Frank Warren
Frank Warren, Britain’s premier and longest-serving boxing promoter, has been building champions in the professional sport for nearly 45 years and was acknowledged for his work across the industry in 2008 with his entrance into the International Hall of Fame.
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The Big Interview – Liam Walsh
By Queensberry Promotions
By Richard Hubbard
The boxing bar is set high by Liam Walsh when he gets to work on his artistry on canvas, so much so that when Andrey Klimov couldn't beat him up in their final eliminator back in October, he did a pretty good job of it himself.
In his own head, anyway.
Not happy with putting on a textbook demonstration of punching without absorbing anything in the way of return fire, Walsh was not a happy bunny when he plonked himself down on the ring apron to address the BoxNation viewers for the post-fight debrief.
Far from content with having secured himself a shot at the IBF world super featherweight title, the concerns of Walsh were closer to home.
To his mind and rationale, he had been involved in a boring and one-sided fight that wasn't worthy of fans parting with their hard earned.
His work was perhaps an exhibition for the purists, but there were no groans in Harrow from the raucous Farmy Army who had made their way across from Norfolk.
Walsh acknowledged beforehand that a final eliminator carried semi-final connotations, so caution was probably the order of the night, but it was only in the following days that he eased up on himself.
After all, it takes two to tear-up.
"I was happier when I went back and watched on TV, to be honest," admitted Walsh, still not displaying any great enthusiasm over his precise punch-picking. "The reason I was a bit annoyed on the night is because I was hyped for the fight, really pumped up and had got into the mentality that we'd have to really dig down and find something out about ourselves.
"That didn't happen so I was a bit disappointed. I was also a little disappointed with him because he's got to go for broke at some point - he was seven or eight rounds down and didn't go for it.
"It made for soppy viewing really, but after watching it back, it was not too bad."
Walsh had convinced himself that Klimov was going to present a formidable obstacle to him realising his ambitions, that his resolve and resilience would be extended to the absolute limit.
When, all said and done, he was simply too good for the rated Russian.
"I expected him to make me apply more pressure and expected more from him, but looking back I should have done more because if he wasn't going to take me places then maybe I should have forced it myself.
"I was forever being urged to be sensible and keep doing what I was doing because I was winning comfortably."
Walsh isn't a gung-ho operator by trade, his game is to saturate the spirit of his opponent then take him out when carelessness inevitably sets in.
In October, he was being constantly harangued by his brothers Michael and Ryan, along with trainer Graham Everett, not to go for broke. They knew the game was up for Klimov and weren't about to let him play his joker.
Walsh took the instructions on board and let his jab continue to do the talking, but he also reasoned that orders don't always have to be obeyed. They just were on this occasion.
"It all lies with me really, doesn't it? It definitely had an effect on my performance though and the way I went about it.
"From six or seven onwards, with no cornermen in there or if I was just getting a sip of water off somebody, I would've 100 per cent starting pushing on the gas. Probably from the knockdown (round 6) - ok, it was only a flash knockdown - but I was sort of getting my way from that point.
"I definitely understand and, looking back in hindsight, it probably was the right thing to do. But I would have liked to have made a big statement and tried to get him out of there."
So Klimov made it to the cards and Walsh's celebrated like a Norfolk Turkey who just realised December was looming.
"I don't do myself any favours and come across as this little miserable arsehole," he reflected, realising people might get him all wrong. "I am not that guy though, I'm alright, I'm sound and I'm happy every day almost.
"I love my job, I love fighting, but I do look back and think 'what do I come across like?'."
Walsh then took his seat in the world title waiting room, listening out for the call to come up against the champion, Jose Pedraza.
The wait was longer than he first imagined when news broke of the IBF granting Pedraza an interim voluntary defence against Floyd Mayweather jnr protégé, Gervonta Davis.
Queue jumping has always been considered anti-social and Walsh was naturally narked over being bypassed for the January date.
Pedraza, however, made a costly error in entertaining the challenge of a dangerous interloper.
'Sniper' Pedraza backfired and the Puerto Rican was gunned down in round seven at Brooklyn's Barclays Center.
"Definitely, costly to his career, maybe not so much to his pocket!" added Walsh, trying to make sense of the defence. "Fair play to him, he's got to do what's right for him and he obviously felt that was the right decision taking on Gervonta.
"Ok, he will have got paid well, but that's not to say he might have taken on Gervonta thinking it was the easier fight. He was relatively unknown, although people in the business knew about him, but he might have taken that fight thinking it would be easier than fighting myself. Style-wise he might have thought it suited him, I don't know."
Walsh does not dismiss the theory that Pedraza might have been cashing out at the weight, with rumours of him struggling to hit the 130lbs limit having been circulating for some time.
"Yeah, true, there are a lot of different opinions about why he took the fight or why he performed the way he did, but in this game you've just got to put your hands up and say you lost to the better man on the night and keep it all to yourself.
"For whatever reasons he didn't perform well, it was his fault."
Walsh, along with his promoter Frank Warren, is adamant that he too would have executed a similar demolition job on Pedraza, but that proposed catch can now be consigned to the 'one that got away bin.
It did bug him for a bit, but he now gets to cast his net in the direction of a bigger fish from a bigger pond.