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Chris Eubank Jr and Conor Benn will be battling it out in an eagerly-awaited middleweight bout this weekend.

The British boxers are not just settling their own dispute – they are continuing a family rivalry going back decades.

But what exactly is the story between Eubank Jr and Benn and who’s on the undercard? Here’s everything you need to know ahead of the fight.

When is Eubank Jr vs Benn?

Eubank Jr and Benn will finally take to the ring as the main event on Saturday 26 April.

Their fight will be the third at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, after Oleksandr Usyk’s victory over Anthony Joshua in September 2021 and Tyson Fury’s win against Derek Chisora in December 2022.

The two fighters are expected to make their ring walks from 9.45pm UK time, but coverage on Sky Sports Box Office will start from 5pm.

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What to know about the fight

Eubank Jr, 35, is the more experienced of the pair, going into the fight with a record of 34-3 (25 KOs).

Benn, 28, has won all 23 of his professional fights, 14 by KO.

They will fight at a middleweight limit of 11st 6lbs, with the inclusion of a hydration clause meaning neither are able to add more than 10lbs in weight between Friday’s weigh-in and Saturday’s fight night.

Eubank Jr fought at 11st 5lb when he beat Kamil Szeremeta in October, while Benn is jumping up two weights from welterweight having come in at 10st 10lbs for his win over Peter Dobson in February 2024.

The stakes are high

While there are no titles up for grabs, Turki Alalshikh, chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, told Sky Sports that a shot at pound-for-pound great and super-middleweight king Canelo Alvarez would be on the line in Saturday’s fight.

And the World Boxing Council (WBC) has said it would back the winner on Saturday to take Alvarez on.

“It is a major event that has all the elements a fan can expect,” WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman said of Eubank vs Benn.

“The rivalry between the parents which became a rivalry between the kids. Heated press conferences, social media… When the bell rings, it is going to be something for the memory of everyone and hopefully the fight comes up to the expectations.”

The ongoing Eubank and Benn feud

The fighters’ fathers fought twice in 1990 and 1993, with Eubank Sr clinching a ninth-round TKO victory against Nigel Benn in the pair’s first bout before the two fought to a draw three years later.

Nigel Benn vs Chris Eubank at Old Trafford in 1993. Pic: Action Images/Reuters
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Nigel Benn vs Chris Eubank at Old Trafford in 1993. Pic: Action Images/Reuters

But the sons have built a rivalry of their own over the past few years, despite not being able to bring it to the ring until now.

They were meant to fight on 8 October 2022 at the O2 Arena, but Benn failed two voluntary drug tests that resulted in the contest being cancelled just 48 hours before it was scheduled to take place.

Benn tested positive for the banned substance clomifene in two Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) tests, before having his licence removed by the British Boxing Board of Control.

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Benn’s suspension was lifted in a ruling by the National Anti-Doping Panel (NADP) in July 2023, with the 28-year-old making his return to the ring that September in a unanimous decision win over Rodolfo Orozco in Orlando.

He went on to beat Peter Dobson by unanimous decision in Nevada in February 2024, before his suspension was reintroduced in May following an appeal from UKAD and the BBBoC.

His provisional suspension was eventually lifted in November 2024 after the NADP said it was “not comfortably satisfied” he had committed a doping offence.

Since the fight was delayed, the pair have had frequent spats in the media, the most high-profile of which came in February during a face-off at a press conference in Manchester.

The moment Eubank Jr struck Benn with an egg. Pic: PA
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The moment Eubank Jr struck Benn with an egg. Pic: PA

Eubank Jr slapped Benn with an egg, leading the two fighters to be held back by security while Nigel Benn, the father of Conor, appeared to grab Eubank Jr by the throat.

The stunt was seemingly in relation to the WBC’s claim in early 2023 that a “highly-elevated consumption of eggs” was a “reasonable explanation” for Benn’s failed test.

Eubank Jr subsequently posted on X: “Apparently egg contamination was the reason for his two failed drugs tests. So I contaminated him with an egg.”

Who is on the undercard?

Former WBO cruiserweight champion Chris Billam-Smith will take on Brandon Glanton in a bid to reignite another world title charge after losing out to Gilberto Ramirez in their unification clash last November.

