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Boxing Betting: Froch will learn lessons from Khan defeat

Boxing Betting RSS / / 13 December 2011 /

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Carl Froch beat Glen Johnson in the US, why can't he do it again?

Carl Froch beat Glen Johnson in the US, why can't he do it again?

"Khan knows that, in boxing, away wins come at a much higher price. While Khan couldn't deal with Peterson's brawling style, Froch is far more experienced and streetwise. If the going gets rough, he'll get going with it and do what he has to do."

Experienced and streetwise British boxer Carl Froch has been here before - fighting a tough foe in a hostile atmosphere far from home. But, where Amir Khan failed last weekend, the Nottingham slugger will concentrate solely on the task in hand across all 12 rounds

Another night, another refereeing row. This time it was Manchester City grumbling about a penalty they never got at Stamford Bridge.The day before we had Harry Redknapp claiming a mixture of Chris Foy and his linesman had cost Spurs a match at Stoke. The list of complaints has been growing all season.

And it's not just football. Amir Khan's camp were so upset by his controversial defeat to Lamont Peterson in the early hours of Sunday morning that they have lodged an official complaint as well as demanding an immediate rematch.

Given that he was deducted two points in a fight in Washington, against a Washington fighter, by a referee who has hardly ever taken charge of a fight outside of Washington you can see why. And one of the judge's cards had been clearly altered to take a vital round away from him.

The plans for an rematch with Peterson - likely to be in Las Vegas on March 31 - will destroy any hope that Sheffield's Kell Brook was nursing of an all-British light welterweight world title fight early in 2012. Brook has his own first taste of fighting in America this weekend on the undercard of Carl Froch's Super Six final against Andre Ward.

Froch will hopefully have been watching the Khan fight closely. He shouldn't need to be told that, to beat an American in America, you're normally best to knock the guy out rather than trust the judges. After all he thrashed Glen Johnson in Atlantic City but one of the judges scored it a draw; and he also was way ahead when he beat Andre Dirrell but one judge said he'd lost the fight.

Thankfully Froch knows that in boxing, away wins come at a much higher price. While Khan couldn't deal with Peterson's brawling style, Froch is far more experienced and streetwise. If the going gets rough, he'll get going with it and do what he has to do.

It's why backing Froch at [3.85] has to be fantastic value. He started the Super Six tournament as a big outsider and has fought his way to the final. He won't stop scrapping now - and, like Khan, if he doesn't make it all the way to the unified titles he'll blame nobody but himself.

Five things you might not know about Kell Brook

1. Born May 1986 in Sheffield, his proper name is Ezekiel

2. He was hyperactive as a child and at the age of nine his dad Terry, a property developer, took him to the boxing gym to try to work out some energy

3. He beat Nathan Cleverly by one vote to be named the 2009 Young British Boxer of the Year.

4. He switched to Barry Hearn's stable after a fall out with former manager Frank Warren over several incidents in his private life - they included a conviction for assault which was subsequently overturned on appeal.

5. His training routine: "Up at six, do a circuit. Return to the gym at 11 to do my pads and bags. Come back again around four to do my shadow, sparring and sit-ups. On Tuesdays and Thursdays I also do weights."

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