th.

It will be a hometown return for Warrington in the all Yorkshire grudge match against his old amateur rival.

 

Warrington, (28-0), had being eyeing a unification clash against WBO titleholder, Oscar Valdez but the IBF ordered him to face Galahad and purses bids were won by the champion’s promoter, Frank Warren.

 

Galahad (26-0) was born in Qatar but lived in Sheffield for much of his life and learnt his skills under the tutelage of the late Irish Brendan Ingle. Galahad is now trained by Brendan’s son Dominic.

 

Galahad became Warrington’s number one contender last October when he outpointed Toka Kahn Clary on his American debut in Boston, Massachusetts,USA in an IBF final eliminator.

 

Galahad, who is also known as Barry Awad last boxed in December, easily outpointing Brayan Mairena over eight rounds.

 

Warrington, a former English, British, Commonwealth, European and WBC international champ, boxed Galahad twice when they were amateurs winning both contests on points.

 

Warrington said: “All of sudden people are saying I am capable of beating every featherweight in the world and with that comes expectation.

 

“I will go into this fight as the bookies’ favourite, but I will be 100 per-cent focused and looking to do a job.

 

“I knew Barry when we were amateurs and he was always a decent guy, but over the last few years he seems to have changed and put on some persona to blag fans, opponents or himself.

 

“He did well at super-bantamweight, but he has beaten nobody as a featherweight and he has lost respect from me for some of his antics.

 

“I want to be Ring Magazine champion, own all the belts and they are in touching distance. I can beat all the featherweights.

 

“I am concentrating purely on Barry, but after this I want one of the other world champions. I want champion after champion.”

 

Galahad won British, European, Commonwealth and international titles at super-bantamweight, and an IBF Intercontinental featherweight belt.

 

Galahad, 28, said: “Josh’s biggest asset is that people underestimate him and he is a lot better than what he looks.

 

“He’s strong, tough, durable and mentally strong, but I have the skill, will and mental toughness to beat him.

 

“He beat me fair and square when we were amateurs, but down the line I knew I would always fight him again. This is professional boxing, different game.

 

“Why am I the man to beat him? I know mentally that I am on a different level and I have the best team in British boxing.

 

“He is going to walk onto a shot, he is going to get hurt very badly and his dad who trains him will stop the fight because he will make an emotional decision and throw in the towel around round six, seven or eight.”

 

Warrington snapped back: “That prediction makes me giggle. It is funny how these scenarios get drawn up. He isn’t in touch with reality and talking daft. It is playground stuff.

 

“He can spout off what he likes, but when the first bell goes it will be me against him and we will see how special he and his team are then.”

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