British light-heavyweight rivals Anthony Yarde and Lyndon Arthur will meet for a third time after boasting one victory apiece, Liam Smith takes on Aaron McKenna in his first fight since being stopped by Eubank Jr in their September 2023 rematch, and Viddal Riley and Cheavon Clarke face off on a defining night for their respective careers as rising cruiserweight contenders.

Here’s the full card:

Main event: Chris Eubank Jr vs Conor Benn – middleweight

Anthony Yarde vs Lyndon Arthur 3 – light-heavyweight

Liam Smith vs Aaron McKenna – middleweight

Chris Billam-Smith vs Brandon Glanton – cruiserweight

Viddal Riley vs Cheavon Clarke – cruiserweight

What have the fighters said?

Benn didn’t hold back earlier this week as he told Sky Sports: “I hate what he [Eubank Jr] stands for. I hate who he is as a man, what he’s chasing.

“Just him as a man personally for reasons that aren’t public, personal reasons, between me and Chris that he’s fully aware of as to why I really dislike him.

“A fight’s a fight. Obviously there is interest with the history of our dads, us being our fathers’ sons, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

“But I think there’s a big personality clash, the controversy, the adversity, it sells. It doesn’t change the outcome of April 26 and what I’m going to do to him.”

He said his goal was to retire the 35-year-old.

Speaking during a face-off in London on Wednesday, his competitor was more focused on what would happen in the ring.

“I don’t do shenanigans. I do what I believe is right and I do what I want to do,” Eubank Jr noted. “I’m just being me.

“This fight isn’t about size or weight. It’s about skill. It’s about dedication. It’s about expertise. All those areas I excel in,” Eubank said.

“I’m a complete fighter, I’ve been doing this for so long now I’ve forgotten more things than he knows and that will show on the night.

“Everything will go how I want it to go.

“I will be like a matador in the ring and Conor Benn will be the bull.”

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890 people arrested at Palestine Action protest yesterday – including 17 on suspicion of assaulting police officers

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890 people arrested at Palestine Action protest yesterday - including 17 on suspicion of assaulting police officers

The Metropolitan Police has said 890 people were arrested at a protest against the banning of Palestine Action as a terror group on Saturday – including 17 on suspicion of assaulting officers.

A total of 857 individuals were arrested in Parliament Square in London under the Terrorism Act 2000 over alleged offences, the force said.

It added that a further 33 were arrested for other offences, with 17 of those detained on suspicion of assaulting officers. The Met Police did not say what the other 16 arrests were for.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Claire Smart, who led the policing operation, thanked Met Police officers for their “professionalism and tireless work despite the level of abuse that they faced”.

Pic: PA
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Pic: PA

Ms Smart said: “The violence we encountered during the operation was coordinated and carried out by a group of people, many wearing masks to conceal their identity, intent on creating as much disorder as possible.

“Many of those individuals have now been arrested and we have begun securing charges.”

Defend Our Juries, which organised the demonstrations, insisted the rally was “the picture of peaceful protest”.

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Ms Smart also claimed that the “contrast between this demonstration and the other protests we policed yesterday, including the Palestine Coalition march attended by around 20,000 people, was stark”.

She added: “You can express your support for a cause without committing an offence under the Terrorism Act or descending into violence and disorder, and many thousands of people do that in London every week.

“We have a duty to enforce the law without fear or favour. If you advertise that you are intending to commit a crime, we have no option but to respond accordingly.”

Defend Our Juries previously estimated 1,500 had gathered for the rally on Saturday, where many held signs saying: “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.”

Pic: PA
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Pic: PA

Pics: PA
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Pics: PA

The group has been banned as a terror group since 5 July after MPs voted overwhelmingly in favour of the move proposed by then-home secretary Yvette Cooper, making it illegal to express support for the group.

It came shortly after two Voyager aircraft suffered around £7m worth of damage at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire on 20 June.

Defence Secretary John Healey told Sky’s Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips that he expects newly appointed Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood to be “just as tough” as her predecessor on Palestine Action.

He said: “I expect her to defend the decision the government has taken to proscribe Palestine Action because of what some of its members are responsible for, and were planning for.”

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The Met Police previously said the consequences for those charged under the Terrorism Act include a maximum sentence of six months’ imprisonment.

