Advertisement
League of Ireland
Horse Racing
TV Listings
GAA Fixtures
The Video Review
Sport meets news, current affairs, society & pop culture
Rugby Weekly Extra
Dive into all the news and analysis 3 times a week
The Football Family
Weekly insights from the week’s big talking points
Advertisement
More Stories
Aaron McKenna celebrates at the final bell following a career-best display.Alamy Stock Photo
Freestatement
Aaron McKenna dominates Liam Smith to earn breakout victory in London
‘The Silencer’ outclassed and out-gunned Liverpool’s former light-middleweight champion en route to a unanimous decision.
8.55pm, 26 Apr 2025
Share options
AARON MCKENNA OUTCLASSED and dropped Liam Smith en route to a landslide decision victory in his career-biggest fight in London.
Monaghan middleweight McKenna improved his professional record to 20-0 (10KOs), dominating Liverpool’s former light-middleweight world champion from pillar to post at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
Fighting third from last on the Chris Eubank Jr-Conor Benn card in the English capital, Smithborough’s ‘Silencer’ elevated his profile and likely entered the world-title picture with a polished display against Smith, whom many in the UK fancied would ‘old-man’ the less seasoned Irishman.
McKenna, 25, dropped his 36-year-old opponent with a pearler of a left hook to the body in the final round but the courageous Smith survived to hear the final bell, applauding the verdict as McKenna took a unanimous decision on scores of 119-108, 117-109 and 118-108.
Smith stopped Chris Eubank Jr two fights ago before suffering a similar fate in their rematch, may well ride off into the sunset having been so comprehensively beaten in this crossroads fight.
McKenna, who earned much of his professional boxing education working under trainers like Robert Garcia and Freddie Roach while he was promoted by Golden Boy in California, will move on to bigger and better things having formally introduced himself to a massive audience.
Smith (now 33-5-1, 20KOs) sought to pressure McKenna in the opening round, cutting off the ring and stalking his taller opponent. It was the Monaghan man, however, who landed the only shots of note, jabbing and pot-shotting off the backfoot to bank the early 10-9.
Advertisement
McKenna upped the ante slightly in the second. While, again, he boxed mostly on the retreat, he landed a couple of tidy one-twos, finding a home for his left hand and sneaking a couple of uppercuts through Smith’s guard. The Liverpudlian responded with a tidy left hook down the pipe as McKenna calculated proceedings off the ropes, but it was another clear McKenna round.
McKenna produced a picturesque spin and counter right to commence the third. His footwork and routine, fleeting changes in stance from orthodox to southpaw were making him a difficult target for Smith to lock onto, albeit the Englishman — still on the front foot in a literal sense — did have split-second moments of success in the round.
McKenna, though, was undeniably 3-0 up heading into the fourth. He punctuated another comfortable round with five unanswered punches, none of which hurt Smith but all of which combined to leave him look slightly bedraggled.
During a clinch in the fifth, Smith pawed at his right eyebrow and revealed a cut which had been caused by a clash of heads. It gave Smith a greater sense of urgency but McKenna matched the increased tempo with ease, outfoxing the older boxer with his feet, upper-body movement and measured shots off either hand.
Smith’s first sliver of encouragement came in the fifth and not from his own work, but from referee John Latham who deducted McKenna a point for pushing his opponent off with his forearm after an earlier warning.
The former light-middleweight beltholder still didn’t do enough to win the round outright as he swallowed most of the blows across a slightly more ragged three minutes.
While Smith landed a couple of eye-catching shots to start the seventh, it was McKenna who, by then, was beginning to edge the close-up physical encounters. He edged Smith backwards in the clinch, stabbing shots into his body in an effort to turn the screw on the older man.
It became clear in the eighth that, having already bested Smith from his preferred range, McKenna decided to try to beat the Liverpudlian at his own game. He routinely ripped right uppercuts through Smith’s guard during phonebooth exchanges, popping ‘Beefy’ with three shots for every one received.
The ninth passed without incident, relatively speaking, with McKenna pocketing another round at his leisure.
‘The Silencer’ peppered Smith from all angles in the 10th, pulling all kinds of arrows from his quiver. Smith, to his credit, bit down and dug in, and even touched gloves with his opponent at the end of the round in a mark of appreciation.
The older fighter landed a handful of significant-looking shots in the first half of the 11th but McKenna had long since drained his power. The Irishman walked through Smith’s work with ease, producing a gorgeous, lightning-fast three-punch combo in the back half.
