George Liddard British middleweight champion

Liddard Outpoints Denny to Retain British Middleweight Title

George Liddard retains his British and Commonwealth middleweight titles with a commanding unanimous decision over Tyler Denny at the Copper Box Arena in London, adding the IBF Intercontinental belt to his collection.

  • Liddard retains British and Commonwealth middleweight titles at Copper Box Arena in London
  • All three judges score it 116-112 for the 14-0 unbeaten fighter
  • IBF Intercontinental belt also on the line and claimed by Liddard in triple title defence
  • Denny showed grit but accuracy and movement of Liddard proved the difference

A Proper Domestic Battle

Right then, this is what domestic boxing should look like. George Liddard defended his British and Commonwealth middleweight titles against Tyler Denny at the Copper Box Arena in London, and it was a proper British middleweight scrap. The kind of fight that reminds you why you love watching boxing at this level—no nonsense, just two men fighting for something that matters. Liddard's unbeaten record now stands at 14-0, and there's no shame in how he picked up this dominant victory. Three judges all saw it the same way: 116-112, 116-112, 116-112. That's not controversial. That's not close. That's a clear win for the champion.

Fast Start, Denny's Response

Liddard came out sharp, getting Denny off balance in the opening rounds. The 14-0 fighter's movement and accuracy were evident from the bell. But here's where you have to credit Denny—the former European champion showed his experience early on, clinching and wrestling through the opening exchanges. That's not cowardice, that's tactics. He was trying to disrupt Liddard's rhythm and get into a phone booth battle. By Round 3, Denny was beginning to find his range. He got the better of some exchanges at close quarters, working to the body and mixing things up. For a moment, it looked like Denny might impose himself on this fight. Denny's got heavy hands when he's engaged properly, and the Copper Box Arena sensed this could tighten up.

Accuracy Wins the Day

But Liddard's accuracy and movement proved the crucial difference over the full twelve rounds. The unbeaten fighter stayed disciplined, avoiding Denny's search for combinations and landing the cleaner shots when they came. It wasn't flashy. It wasn't particularly entertaining if you're after a brawl. But it was professional, it was intelligent, and most importantly, it was effective. This was a triple title defence—the British, Commonwealth, and IBF Intercontinental belts all on the line—and Liddard handled the pressure like someone destined for bigger things. There's a composure about him that suggests this level won't contain him for much longer.

What's Next?

Denny showed enough grit to suggest he's not done at this level, but this loss might force him to reassess. He's a decent fighter, but he's been around enough to know when he's facing someone with the potential to go further. Rebuilding might be the order of the day. For Liddard, though, this is a statement. The 14-0 record demands bigger fights now. European title shots. World title eliminator bouts. The levels he's conquering now—solid domestic opposition—they're not enough anymore. Liddard's got the tools, the record, and the composure. The boxing world's eyes should be turning his way. This was exactly the kind of fight that makes domestic boxing great. Two fighters going to war for real titles, putting in proper work, and letting the scorecards tell the story. Liddard's time is coming. Question is: who gets the call next?

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