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.
Image: 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.
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.
Image: 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.
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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.”
Three men have been jailed for a combined total of 99 years for plotting to murder a member of a gang that carried out Britain’s biggest-ever cash robbery.
Paul Allen, 46, was shot twice as he stood in his kitchen in Woodford, east London, on 11 July 2019.
He was a member of the Securitas heist gang that stole £54m from a cash depot in Tonbridge, Kent, in 2006.
The former cage fighter was living in a large detached rented house with his partner and three young children after being released from an 18-year prison sentence over the raid.
The attack at his home has left him paralysed from the chest down.
Louis Ahearne, 36, Stewart Ahearne, 46, and Daniel Kelly, 46, denied conspiring to murder Allen but were found guilty last month following a trial at the Old Bailey.
The trio were sentenced at the Old Bailey in central London on Friday.
Kelly was sentenced to 36 years in prison and an extra five years on licence, Louis Ahearne was jailed for 33 years, and his sibling Stewart Ahearne – 30 years.
Image: Damage to the kitchen door. Pic: Met Police/PA
Image: A bullet casing found in the back garden. Pic: Met Police
Prosecutors did not give a motive for the murder plot, though they described the victim as a “sophisticated” career criminal.
Detectives said the shooting could seem like “the plot [of] a Hollywood blockbuster” but added it was actually “horrific criminality” from “hardened organised criminals”.
In her sentencing remarks, the judge said she believed the trio “were motivated by a promise of financial gain”.
Judge Sarah Whitehouse KC said: “I have no doubt that this agreement to murder Paul Allen involved other people apart from the three of you and that you three were motivated by a promise of financial gain.
“The culpability of each one of you is very high.
“The harm caused to the victim was very serious – indeed, short of killing him it could hardly be more serious. He is currently paralysed and relies on others for every single need.”
The shooting was just the latest act in a long list of criminal deeds. The day before, Kelly and Louise Ahearne used a rented car to carry out a burglary in Kent, accessing the gated community by pretending to be police officers.
A month before that, the trio had stolen more than $3.5m (£2.78m) worth of Ming dynasty antiques from the Museum of Far Eastern Arts in Geneva, for which the Ahearne brothers had been jailed in Switzerland.
Kelly is also wanted in Japan over the robbery of a Tokyo jewellery store in 2015 in which a security guard was punched in the face.
A man has been jailed for life for the murder of university lecturer Claire Chick.
Paul Butler was sentenced to a minimum term of 27 years for killing his estranged wife after a six-month campaign of stalking and harassment when he refused to accept their relationship was over.
Ms Chick, 48, was found seriously injured on West Hoe Road in Plymouth just before 9pm on 22 January. She was taken to hospital, but died the next day.
Previously known as Claire Butler, Ms Chick worked at the University of Plymouth.
Image: Paul Butler has been jailed for murder. Pic: Devon & Cornwall Police
She died after a frenzied attack outside her home – the attack a culmination of months of harassment, stalking and violence at the hands of Butler.
Following her death, Devon and Cornwall Police made a referral to the police watchdog due to previous contact prior to her death.
Jo Martin KC, prosecuting, said Ms Chick had made six statements to the police about Butler and he had been arrested three times.
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In her final statement to police the day before he killed her outside her own home, she said: “I only feel that Butler will kill me if further action is not taken. I am in fear of leaving my house.”
Butler was arrested around 20 miles away in the Liskeard area on 24 January.
He was sentenced on Friday at Plymouth Crown Court, having previously pleaded guilty to murder, and to one charge of possession of a bladed article.
‘I loved Claire’
The family of Ms Chick told the court how her murder left a “huge void” in their lives.
Her eldest daughter, Bethany Hancock-Baxter, described Butler as “evil”.
She said: “I want this evil man to listen to me. I want you to know what you have done to us as a family.
“Despite all the hate I have for you, I cannot bring myself to do what you did to my mum – that’s because I am not evil like you.”
Her sister, Lydia Peers, said Butler was a “parasite”.
After her short-lived marriage to Butler, Ms Chick began a relationship with another man, Paul Maxwell.
Mr Maxwell spoke from the witness box and repeatedly stared at the defendant as he spoke. Butler stared back at him.
“I loved Claire. She was beautiful, funny and kind,” Mr Maxwell said.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.
Following the funeral, and after nine days of mourning, cardinals from around the world will gather in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel to cast their votes, with white smoke announcing to the world when a new pope has been elected.
Image: Cardinal Vincent Nichols speaks to Sky’s Anna Botting
Cardinal Nichols told Sky’s Anna Botting: “I hope nobody goes into this conclave, as it were, with the sole purpose of wanting to win. I think it’s very important that we go in wanting to listen to each other… It has to be together, trying to sense what God wants next. Not just for the church.”
He described the procession that took Pope Francis to lie in state as “the most moving thing I’ve ever attended here”.
Describing the Pope as a “master of the gesture and the phrase”, he also recalled the pontiff’s last journey away from the Vatican.
Cardinal Nichols said Pope Francis had visited the Regina Coeli prison, telling the inmates: “You know, except for the grace of God, it could well have been me … Don’t lose hope, God has you written in his heart.”
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‘Pope touched the hearts of millions’
The Pope later told his doctor his last regret was not being able to wash the feet of the prisoners during that visit.
Becoming emotional, he also said the final message he would like to have given Pope Francis is “thank you”.
The 88-year-old died peacefully on Easter Monday, the Vatican confirmed.
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Where will Pope Francis be buried?
Talking about the seating plan at the funeral, Cardinal Nichols said he understood it to be “royalty first, then heads of state, then political leaders”.
Worldwide geopolitical tensions mean that many eyes will be on interactions between heads of state at the event, with particular focus on Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy following their tense meeting at the Oval Office in February.
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Looking back at the last papal funeral, Cardinal Nichols described the seating of the then Prince Charles one seat away from Zimbabwean present Robert Mugabe as “obviously a little bit tense”.
Cardinal Nichols explained event would be “exactly the same Catholic rite as everyone else – just on a grander scale”.
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3D map shows pope’s funeral route
In a break from tradition, Pope Francis will be the first pope in a century to be interred outside the Vatican – and will instead be laid to rest at his favourite church, Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica in Rome’s Esquilino neighbourhood.
He will also be buried in just one simple wooden coffin, instead of the traditional three coffins which are usually used for pontiffs.
Born in Crosby near Liverpool, Cardinal Vincent Nichols hoped to be a lorry driver as a child – but as a teenager reportedly felt the calling to join the priesthood while watching Liverpool FC.
As cardinal, he is known for leading the church’s work tackling human trafficking and modern slavery, for which he received the UN Path to Peace Award.
He was criticised by the UK’s Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which said he “demonstrated a lack of understanding” of the impact of abuse and “seemingly put the reputation of the church first”.
Cardinal Nichols, responding to the findings, previously told Sky News he was “ashamed at what has happened in the context of the Catholic Church” and promised to improve the church’s response.
He has appeared to rule himself out of the running for pope, telling reporters he was “too old, not capable”.