Seconds into the final round, McKenna sunk Smith to his knees with a vicious left hook to the body. ‘Beefy’ smiled ruefully at his corner, rising at the count of eight.
McKenna went in for the kill but Smith’s potential last stand in a boxing ring was stirring as he absorbed the punishment and flung back a few Hail Mary shots of his own.
McKenna gave him a couple of nods of appreciation, cruising towards a points finish and, as if to reiterate his own point, making Smith look silly with some clever movement and a counter in the seconds before the final bell.
Smith applauded the winner before McKenna’s name even left the MC’s lips. His race is probably run, but McKenna’s has just begun.
Gavan Casey
View 4 comments
Send Tip or Correction
Embed this post
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
Email “Aaron McKenna dominates Liam Smith to earn breakout victory in London”.
Recipient's Email
Feedback on “Aaron McKenna dominates Liam Smith to earn breakout victory in London”.
Your Feedback
Your Email (optional)
Report a Comment
Please select the reason for reporting this comment.
Please give full details of the problem with the comment...
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic.
Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy
before taking part.
Leave a Comment
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Damaging the good reputation of someone, slander, or libel.
Racism or Hate speech
An attack on an individual or group based on religion, race, gender, or beliefs.
Trolling or Off-topic
An attempt to derail the discussion.
Inappropriate language
Profanity, obscenity, vulgarity, or slurs.
Advertising, phishing, scamming, bots, or repetitive posts.
Please provide additional information
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
Leave a commentcancel
Access to the comments facility has been disabled for this user
View our policy
⚠️ Duplicate comment
Post Comment
have your say
Or create a free account to join the discussion
News in 60 seconds
Freeresponse
Ian Wright ‘can’t accept’ Eni Aluko apology after controversial punditry comments
FreeControversy
Wexford boss Rossiter dismayed by awarding of Dublin goal after sliotar didn't appear to cross line
FreeLeinster SHC
2-8 for mercurial Mannion as Galway bounce back against blundering Offaly
41 mins ago
Freehollywood story
Wrexham book Championship spot with third successive promotion
FreeMatch Report
Crystal Palace sweep past Aston Villa to reach FA Cup final
FreeImpressive
Scarlets hand Leinster second defeat of season to boost play-off hopes
FreeGrand Slam
Seventh heaven: England hold off stirring France fightback to clinch Women’s Six Nations title
As it happened
Scotland v Ireland, Women's Six Nations
race for top 8
Munster's URC play-off hopes suffer blow with defeat in Cardiff
Carty's Connacht, new face for Leinster, Stockdale's Ulster switch
FreeImpressive
Scarlets hand Leinster second defeat of season to boost play-off hopes
more from us
Investigates
Daft.ie Property Magazine
Allianz Home Magazine
The 42 Sports Magazine
Money Diaries
The Journal TV
Journal Media
Advertise With Us
About FactCheck
Our Network
FactCheck Knowledge Bank
Terms & Legal Notices
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
more from us
TV Listings
GAA Fixtures
The Video Review
Journal Media
Advertise With Us
Our Network
The Journal
FactCheck Knowledge Bank
Terms & Legal Notices
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
© 2025 Journal Media Ltd
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
Switch to Desktop
Switch to Mobile
The 42 supports the work of the Press Council of Ireland and the Office of the Press Ombudsman, and our staff operate within the Code of Practice. You can obtain a copy of the Code, or contact the Council, at https://www.presscouncil.ie, PH: (01) 6489130, Lo-Call 1800 208 080 or email: mailto:info@presscouncil.ie
Report an error, omission or problem:
Your Email (optional)
Create Email Alert
Create an email alert based on the current article
Email Address
One email every morning
As soon as new articles come online
Sign in or create
a free account
To continue reading create a free account
Or sign into an existing account
Related News
04 Apr, 2025
Appiah Stadium recounts his wife's ordea . . .
22 Mar, 2025
How to Watch McNeese vs Purdue: Live Str . . .
11 Apr, 2025
Amazon's weekend sale just launched from . . .
30 Mar, 2025
تصاویری از بازی ملوان - مس رفسنجان
14 Apr, 2025
Sports News | Ayush Mhatre to Replace Ga . . .
09 Apr, 2025
On Which Channel ICC Women’s Cricket Wor . . .
06 May, 2025
United For Asthma Awareness Week With Po . . .
11 Feb, 2025
Mark Wood: England cannot dwell on India . . .