By Terence Dooley

Rendall ‘Two Tone’ Munroe takes on Victor Terrazas at the Skydome, Coventry tomorrow night in a WBC super bantamweight title eliminator and the ‘Boxing Binman’, Rendall still holds down a day job on the bins, goes into the fight with the support of Sky Sports pundit, and former lightweight world champion, Jim Watt ringing in his ears.

‘Rendall has the experience to keep calm and keep working and if he can keep doing what has got him to number one in the WBC rankings, then there's absolutely no reason why he can't go that next step,’ wrote Watt in his skysports.com blog.

‘I can see this going all the way and Munroe winning on points, but it may even be that with the stakes so high, he can raise the gallop and that there is actually more to come.  Either way, the result is all that matters - get that right and then he can start talking and thinking about becoming a world champion.’

Watt defeated Alfredo Pitalua in 1979 to win the vacant WBC 135lb title, he later successfully defended the belt against the hugely talented Howard Davis Junior, the Scottish boxing legend has commentated on the sport for years and his endorsement will be sweet music to Munroe, who lost his first tilt at a title back in 2006 when suffering a points reverse to Andy Morris for the British featherweight title.  Munroe is undefeated since that night; he learned his lessons well.  The Frank Maloney-promoted boxer shot to prominence by twice defusing Kiko Martinez, who wiped out Bernard Dunne in a single stanza, and Rendall, 29, has since dominated the European scene.

Now, though, Munroe, 20-1 (8 KOs), is in tricky waters, he is one step away from fulfilling his dreams and will be wary of Mexico’s Terrazas, an unknown quantity who has not tasted defeat since his pro debut in 2003, a second round KO against Adrian Tellez.  The 27-year-old visitor, who is 25-1-1 (13 early), has endured a nightmare journey to these shores due to the flight restrictions put in place after the fallout from the Eyjafjallajokull volcano and will no doubt feel the effects of his long drive, from Spain to the UK, early on in the contest.  It is win or bust for the fighting bin man; Rendall’s fitness, strength and southpaw stance, coupled with home advantage, will play a huge part in the destiny of this contest.

Sky Sports 1 and HD1 televise here in the UK.

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