Thursday 20 October 2016 17:06, UK
Frankie Gavin has vowed to knock out rival Sam Eggington when they meet at Birmingham's Barclaycard Arena on Saturday, live on Sky Sports.
Gavin and Eggington meet in a local derby that has grown fiercer by the day as the stakes become clear. Promoter Eddie Hearn told Thursday's press conference that the loser's career at the top level could be finished, a fate both fighters agreed with.
Gavin boxed for a world title when he met IBF champion Kell Brook in May 2015 and was set to fight Eggington for his British and Commonwealth belts a year ago but Gavin pulled out with a foot injury.
Eggington has since surrendered those crowns to Bradley Skeete, who Gavin beat in November 2014, and Gavin believes that he'll claim the vacant WBC International crown and move onto bigger things with a KO victory.
"I beat Sam every day of the week," said Gavin. "We know what Sam is going to do, he's going to come and fight because he can't sit off me, so it's up to me to keep him off me, box his head off and land my big shots.
"He's not the brightest, you can tell that by listening to him, but he's game and he's got grit, determination and gives it 100 per cent, so this is going to be a tough fight. He's not got the best boxing IQ. I will say what I want about him though because I am going to knock him out.
"Skeete beat Sam easy. Before that fight Sam was getting rid of everyone, but the minute he gets in with a mover, he struggles. I probably won't move as much as Skeete but my lateral and head movement is better and I punch inside better.
"This is the only domestic fight I would take. I want to make an impact on the world scene and it's fighting the likes of Chris van Heerden after this one that would get me back up there.
"Hearing that he's more spiteful in the gym since losing to Skeete is just nonsense. You know what you are going to get with Sam, he's not going to come out and be technical; he's just going to come forward. He's technically poor and I am a lot harder to hit than Skeete, I am a smaller target and a southpaw. Even if he has improved, it's not going to make any difference, I am better than him and I'm going to stop him."
Gavin and Eggington clash on a huge night of action in Birmingham with the chief-support provided by 2012 Olympic bronze medal star Anthony Ogogo meeting Birmingham's Craig Cunningham for the vacant WBC international middleweight title.