George Kambosos outpoints Liam Wyllie via UD12 – barely scrapes past Whyllie: Well done, George—just about got past a bloke no one’s ever heard of. Wyllie came in with nothing to lose and gave him hell. Took him the full twelve and actually had him in bother more than once. Not exactly the return Kambosos fans were dreaming of, was it?
By round 9, Kambosos was leaking from the brow, swinging wild, and getting dragged into scraps by a kid meant to be a tune-up. Wyllie kept marching forward, ate his best shots, and laughed while doing it.
Sure, Kambosos edged most rounds with a few tidy counters off the back foot, but the fact he had to dig this deep against Wyllie? Yeah, good luck surviving a top-contender with that form. Judges scores: 117-111, 117-111, 115-113 for Kambosos.
– So much for the homecoming. Skye Nicolson walked in as champ, left empty-handed. Tiara Brown came to Sydney, ignored the crowd, and roughed her up in front of everyone. No drama, no excuses—just took it.
Brown forced her way inside all night, shut down Nicolson’s range, and turned the fight into a scrap. Nicolson had a few sharp moments, but nothing that took control. Brown dragged her into a brawl and beat her at it.
Split decision on paper, but the right fighter got the win. Nicolson was outworked. Skye Nicolson (97-93, 96-94, 94-96).
– To’omua Teremoana destroys Navdeep Singh via TKO1: Singh landed one clean shot early… and that was his entire night. Teremoana didn’t flinch, came straight back and started breaking him down straight away.
Singh tried swinging wild over the top—Teremoana just walked through it and kept landing. Then boom—massive left hook drops Singh hard. He got up, but shouldn’t have bothered.
Teremoana unloaded more bombs, another left, then a right—ref jumps in. Over in one. Brutal. Singh looked like he’d turned up for a spar and ended up in a demolition job.
– Cherneka Johnson hammers Nina Hughes: Hughes had no chance. From the opening bell, she looked a step behind and stayed there. Johnson was sharper, quicker, and meaner—busted Hughes’ nose early and just kept slicing her up.
In round 7, Johnson landed a clean left hook, and that was it—Hughes’ corner threw in the towel. No knockdown, no serious trouble, just a one-sided beating from start to finish.
Hughes never looked like she belonged in there. Johnson controlled every round, landed at will, and never let Hughes into the fight. The stoppage might’ve been soft, but there was no point dragging it on. Total dominance.
– Imam Khataev just went the full ten rounds for the first time—and still battered Durval Palacio from bell to bell. Scores were wide as they come: 99-89, 99-89, 98-90. Palacio’s face told the story, even if he somehow stayed on his feet.
Khataev marched through him with no guard, ate some shots on purpose just to swing back harder. Round 9? He rocked Palacio with a right hand and nearly closed the show, but the bloke wouldn’t drop. Round 10? Khataev coasted—landed combos, shrugged off a few counters, and still bossed the last minute.
Tough lad Palacio, but Khataev didn’t need a stoppage to make it ugly. Controlled violence, start to finish.
– Hemi Ahio flattened Aekkaphob Auraiwan in round one—TKO, straight mugging.
– Jayden Buan boxed up Jordan Kasilieris over four, clean sweep on two cards (40-36, 40-36), one gave a pity round (39-37). Still a shutout.
