Lewis Ritson vs Robbie Davies Jr: Brits clash in crucial match on night of important fights in Newcastle

The English fighters do battle in Newcastle on Saturday night

Martin Hines
Saturday 19 October 2019 13:26 BST
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Two of Britain’s most exciting boxers take to the ring tonight in Newcastle as local star Lewis Ritson meets Liverpool’s Robbie Davies Jr in a super lightweight Tyneside grudge match.

Both heavy-handed and both unsure of their ultimate place on the boxing landscape, Ritson and Davies have identical 19-1 records, yet the way each has risen through the ranks could not have been more different.

It’s difficult to believe at this stage, but exactly a year ago, Lewis Ritson was being heralded as one of the best fighters in the country. After a slow start to his professional career, the Geordie hit form in October 2017 with a shock stoppage of Robbie Barrett for the British lightweight title, before enjoying a sensational first nine months of 2018.

Solid domestic names including Joe Murray, Scott Cardle and Paul Hyland Jr were all clinically disposed of by Ritson, whose power and grit saw him earn a succession of early stoppage victories.

Sure, weaknesses were apparent especially in his defence, but as the knockouts continued, the adulation grew, and soon he found himself headlining in Newcastle for the European title a year ago this week.

Ritson won the British lightweight title in 2017 (Getty)
Ritson won the British lightweight title in 2017 (Getty)

Francesco Patera was a name unknown to many prior to the fight, but as each round progressed, the crowd in Newcastle began to understand why he was also challenging for the title. Ritson’s usual tactics were not working, the power was not enough and the aggression was met with skill and guile from his Italian opponent, who was completely unperturbed by the emotion of the night.

After 12 rounds, it was Patera’s hand that was raised in victory by split decision, while through 48 tough, tough minutes, Lewis Ritson had gone from the Geordie Golovkin to Newcastle United era Michael Owen.

2019 has seen Ritson defeat two very average fighters, which leaves tonight as his first legitimate attempt at rejuvenation. Once again Ritson will be the headline act in front of his home fans, but this time a fellow Brit will be in the opposite corner.

While Lewis Ritson enjoyed a year of hype in 2018 that few British fighters have seen, Robbie Davies Jr was starting the year at rock bottom. After establishing a steady, if unspectacular, undefeated record in his first 15 professional fights, Davies suffered his first defeat in July 2017 to Poland’s Michal Syrowatka.

Davies was stopped in the last round of a bruising 12 round contest, despite dropping his opponent in the ninth round of the contest. The defeat was crushing, few fighters with little media attention bounce back from such defeats, and little was expected of the Liverpudlian heading into 2018 and beyond.

Slowly, but surely, he rebounded. An immediate rematch with Syrowatka was successful, with Davies stopping the Pole in the 12th round after previously knocking him down in the third and fourth rounds.

Then, in October 2018, on the same night and same venue where Lewis Ritson lost to Francesco Patera, Robbie Davies won the British super lightweight belt against Newcastle’s own Glenn Foot.

By the time Ritson had tasted defeat, one can only assume Davies was well en route to enjoying one of the best nights of his life.

As they say, one man’s sunset is another man's dawn.

But who will wake up tomorrow morning filled with the light of day? Will it be Lewis Ritson, who has moved up in weight to face Davies, the hometown hero who is loved by his City, both desperate for world class sporting success.

Or will it be Davies, rarely the star, usually the bridesmaid who once again heads to Newcastle and defeats the crowd favourite and moves forward in his career?

Both are strong, both carry power and both are vulnerable. This could be a 12 round war or an early blowout, and it’s exactly the sort of fight to watch on a Saturday night.

British boxing hasn’t experienced enough high level domestic dust-ups this year, but tonight’s Matchroom card is a much needed throwback to the events of previous years with several important fights on the same bill.

Can we have these every week?

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