Liddard (13-0, 8 KOs) won the belts with a stoppage over Kieron Conway in 2025 and now returns for his first defense at 23 years old. Denny (21-3-3, 1 KO) brings experience from title fights and enters at 34 with a chance to add British and Commonwealth belts to his record.

Liddard has made his position clear going into the fight.

“I am bigger, stronger and faster and will be ready for whatever happens,” Liddard said. “If we need to go into deep waters, I’m ready, but I believe I will stop him.”

Denny answered with a direct response on what he expects Saturday night.

“Saturday is not going to be George’s night. My confidence is at an all time high,” Denny said. “I am going to take those belts.”

The fight places a young champion in his first defense against a contender who has already worked through domestic and European level opposition. Denny’s experience gives him a clear path if he can slow the pace and turn the fight into rounds, while Liddard enters with momentum and physical advantages.

Denny relies on positioning and timing, looking to disrupt rhythm and pick shots rather than engage in extended exchanges.

If Liddard keeps the pressure steady and builds rounds with his workrate, he can hold the center and control the fight. If Denny breaks the rhythm and forces a slower pace, he can turn it into a technical fight over distance.

The result will shape the domestic order at middleweight. The winner leaves with both belts and control of the British title picture.

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