Josh O'Reilly believes he has what it takes to stop Belfast boxer James Tennyson's destructive run of form as the lightweights prepare to collide in a WBA world title eliminator at the Wembley Arena tomorrow.
O'Reilly (16-0, 6 KOs) is undefeated in 16 fights since turning professional in July 2014, and the 29-year-old Canadian holds the North American Boxing Association lightweight title and a top ten ranking with the WBA.
Having looked into the previous fights of Tennyson (27-3, 23 KOs), O’Reilly knows he cannot afford to come into the ring with anything less than top form, and the Ontario man is confident of taking a step closer to a dream World Title shot of his own tomorrow evening.
"I'm super excited," said O'Reilly. "I've never been on a stage like this. It's awesome to get this opportunity. I'm happy to be sharing the ring with James, I think it's going to be a great fight and I'm looking forward to it.
"He really likes guys to sit in front of him, so you’ve got to keep him off balance, lots of lateral movement. Some do well but expend a lot of energy and he catches up with them. You have to mix it up, lateral movement and space.
"I've got to be sharp and switched on. The plan is to not get caught up in anything crazy early and pick my shots to slow him down.
"There’s things you see, there’s a lot I can take away from all his fights. There’s a lot of things from the outside that might seem different when I’m in there.

"I'm a fan, I like watching the kid. I've seen him enough and I think there's a lot of stuff I can do in there to negate a lot of the stuff he does. I've got my own plan on what's going to happen, it's just about executing it.
"I've watched him for a while. I’ve paid attention to him, seen some of his older fights. He’s a strong kid, I might be a bigger guy than him but he’s got the power.
"We’ve both got to make 135. Back home, there’s stuff to do like sell tickets, so it’s less stressful here. You can focus on the fight and do your training, focus on making the weight. I feel quite comfortable, it’s the easiest I’ve made weight for some time."
Tennyson believes he is ready to seize his chance of a second world title tilt.
The 27-year-old has stopped five opponents in a row at lightweight since losing to IBF super featherweight champion Tevin Farmer in October 2018.
'The Assassin' continued his destructive form last time out in August when he claimed the vacant British Lightweight Title with a ruthless sixth round stoppage win over Welshman Gavin Gwynne.
"This is a big step forward, a world title eliminator," said Tennyson (pictured), speaking earlier in the week.
"It can open some doors and opportunities for me. I know I can mix it with those guys. I want the opportunities with the big names.
"I haven't watched too much of O'Reilly. Tony (Dunlop) is happy with how training is going. We’re very confident of getting the win on Friday. He’s ranked above me. It’s a must win. It’s just about winning, whether or not it looks good.
"I’m very highly motivated. I haven’t stopped thinking about a world title. Fighting at that level is where I want to be. I’m working very hard to get myself into that position again. It’s a stage of boxing I’ve wanted to get back at.
"I want to bring big fights back to Belfast. It’s a dream. It’s one I’m getting closer to."