JOSH WARRINGTON may not be quite finished with his boxing career.
The 33-year-old signalled that he was done with fighting when he left his gloves in the centre of the ring at Wembley Stadium following his loss to Anthony Cacace last month. Cacace defeated Warrington on points which still yet could be the last stand in the 33-year-oldโs 36-fight career.
However, speaking to Boxing News in Liverpool last night Warrington wouldnโt commit to retirement because of an impending new arrival.
โIโm stepping away for the rest of the year because my wifeโs pregnant and Iโm expecting a baby at Christmas time,โ he said.
In recent weeks, conversation in British boxing has touched on the lack of big-fight cards taking place in the UK. Since the emergence of Riyadh Season events there has been a dip in quality in Great Britain and Warrington revealed what one broadcaster thought of a rematch between himself and Leigh Wood.
โBritish boxing fans are starving,โ Warrington said.
โInitially we had a chat, me and Matchroom and they said that the TV network doesnโt think me and Leigh, a rematch is a big fight. I was surprised to hear that.
โIt was always going to be bigger than the first one. It were an entertaining fight the first time. Yeah, the build-up were boring because we were amicable but the way it finished weโve had a few words said here and there so it was always going to be bigger.โ
Warrington is clearly open to a Wood rematch, a second bout against Cacace or even a third against Mexican rival Mauricio Lara. One of those would postpone any thoughts of retirement.
โI canโt be hanging around,โ Warrington said. โIf some talk gets going then itโll be done asap.โ