Chris Eubank Jr. is just hours away from one in all the most important fights of his profession.
The primary meeting between Eubank Jr. and Conor Benn delivered a fight of the 12 months contender back in April.
On November 15, the 2 men are set to run it back in the identical constructing, the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, England.
While he didn’t secure the victory on that night, Benn did receive a major boost to his earnings as a consequence of his opponent being fined after missing weight.
Each fighters hit the mark on Friday’s weigh-in but there was still another obstacle to clear ahead of fight night.
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Chris Eubank Jr. reveals that he was just below the rehydration limit ahead of Conor Benn rematch
Chris Eubank Jr. is confident that he can hand Conor Benn the second lack of his skilled profession of their highly-anticipated rematch.
Loads was made from the load that the 2 men were set to compete at each ahead of the primary fight and their second meeting.
In April, Eubank Jr. was fined $500,000 after he missed the 160 pound mark by 0.05 on his second attempt at stepping on the scales.
He did, nonetheless, pass the rehydration clause, which prevented him from gaining over ten kilos between the Friday weigh-ins and a second check on the day of the fight.
Each men hit the mark on November 14, with Eubank Jr. coming in lighter than Benn, though the identical rehydration clause would still should be met.
Earlier this morning, Eubank Jr. shared the next image on social media to point out that he hadn’t gained over ten kilos, with the fight being official after Benn also didn’t exceed this limit.
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Conor Benn says a trilogy fight with Chris Eubank Jr. is out of the query
Even when he avenges his loss to Chris Eubank Jr. on Saturday night, Conor Benn is adamant that it won’t result in a 3rd fight between them.
If the rematch lives as much as their incredible first encounter, it seems likely that fans and promoters will need to see it again, but Benn has other plans.
“It wouldn’t mean a trilogy, obviously,” He told Carl Froch in a recent interview. “No, no, no. Get back all the way down to my weight… My next fight is scheduled for 147. I need to get on with my profession.”
Having now experienced what it was prefer to fight 12 rounds at the next weight class, Benn is certain to have learned some essential lessons from his first defeat.