The Home Office is set to appeal against the High Court ruling allowing Palestine Action’s co-founder, Huda Ammori, to proceed with a legal challenge against the government over the group’s ban.

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Labour considering using military barracks to house asylum seekers

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Labour considering using military barracks to house asylum seekers

Defence Secretary John Healey has told Sky News the government is considering using military barracks to house asylum seekers, as an estimated 1,000 people arrived in the UK on small boats on Saturday.

“We are looking at the potential use of military and non-military sites for temporary accommodation for the people who come across on these small boats that may not have a right to be here,” he told Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips.

“I’m looking really hard at it. I’m looking at it with the Home Office, and I recognise that the loss of confidence of the public over recent years in Britain’s ability to control its borders needs to be satisfied. And we have to deal with this problem with the small boats,” Mr Healey added.

Politics latest: Labour considers housing migrants on military sites

The measure follows widespread protests this summer over housing migrants in hotels.

Fresh small boat arrivals were spotted on Sunday, after an estimated 1,000 people arrived on Saturday – when French authorities said 24 people were rescued while trying to cross the Channel.

The figures compare to a relatively recent lull in crossings. In the previous seven days (30 August to 5 September) the Home Office recorded no small boat arrivals.

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Zia Yusuf, head of policy at Reform UK, told Trevor Phillips that Britain has become a “soft touch” on migration, before suggesting between 15 and 25 detention sites will need to be built to detain asylum seekers. He described these as “purpose-built modular steel structures”.

“We can look around the world at where things have worked and worked well. President Trump stood up 3,000 detention beds in eight days. That was this year in the state of Florida – using steel modular structures,” Mr Yusuf said.

He added that the president’s crackdown has significantly reduced illegal border crossings and suggested the same could happen in the English Channel to deter migrants.

“These are unarmed, largely men in dinghies, we don’t need a particularly formidable military to be able to take them to a detention centre,” he said.

Zia Yusuf from Reform UK said he believes Britain has become a "soft touch" on migration
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Zia Yusuf from Reform UK said he believes Britain has become a “soft touch” on migration

Shabana Mahmood will have the job of tackling illegal immigration after taking over from Yvette Cooper as home secretary on Friday – when Sir Keir Starmer carried out a major cabinet reshuffle following the resignation of his deputy prime minister Angela Rayner.

National Crime Agency (NCA) figures show record levels of disruption of immigration crime networks in 2024/25.

Join the Sky News immigration debate

Officials believe this contributed to the lowest number of boats crossing the Channel in August since 2019.

But, despite the 3,567 arrivals in August being the lowest since 2021, when looking across the whole of 2025, the figure of 29,003 is the highest on record for this point in a year.

Sky’s Political Correspondent Liz Bates said that after Labour scrapped the previous government’s controversial Rwanda policy and shut down the Bibby Stockholm barge, ministers are “hitting up against many of the same problems” with “a really broken and very slow asylum system”.

“The context to all of this is a huge shake-up at the Home Office, and I think something of an admission that [Yvette] Cooper, despite her years of experience, could not get a grip… of this problem of people coming across the Channel in small boats and then ending up in asylum hotels,” she added.

Army bases were previously used by the Conservative government, but this prompted local protests, and the sites were widely criticised for their poor conditions in some cases.

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As Sky’s Home Editor Jason Farrell writes, Ms Mahmood has become the home secretary of a country where the national flag is being hoisted as a symbol of dissatisfaction – with anger at the arrival of desperate migrants crossing the Channel in small boats.

Sir Keir’s sweeping changes

Sir Keir Starmer has announced sweeping changes to his ministerial team in the Home Office as his government works to get a grip of illegal migration to the UK.

Here’s a list of who has been moved, besides the home secretary.

Dame Angela Eagle, who was border security and asylum minister, has been moved to the environment department.

Dame Diana Johnson, who was policing and crime minister, has been moved to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).

She has said in a post on X that it was an “honour” to work with police officers, and she is “delighted” to be moving to the DWP.

Dan Jarvis has been given a role in the Cabinet Office, in addition to his post as security minister in the Home Office.

And Sarah Jones, who was industry minister, has been moved to the Home Office.

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Harry wants to put ‘trials and tribulations’ behind him in first UK visit in months – but will he meet the King?

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Harry wants to put 'trials and tribulations' behind him in first UK visit in months - but will he meet the King?

