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View Full Version : Boxing: Haye and Harrison set for big hit at box office as fight is confirmed



lpinoy
09-07-2010, 11:29 PM
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By Steve Bunce

David Haye's defence of his World Boxing Association heavyweight title against Audley Harrison at the MEN Arena in Manchester on 13 November was confirmed today, setting up a fight that could generate more money than any other in British history.


The pair were good friends in their amateur days, but a variety of perceived slights means they are now the best of enemies – and yesterday's official announcement was a foul-mouthed face-off that came close to turning nasty.

"I don't like him and he doesn't like me," said Haye. "He's bitter and twisted and delusional, and I feel sorry for him. This is the end of his road. His stupid journey will soon be over."

Harrison, who is 38 and often shared rooms with Haye at international tournaments 10 or more years ago, looked hurt at times but insisted that Haye caused the rift.

"We stopped being close because David turned his back on me," insisted Harrison, whose career has come close to oblivion on several occasions. "This is about the ultimate redemption for me – I've had to struggle back from the deepest holes and I've done that on my own."

Haye admitted that Harrison was not his first-choice opponent but conceded that the domestic showdown, the biggest since Lennox Lewis v Frank Bruno in 1993, would be a massive attraction. "The public wanted it," said Haye. "What could I do? He's the best available fighter out there."

In 2000 Harrison won a gold medal at the Sydney Olympics, for which Haye failed to qualify, and agreed a high-profile and profitable deal with the BBC before his popularity dipped. He became something of pantomine figure and relocated to America from London, but his image has softened recently since joining Eddie Hearn, who negotiated his return from the margins to a fight that is set to break records.

lpinoy
09-07-2010, 11:32 PM
C/P
By:Fightnews

Vows to give Haye “the fight of his life”

Prizefighter Heavyweights III champion Audley Harrison is set face David Haye for the WBA World Heavyweight title in Manchester in November 13. Harrison has always claimed it was his destiny to win the World Heavyweight title and in a tense press conference in central London, he warned his former friend Haye that he is in for “the fight of his life” when he defends his title for the second time at the M.E.N Arena.

Haye called the contest the “biggest fight the UK has seen in years” and it marks a return to the venue where he defeated John Ruiz in his first defence in April, but Harrison believes that his epic journey in the sport is ready to peak with a World title victory.

“I’m ecstatic I’m getting a shot at the Heavyweight title and I’m doubly ecstatic that it’s against David Haye – a guy that I groomed when I was 29 and Olympic gold medallist and he was just 19,” said Harrison. “People are saying this is the David Haye show, it’s not – this is the Audley Harrison show, it is part of my journey and I’m knocking out a man who I laid down the red carpet to when he was coming through. This is my time – I’ve been down to the bottom of the pit but now I’m right back at the top and ready to take my chance.”

There is no love lost between the two fighters with Harrison reminding Haye throughout the press conference of the help he gave the Bermondsey boxer when his career was in its infancy, but his fellow London-born challenger told the press that while there will be plenty of trash-talk traded in the build-up to November’s showdown, he will back up his words with everything he has got in Manchester.

“I don’t talk just for the sake of talking – I will be there every second and every minute of every round and he is in for the fight of his life,” said the 38 year-old – now based in Las Vegas. “People were saying I was delusional when I said I would fight David Haye for the World title, and they said it again after I won Prizefighter – but look here today, I am fighting him for the World title and I will win.”

Harrison’s last fight saw him knockout Michael Sprott with a devastating left hook in the last round of their European title fight in April and he identified that shot as the one that he will use to wrestle the belt from Haye, just over one year after the World Champion took it away from Nikolai Valuev in Germany.

“When I land that left on him, it’s done – I don’t think he has a weak chin, I know he has a weak chin and so does everyone else. He hasn’t fought a real Heavyweight with a punch – when I started out the so-called experts were saying I was a “powder-puff puncher”, now all of a sudden they’re saying “Audley’s got a puncher’s chance.” I’ve always been able to punch, I’ve got 20 KO’s in 27 wins but this isn’t just about fighting though, it’s also about game plans and skills. I believe I’m a complete professional but I don’t think David is. He’s a good fighter and puncher but he’s got lots of mistakes.”