There have been times in recent years when British boxing fans weren’t necessarily satisfied with the overall quality of Matchroom Boxing cards in the United Kingdom.

Eddie Hearn is beyond confident they’ll get plenty of bang for their collective buck Saturday night at O2 Arena in London. Hearn, Matchroom’s managing director, went as far as to state that the show headlined by the Regis Prograis-Josh Taylor 140-pound title unification fight is the most stacked card his company has ever promoted.

“From top to bottom, this is probably the best card I’ve ever done,” Hearn told BoxingScene.com. “I mean, obviously you’ve got Conor Benn kicking it off. You’ve got Okolie against Ngabu for the European title; it’s a great fight. Ricky Burns against Lee Selby, which is a brilliant fight, could be headlining its own arena. You’ve got Chisora against Price, which every man on the street is talking about. And then you’ve got Prograis against Taylor, another great fight as well.”

New Orleans’ Prograis (24-0, 20 KOs) and Scotland’s Taylor (15-0, 12 KOs) will fight for Prograis’ WBA crown and Taylor’s IBF belt in the championship match of the World Boxing Series’ 140-pound tournament. London’s Chisora (31-9, 22 KOs) and Liverpool’s Price (26-6, 20 KOs) are set to go at it in a 12-round heavyweight fight that’ll immediately precede Prograis-Taylor.

Scotland’s Burns (43-7-1, 16 KOs), a former three-weight world champ, and Wales’ Selby (27-2, 9 KOs), an ex-IBF featherweight champ, will square off in a 12-round lightweight bout. London’s Lawrence Okolie (13-0, 10 KOs) and Belgium’s Yves Ngabu (20-0, 14 KOs) will compete for Ngabu’s European Boxing Union cruiserweight title, also scheduled for 12 rounds.

Benn (15-0, 10 KOs), the son of British boxing legend Nigel Benn, and Belgium’s Steve Jamoye (26-7-2, 5 KOs) are contracted to meet in a 10-round welterweight bout.

Hearn expects an approximate crowd of 15,000 at O2 Arena, about 1,500 customers short of a sellout.

“You know what?,” Hearn said. “All the fights on the undercard can headline events on a ‘Saturday Night Fight Night.’ And most of them sell out arenas on their own. Now Burns against Selby, I think Scotland or Cardiff is an instant sellout. You know, Lawrence Okolie against Ngabu is a big fight in London. Connor Benn is super, super popular. Chisora-Price is huge on its own. And, of course, Taylor against Prograis in Scotland sells out as well. So, it’s got everything this card, it really has. And it’s one of those where you just sit down and you just watch it, you take it in and you enjoy it. You get great value for money. You just see the brilliance of boxing.”

The aforementioned fights all will be streamed by DAZN in the United States and televised as part of a Sky Sports Box Office pay-per-view event in the UK.

DAZN’s coverage will begin at 2 p.m. EDT/11 a.m. PDT. Sky Sports Box Office’s show will start at 7 p.m. BST (£19.95).

Keith Idec is a senior writer/columnist for BoxingScene.com. He can be reached on Twitter @Idecboxing.