Katie Taylor ‘ready to go’ as she puts titles on the line against Natasha Jonas

Taylor may be cautious knowing her opponent will be trying to land one magical punch

The last time Katie Taylor fought a southpaw professionally was 2017 in a world title eliminator in Wembley Stadium on the under card of Anthony Joshua's heavyweight defeat of Vladimir Klitschko. It was Taylor's fifth fight after leaving amateur boxing following a disappointing Rio Olympics.

That night Nina Meinke returned to the lockerroom in the seventh round of a scheduled 10, when the referee decided the German boxer had taken enough punishment.

Good karma for Taylor, who has now gone 17 straight fights unbeaten. It is another lefty she faces in the Manchester Arena om Saturday night in Liverpool's Natasha Jonas, with her undisputed lightweight world titles going on the line.

Jonas comes to the table with a scratchy record of nine wins and one defeat from 11 bouts with an unlikely draw against world champion Terri Harper last summer, a contest some "experts" predicted would be over within two rounds.

READ MORE

“My preparation hasn’t really changed much from fight to fight,” said Taylor this week. “Obviously the sparring partners have changed. That’s the only part that actually changes during the training camp.

“So, I’ve had some southpaws sparing there for the last few months so that’s never an issue really. So, yeah, I’m feeling very, very good. I fought a southpaw before the girl Meinke early on in my pro career. But that was a late replacement as well.

“This is the first time I actually have proper southpaw sparring as a pro. I feel in good shape, ready to go, but nothing has really changed in training, just the sparring partners.”

Third bout

Taylor will be pawing the dirt to get out for only her third bout since November 2019. She managed two contests last year in the pandemic, and for her that is a slow year. This is her first of 2021.

Jonas is moving up about five pounds from super featherweight, and her warning has been not unlike the stream of fighters that Taylor has seen off before. One punch to land can change everything, a fight detail about which Jonas has being reminding Taylor all week.

It is a valid point, but one nobody has been able to execute against one of the best technicians in boxing, male or female. Taylor will probably always have that expertise advantage against opponents.

If Jonas is to learn anything from previous fights it was how Delphine Persoon crowded Taylor and seduced her into a punching battle in the first of the two outings. Both were hitting each other like a piñata to see who cracked first and it was very nearly Taylor.

“I don’t feel any pressure. I look at those performances as great victories, the first fight was a lot closer, but I think I showed in the first fight that I have a lot of heart and a lot of grit and determination, and I came out with a gruelling win,” said Taylor.

“The second fight was obviously a lot more clear cut and a great performance, so I felt really good after that fight. I don’t feel under pressure at all really. There is pressure going into every fight, because I am aware that often I am the favourite.

“But that’s a good thing as well. Pressure is a privilege, and I feel pressure to be in the position where I am winning fights and my record as a fighter is a good one, and that’s why there is pressure because it’s a test that you are doing well in the ring.”

Offensive position

For the fans who can’t remember back to the London Olympics in 2012, Taylor’s first bout of the games against Jonas was the best of the competition, with both amateurs adopting an offensive position.

That again would work for Jonas but Taylor may be more cautious knowing her opponent will be dying to release her left backhand and discover the magical one punch that lands and can end a contest.

Otherwise it is difficult to see how Jonas can do damage against the quicker hand speed of Taylor, her positional movement and ability to land combinations.

The co-main event to Derek Chisora and Joseph Parker, the lightweight bout is expected to get under way at around 9pm on Matchroom.tv.

Johnny Watterson

Johnny Watterson

Johnny Watterson is a sports writer with The Irish Times