9pm tonight on skiy sports 1,2 or 3 but 1 i think is the heavyweight torney,
they have 3 mins to fight each other and they will be a winner by then end of it, ther is like 12 of them entering, all unknows going for it,
3mins trying to knock each toher out to reach the next round
so remember 9PM tonight sky sports 1
heaveyweight knockout torney
thought it was fairly good entertainment in the end!
Hearn will be disapointed that Rogan won it as he has no real future at 36, he'll maybe get a couple of fights on sky off the back of it.
Dolan might make something of himself at cruiser maybe.
My good German friend was perplexed when he saw that Rogan, a fighter from the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, draped himself in the Eire flag at the end of the final fight.
I had to explain to him that a minority of the population of Northern Ireland wants to change from being British and are more loyal to the Republic of Ireland instead.
lmao, eamon magee said to Rogan before last round 'He called you an Irish bastard!' and then he goes and knocks dolan down. hilarious
You got a new hero now. :lol1::lol1:
Final on now, what a fucking fight.
lmao, eamon magee said to Rogan before last round 'He called you an Irish bastard!' and then he goes and knocks dolan down. hilarious
Johnny Nelson on commentary :ugh: and I thought Jim Watt was bad. Ian Darke and Glenn McCrory are the best combo for commentary imo.
How do you get your sig that size mate ?
Sky Sports could be giving you a glimpse into the future of boxing when Prizefighter laces up its gloves on Friday night.
Barry Hearn's revolutionary heavyweight tournament takes place at the York Hall as the old and the new and eight hungry fighters collide.
The format is quite simple. Three three-minute rounds, a total of seven bouts, with the last man standing pocketing a cool £25,000.
Hearn is the man behind the revolutionary plan and if the heavyweights prove a knockout, he has promised to bring Prizefighter to the lower weights.
But for now, it is all about eight bigguns - and two reserves - from across Britain, who have the chance to make a name for themselves, as well as the sort of money they can only dream of as a fighter.
And that, says Hearn, means a special night on Sky Sports.
"These boys won't try and nick it, because that will be too dangerous, so hopefully we'll get more exciting fights in a short period of time," he said.
"They know they will have to come back again and again and the crowd will be following the progress of the four winners. They'll be seeing a whole competition on one night and that's never been done before.
"That's the sort of thing that may just bring a new audience into boxing - and also give us a bit more crash, bang, wallop, thank you very much!"
The York Hall is expected to be packed the rafters, while squeezing inside a crowd will be Sky Sports' own heavyweight line-up.
Dave Clark will be joined by Glenn McCrory and Nicky Piper to analyse the action, while Johnny Nelson will be joining Adam Smith on commentary to guide you through the seven fast and furious fights, culminating in the winner-takes-all finale.
And if you fancy cashing in on the crash, bang, wallop, you can bet live with Skybet, whose Dale Tempest will be ringside all evening updating their odds and offering some sensational specials.
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here are the details
Sky Sports could be giving you a glimpse into the future of boxing when Prizefighter laces up its gloves on Friday night.
Barry Hearn's revolutionary heavyweight tournament takes place at the York Hall as the old and the new and eight hungry fighters collide.
The format is quite simple. Three three-minute rounds, a total of seven bouts, with the last man standing pocketing a cool £25,000.
Hearn is the man behind the revolutionary plan and if the heavyweights prove a knockout, he has promised to bring Prizefighter to the lower weights.
But for now, it is all about eight bigguns - and two reserves - from across Britain, who have the chance to make a name for themselves, as well as the sort of money they can only dream of as a fighter.
And that, says Hearn, means a special night on Sky Sports.
"These boys won't try and nick it, because that will be too dangerous, so hopefully we'll get more exciting fights in a short period of time," he said.
"They know they will have to come back again and again and the crowd will be following the progress of the four winners. They'll be seeing a whole competition on one night and that's never been done before.
"That's the sort of thing that may just bring a new audience into boxing - and also give us a bit more crash, bang, wallop, thank you very much!"
The York Hall is expected to be packed the rafters, while squeezing inside a crowd will be Sky Sports' own heavyweight line-up.
Dave Clark will be joined by Glenn McCrory and Nicky Piper to analyse the action, while Johnny Nelson will be joining Adam Smith on commentary to guide you through the seven fast and furious fights, culminating in the winner-takes-all finale.
And if you fancy cashing in on the crash, bang, wallop, you can bet live with Skybet, whose Dale Tempest will be ringside all evening updating their odds and offering some sensational specials.