Dennis Hogan to Fight Sam Eggington for IBO World Title in Australia
Dennis Hogan [30(7)-4(2)-1] will challenge for the IBO world light middleweight title in Australia in October according to new manager Steve Scanlan.
According to Scanlan, Sam Eggington [32(18)-7(2)], who won the title by defeating Przemyslaw Zysk in June, has agreed to travel Down Under and a title fight should be confirmed for Brisbane and October before next week’s purse bids are called.
âDennis deserves this shot for everything he has been through,â Scanlan when speaking to the Australian.
âHe has had three world-title shots and he was robbed in Mexico, but this would be his first world-title fight on Australian soil.
âThe IBO ordered us to negotiate and we have another week to finalise a deal with Sam Eggington before it goes to purse bid.
âNegotiations are going well, they are happy to come here, so we expect to have a deal done this week which is great news for Dennis and Australian fight fans.”

The Hennessy Sports stable mate of Aaron McKenna, Stevie McKenna and Brett McGinty inherited Hogan as a mandatory challenger when he claimed the title, so even if talks fall through the fight has to take place.
âThe Hurricaneâ earned a shot at the title by outclassing the gutsy Wade Ryan on the undercard of Nikita Tszyuâs debut win at the Fortitude Valley Music Hall in Brisbane in March.
That victory assured the two-weight world title challengerâs next fight will be for the IBO 154lbs belt, and he had hoped to challenge for it early this summer.
However, speaking recently he revealed his shot had been delayed. The 37-year-old thought he was awaiting the winner of another final eliminator, but it turns out heâd been waiting for the title to find a home. Itâs now placed around the waist of the Brit and he has to defend against the Kildare fighter.
Scanlan is confident the former DDP Sports fighter the title will find a new home for the strap very soon.
âEggington is very beatable,â he adds. âSam has more power than Dennis, but Dennis has the experience to outbox him the longer the fight goes.
âWhat happened to Dennis in Mexico (losing to Munguia) was devastating, but in his backyard of Brisbane, he can finally get that world title.
âThis is his last chance.â
Although. as an organization, the IBO does a lot of things right, it isnât held in the same regard as the big four [WBO, IBF, WBA, WBC] by most. However, if there is any fighter that deserves that fact being overlooked somewhat itâs Hogan, whose performance against Jaime Munguia in Mexico should have been enough to see him join the list of Irish world champions.
