Carl Frampton confident he can outbox ‘lazy’ Jamel Herring
Carl Frampton [27(15)-2(0)] today rejected the idea that the coronavirus lockdown represents more personal bad luck in his hunt to become a three weight World Champion, saying âwe are all in the same boatâ.
âThe Jackalâ was forced out of a fight with Emmanuel Dominguez in August 2019 after a freak accident saw a large ornament fall and break his hand in a hotel lobby.
In his return bout in December 2019 Frampton outpointed an outmatched Tyler McCreary but would fracture both his hands in the process, pushing his title fight with Jamel Herring [21(1)-2(1)] even further away.
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Carl, however, is refusing to feel sorry for himself and told ‘The Lockdown Lowdown’ that he is choosing to look on the bright side.
âMy wife made a good point the other day. If I hadnât had my hand operations, and had been waiting on them now it could have been a different story with things like that being postponed.â
Frampton is clear what that could have meant for his career: âIt might have been the end.â
Fans neednât worry, though, as the 29 fight veteran from Belfast is certain his shot against WBO Junior-Lightweight Champ Jamel Herring will come as soon as itâs safe for them to meet.
âThe fight has been pretty much agreed, without being officially announced. Iâm pretty sure it will happen eventually⊠when restrictions ease a little bit.â
Herring has 22 professional fights to his name, with just two losses, and many fans believe heâd go into a fight with 27-2 Frampton as the favourite based on size difference alone.
âSemper Fiâ got into the ring for a face-off with Frampton after his recent victory over Tyler McCreary and it didnât go unnoticed how much bigger the American was.
âThe Jackalâ wasnât as impressed as some.
âIf you look at that picture, when he got in the ring after my last fight, he looked about 12 stone… Iâm thinking âheâs got to make 9st4′.
Itâll hurt him to do the weight a lot more than me…â
Frampton is sure that Herring’s size won’t be the deciding factor when they meet and was adamant that he sees serious flaws in his adversaries game.
âI think he can be outboxed. His feet are slow, he doesnât punch that fast either. In the middle rounds he gets a little bit lazy. Itâs almost like he cruises and doesnât want to exert too much energy.â
With victories over Nonito Donaire, Leo Santa Cruz and Scott Quigg on his record, Frampton knows a thing or two about the sweet science.
So what would it mean to be proven right and be crowned a four-time, three-weight World Champion?
âIt would be amazing⊠Hall of Fame stuff. I want people to remember me.â


