Gerome Warburton says the British title is coming home with him

GEROME WARBURTON goes by the ring monicker of โ€˜The Bread Makerโ€™, but he might more accurately be called โ€˜The Fortune Tellerโ€™.

However you slice it, you canโ€™t argue when he claims โ€œall the things I spoke about have happenedโ€.

Warburton is harking back to our first meeting, more than five years ago, when he was a novice pro saying all the things youโ€™d expect of a young 5-0 fighter.

He told me he was going to win a Welsh championship, that he would one day fight for a British title, and most of all, that he was bound for the biggest stages.

โ€œImagine me fighting for Eddie Hearn on DAZN,โ€ he said at the time. โ€œJust watch me go!โ€

We can do exactly that on Saturday. Warburton has also, as predicted, won a Welsh title and will fulfil the prophecy of fighting for a British championship when he meets Kieron Conway for the vacant middleweight honours (and Conwayโ€™s Commonwealth crown) on the Johnny Fisher-Dave Allen II card at Londonโ€™s Copper Box Arena, live on DAZN.

But should he triumph and take two more belts back to Colwyn Bay on the North Wales coast, it will not be a case of mission complete. Now, the goals are bigger. Never mind Wales โ€“ Warburton wants the world.

โ€œAnybody can talk about world titles,โ€ he says, โ€œbut I could be two fights away.

โ€œConway is European mandatory, so if I beat him, I assume that position. [European champion] Denzel Bentley is gonna fight Zhanibek [Alimkhanuly, the IBF and WBO ruler], so I could pick up the vacant European title โ€“ and that gives you a world rating.โ€

Bold talk from a man who, for now at least, is relatively little known on the wider boxing scene, and who comes from an area with a minimal pro boxing presence. Only two fighters from North Wales have contested a British championship, neither of them successfully (Rhyl heavyweight Carl Gizzi in 1969, and Connahโ€™s Quay middleweight Tom Doran in 2016). Warburton has spent his entire career boxing away from home, but believes this leaves him well prepared.

โ€œIโ€™ve always boxed away,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™ve always been one whoโ€™ll take my chances. I ainโ€™t got nothing to lose.

โ€œLook at Shakiel Thompson โ€“ he was offered a title shot [against Alimkhanuly] and 300 grand, and he refused. Why? When opportunities arise, thereโ€™s no turning back. You might not get another chance.โ€

โ€˜The Bread Makerโ€™ turned pro in 2019 to precisely no fanfare.

โ€œIt got to the point in the amateurs where I was positive I was gonna win Welsh championships, but I was beating my opponents and not getting the decision,โ€ he says. โ€œ[Then-stablemate] Sion [Yaxley] was turning over, so I thought to myself, โ€˜just go and do it; I may as well give it a tryโ€™.โ€

Warburtonโ€™s willingness to accept a challenge was immediately obvious. His first pro fight was in the away corner, against a ticket-selling local, in the iconic setting of Londonโ€™s York Hall.

โ€œI was in the gym when I got a message from Chris [Sanigar], โ€˜do you want this fight?โ€™ I thought it was a joke!โ€ he says. โ€œGoing to York Hall for your first fight is something in itself; something to tell everyone. Itโ€™s such a historic place.

โ€œHe [Celal Ozturk of Hackney] was also 0-0 but he had bear fans, and nobody knew me. But I ended up stopping him in two rounds.โ€

If Warburton thought spoiling Ozturkโ€™s pro plans at the first hurdle would kickstart his own, he was mistaken. He did occupy the โ€œhomeโ€ corner for the next couple of years (with the exception of a lockdown-era trip to Spain), albeit in Manchester, where he boxed for Kieran Farrellโ€™s Vicious Promotions, but was far from enthused by the competition.

He had talked with Boxing News in 2022 about his frustrations when facing journeymen, trying to find a finish against men seeking to โ€œsurvive like wounded animalsโ€, the grind of selling tickets while โ€œtelling your fans youโ€™re boxing someone with a hundred lossesโ€, and of the comedown of following a Welsh title win with a four-rounder against a serial loser.

Accordingly, Warburton hasnโ€™t had to be asked twice when offered more meaningful fights โ€“ even if he wasnโ€™t supposed to win them.

โ€œThe Welsh title at four weeksโ€™ notice [w pts 10 Morgan Jones, May 2022]; British title eliminator at six weeksโ€™ notice [w pts 10 Aaron Sutton, February 2024]; a massive jump up against Ryan Kelly on Channel 5 [d pts 10, June 2024]; Spain on two weeksโ€™ notice against a good, rated kid [l pts 6 Jhon Jader Obregon in Spain in December 2021]; I was thrown into York Hall on my debut against a big ticket seller and won.

โ€œNo one ever thought I was meant to win them fights. Taking a fight on a few weeksโ€™ notice, people usually do that for money โ€“  I did it โ€™cos I believe in myself.โ€

And he believes in himself against Conway.

โ€œI ainโ€™t putting pressure on myself, โ€™cos I already know Iโ€™ll win,โ€ he says. โ€œAm I favourite? No. But Iโ€™ve always proved people wrong. Everyone from here [North Wales] whoโ€™s tried [to win the British title] has lost โ€“ but not me.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s only fought two southpaws,โ€ adds Warburton, a converted lefty, โ€œand itโ€™s well known he struggles with the weight. Whatโ€™s he going to do in a hard 12-rounder with someone who makes the weight easily? Iโ€™ve never had trouble with weight. I used to eat KFC outside the gym before it opened.โ€

That was when he was an amateur at Colwyn Bayโ€™s Dyffryn Boxing Club, where he remained for several years into his pro journey, retaining Dyffrynโ€™s founder Wesley Jones as his head coach.

But the 29-year-old eventually conceded he would have to look further afield if he was to push on, settling on former Team GB Olympic coach Paul Walmsley in Liverpool, an hourโ€™s drive away.

Leaving Dyffryn late last year was a tough decision, but it was made with Jonesโ€™ blessing.

โ€œWes agreed I needed to get out of my comfort zone,โ€ Warburton says. โ€œAt Dyffryn, itโ€™s all about the fundamentals, and the fitness is probably the best in all of Wales, but the technical side isnโ€™t quite there. And in North Wales, the sparring, the contacts, arenโ€™t very high. Youโ€™ve got to move to the city.

โ€œAnd Paulโ€™s got no other pros, so Iโ€™m getting the time I need. I feel like Iโ€™ve improved and people I spar with say Iโ€™ve improved.

โ€œIt will be a shame to not have Wes in my corner for the British, but the beltโ€™s coming back to the [Dyffryn]  gym, not to Liverpool. Dyffrynโ€™s always going to be my home, no matter what I go on to.โ€

Heโ€™s already gone on to more than most pro boxers from his region, and if Warburton beats Conway, heโ€™ll do what none before him have.

Winning the British title would be a โ€œfantastic, life-changing eventโ€, he says, โ€œbut itโ€™s more about showing people you can do it; showing the kids that if you believe in yourself and do things right, the opportunities are there.

โ€œJust โ€™cos youโ€™re not from the city doesnโ€™t mean you canโ€™t do something.โ€

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