Prince Harry will carry out a rare public engagement outside of London this week, as he heads back to the UK for a visit with “no negativity”.

After a tumultuous five years, the Duke of Sussex and his team are hoping this may be a trip that can help begin to “put the trials and tribulations behind them” and herald a reset, according to sources close to the royal.

It’s been confirmed the duke will be in Nottingham on Tuesday, visiting a youth organisation that he’s maintained strong personal contact with since moving to America.

Harry, who is no longer a working royal, is set to carry out a run of engagements and make a substantial donation to BBC Children in Need to support work tackling violence affecting young people.

Prince Harry, last seen in the UK in April 2025. Pic: AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali
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Prince Harry, last seen in the UK in April 2025. Pic: AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali

It is not known if he will meet with his estranged brother, the Prince of Wales, or his father, the King.

The King is currently in Balmoral with the Queen, and so far, no engagements have been announced for the couple this coming week.

The monarch last met his youngest son face-to-face more than 18 months ago, when the duke made a transatlantic dash to see his father after hearing about his cancer diagnosis. The pair spent less than an hour together.

‘There is no negativity with this trip,’ say sources close to Harry

Harry’s past visits to the UK, since stepping away from royal life, have often been shrouded in secrecy with any public moments taking place in London. This will also be the first time in a while that he isn’t returning due to a court case.

Sources close to Harry suggest that already means “there is no negativity with this trip” saying that “Harry is really looking forward to coming back to do what he loves”, focusing on his charity work.

“It’s a moment to put the trials and tribulations of the last few years behind us,” they added.

But Harry and his team are well aware that there will be considerable interest in whether or not he will see his father, the King. Hopes of reconciliation and a potential meeting were ramped up earlier in the summer when members of Harry’s team were photographed meeting with the King’s communications secretary for the first time. Both sides aren’t commenting on any possible contact between Harry and his father this week.

When Harry arrives in London on Monday the King will be in Scotland, marking Queen Elizabeth’s death and his Accession Day. But it’s understood that Harry is due to be in the UK for most of the coming week. The strain in the relationship between father and son was emphasised by Harry in an interview he gave after he lost his legal challenge against the Home Office over his security.

We also understand that his team have tried to “pack in as much as possible” in the coming days, with a number of private meetings and public visits to other organisations with which he has longstanding links.

We are told he will not be meeting lawyers.

Ultimately it appears that Prince Harry and his team are hoping this visit will have a different, more upbeat tone, compared to other recent trips to the UK, in what feels like a reset for the duke.

It has been suggested that he may have wanted to make the trip longer but as he’s “financially responsible” for the visit, including the travel and security bill for him and his team, his time here comes at a considerable cost.

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Harry last visited the Community Recording Studio (CRS) in Nottingham’s St Ann’s area to mark World Mental Health Day in 2019, just two months before he and the Duchess of Sussex announced they were stepping down as senior working royals and moving to North America.

The Duke of Sussex last visited the Community Recording Studio in Nottingham in 2019. Pic: PA
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The Duke of Sussex last visited the Community Recording Studio in Nottingham in 2019. Pic: PA

He is planning to hold a private briefing with Children in Need, the Police and Crime Commission, the CRS and community outreach group Epic Partners in Nottingham, stage informal catch-ups with some of the young people he met before, and watch performances from CRS artists and make a short speech.

Harry appears to be focusing on his philanthropic ventures while his wife, Meghan, works on her lifestyle brand, As Ever. She is not expected to join him on the trip to the UK.

Meghan is not expected to join the duke on his trip. Pic: Netflix
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Meghan is not expected to join the duke on his trip. Pic: Netflix

Senior aides to the King and the duke were pictured together in London this July in what was reported to be an initial step towards opening channels of communication between the two sides.

Harry levelled repeated accusations at the King, Queen, William and Kate in his Oprah interview, Netflix documentary, and memoir Spare. But he outlined hopes for a “reconciliation” with his family in a BBC interview in May.

His sit-down with the BBC came in the wake of a court battle over his security in the UK. His level of security was changed after the couple stepped down as senior royals.

Harry took a legal challenge to the Court of Appeal, which he ultimately lost in May. He said he “can’t see a world in which I would be bringing my wife and children back” to the UK.

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