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When Amir Khan and Kell Brook settle their score on Saturday night, they can finally join the list of British boxing’s most heated, personal, hate-fuelled rivalries.

That’s a dealbreaker in our top 10 UK feuds: there’s no Ricky Hatton-Junior Witter, AJ-Tyson Fury or any other pair who haven’t actually fought. Each of these fierce rivals traded blows in the ring – and also sometimes at press conferences, in car parks or in a filthy ditch outside a posh hotel. Let the countdown begin.

Khan and Brook will settle their differences in the ring when they meet live on talkSPORT
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Khan and Brook will settle their differences in the ring when they meet live on talkSPORTCredit: Getty

10. Tony Bellew and Nathan Cleverly

Bellew’s lucrative dislike of David Haye was a bit panto when compared to his bitter feelings towards fellow light-heavyweight Cleverly: the unassuming maths graduate who Tony really wanted to make hear the 10 count. Welshman Cleverly narrowly won the first fight on points but was called a “lying scumbag” by Bellew for his post-fight excuses. The Liverpudlian got revenge in the rematch but the lack of sizzling action meant a decider never happened. Go figure.

9. Anthony Joshua and Dillian Whyte

Whyte brought an amateur win and a skill in needling Britain’s golden boy to this heavyweight showdown at an electric O2 Arena in 2015. The underdog labelled AJ a 'skinny bodybuilder' (bit of a weird analogy), while Joshua had pal Stormzy performing ‘Shut Up’ live during his ring entrance. The fight was a cracker, AJ hurting Whyte early, getting rocked himself by a left hook, then producing a spectacular KO in round seven. Grudge settled (for now).

AJ was very aggressive in the early stages of his career, especially when he met his London rival Whyte
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AJ was very aggressive in the early stages of his career, especially when he met his London rival WhyteCredit: Getty Images - Getty
Their fight spilled over with punches after the bell in round one
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Their fight spilled over with punches after the bell in round oneCredit: Getty Images - Getty

8. Joe Calzaghe and Robin Reid

Part-time model Reid vs clean-cut Calzaghe was built on a row we can all relate to: who’s the most handsome? But behind the playboy hype to their 1999 fight, a real animosity grew. Calzaghe’s cockiness riled the talented but usually placid Reid to the point where he was bellowing at Sky’s TV cameras during his ring entrance. The result: a razor thin split-decision win for ‘Super Joe’ – nobody came closer than Reid to beating this all-time great at 168lb.

7. Herbie Hide and Michael Bentt

A Nigeria-born Brit and a London-born American, but we’re 100 per cent claiming this heavyweight feud. Before their 1994 fight, Bentt and Hide’s photo op at a fancy London hotel ended with the pair wrestling in a puddle on live TV. “I tore my suit, he grabbed me, I fell on my knees, he punched me. It was an ugly mess,” Bentt recalled. The short-tempered Mr Hide won the fight at Millwall’s Den by KO, Bentt suffering injuries that ended his boxing career (though thankfully he fully recovered).

6. David Haye and Derek Chisora

Haye interrupted Chisora’s post-fight presser in 2012 to challenge Vitali Klitschko but instead got Del Boy up in his grill, so retaliated by detonating a right hand (holding a half-drunk bottle) onto Chisora’s chin. “He glassed me!” cried Derek, the Hayemaker fled Germany, and their eventual in-ring showdown was sanctioned by the Luxembourg Boxing Federation as the BBBofC wouldn't touch it. Haye won by (bottle-free) KO, then in a plot twist worthy of a Rocky film, later ended up managing Chisora.

Haye and Chisora brawled at a press conference in 2012
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Haye and Chisora brawled at a press conference in 2012Credit: BoxNation
Then all the theatrics came out for their actual fight, including a fence separating them at a media event to promote the event
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Then all the theatrics came out for their actual fight, including a fence separating them at a media event to promote the eventCredit: Getty Images - Getty

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5. George Groves and James DeGale

No rivalry cuts deeper than one that starts as kids. These two Dale Youth products had to train at different times as they hated the sight of one another. Groves edged their only amateur contest but DeGale made the Olympic team, winning gold in 2008. The buildup to their early-career fight bristled with ugly insults and the fallout – after Groves won a decision that could have gone either way – was no better. Probably still have to schedule their Tesco trips to avoid one another to this day.

4. Lennox Lewis and Frank Bruno

For two mild-mannered gents, there was a nasty edge to Britain’s beloved ‘Big Frank’ facing London-born – but with a stint in Canada – Lewis in 1993. It crystallised in one phrase: “Uncle Tom”. Lewis insisted he didn’t say it, but Bruno was sure it came from the champion’s camp. Their 3am fight in a rainy Cardiff Arms Park saw Bruno make a strong start until Lewis caught him with a wild left hook then finished the job. Years later, after Bruno beat Oliver McCall for his world title, he wept post-fight: “I’m not an Uncle Tom. I’m not a sell-out.”

3. Mark Kaylor and Errol Christie

Only a 1985 British middleweight title eliminator but the most toxic fight on this list. Christie claimed Kaylor used a racist slur at a press event and the pair brawled. The end result: hefty fines, police surrounding the ring and simmering racial tension at Wembley Arena (Cass Pennant, an infamous West Ham hooligan, was reportedly hired to keep the peace).

The fight was a barnburner that saw both men down in the opening round, Kaylor floored again in the third, but Christie overwhelmed in the eighth. But unfortunately that’s only half the tale.

The 1993 bout between Lewis and Bruno featured two Brits fighting for a world heavyweight title for the first time in history
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The 1993 bout between Lewis and Bruno featured two Brits fighting for a world heavyweight title for the first time in historyCredit: Getty
Froch and Groves had two memorable battles in the ring and the former settled the dispute with his KO in their second fight
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Froch and Groves had two memorable battles in the ring and the former settled the dispute with his KO in their second fightCredit: Getty Images - Getty
Benn vs Eubank will go down in boxing folklore
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Benn vs Eubank will go down in boxing folkloreCredit: Getty Images - Getty

2. Carl Froch and George Groves

Groves got inside Froch’s head, then dented his granite chin in their 2013 fight, dumping the champion onto the canvas in round one. Howard Foster’s controversial round-nine stoppage eventually took away Groves’ chance of finishing the upset but perfectly set up a rematch. The bad blood continued but this time Froch got mentally prepared, almost handshaked Groves’ arm off, then scored a brutal KO in front of what we’re reliably informed was 80,000 people at Wembley Stadium.

1. Chris Eubank and Nigel Benn

Blue-collar, ex-army, working-class icon Benn was never going to like the preening, monocle-wearing Eubank who called boxing “a mug’s game”. The hate was so raw that Benn couldn’t even look at Eubank when they signed their contracts for their 1990 world title fight on live TV. It lived up to the hype, a fiery war with both men hurt but Eubank victorious by ninth-round KO.

The 1993 rematch, ‘Judgement Day’ at Old Trafford – watched by over 18 million people live on ITV – was even closer: a draw declared after a rousing 12th round. Unbelievably, relations have thawed between ‘Simply the Best’ and ‘The Dark Destroyer’ in retirement. But if their sons fight any time in the future, don’t be surprised if both dads suddenly want to tear into one another on the undercard.

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Dishonourable mentions: Billy Joe Saunders and Chris Eubank Jr, Joe Bugner and Henry Cooper, Johnny Nelson and Carl Thompson, Michael Gomez and Alex Arthur, Tony Bellew and David Haye


Amir Khan vs Kell Brook is live on talkSPORT on 19 February from 10pm

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