Today on Sky Sports Racing: Rosallion seeks revenge against Notable Speech at Royal Ascot | Racing News

Today on Sky Sports Racing: Rosallion seeks revenge against Notable Speech at Royal Ascot | Racing News



Royal Ascot is here! Notable Speech and Rosallion headline day one at the Royal meeting, with all seven races live on Sky Sports Racing…

4.25 Ascot – Rosallion seeks revenge against Notable Speech

The unbeaten Notable Speech comes into the St James’s Palace Stakes fresh from his impressive 2000 Guineas win and is a worthy favourite for Charlie Appleby.

Richard Hannon’s Rosallion kept on well behind Notable Speech at Newmarket and it would be no surprise to see him reverse the form today. He has since scored in the Irish 2,000 Guineas, defeating the reopposing Unquestionable.

Henry Longfellow was disappointing in the French 2000 Guineas but will come on plenty for that run and enters calculations. Ryan Moore is in the plate for Aidan O’Brien, seeking his 80th winner at the Royal meeting. Metropolitan is also one to consider, having fended off Dancing Gemini to win the French 2000 Guineas.

2.30 Ascot – Charyn, Big Rock and Audience clash

Roger Varian’s Charyn kept on well in the Lockinge Stakes behind Audience and has the ability to land his first Group One. Silvestre de Sousa retains the ride on the dual Group 2 victor. He sits at the top of the market alongside Facteur Cheval, who impressed when landing the Dubai Turf at Meydan last time out.

The French-trained Big Rock is a solid contender having made light work of rivals in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes at Ascot on Champions Day. He could easily bounce back from his run at Newbury where he stumbled at the start, although the move to Maurizio Guarnieri’s yard raised eyebrows.

Audience caused an upset in the Lockinge when making all and must be respected today for John and Thady Gosden under Rab Havlin.

3.45 Ascot – Big Evs headlines in the King Charles III Stakes

The Michael Appleby-trained Big Evs landed the Windsor Castle at the Royal meeting last year and can justify favouritism. The three-year-old has emerged victorious on his last three starts and – reunited with Tom Marquand – he’ll be looking for four on the spin.

Regional was beaten marginally by Mitbaahy in the Greenlands Stakes but with Charlie Hills’ horse elsewhere this time around, he could go off favourite. Kerdos comfortably won the Temple Stakes at Haydock and could pose a dangerous threat if improving on that run.

Australian raider Asfoora ran in the Temple Stakes last time out and must be respected back on a sounder surface.

Sunday racecards | Latest Sky Bet odds

Watch every race from Royal Ascot live on Sky Sports Racing on Monday, June 17.

Chris Billam-Smith plots ‘perfect revenge’ as Richard Riakporhe warns: Nobody can hit like me | Boxing News

Chris Billam-Smith plots ‘perfect revenge’ as Richard Riakporhe warns: Nobody can hit like me | Boxing News



Richard Riakporhe’s fighting nickname is ‘The Midnight Train’. Does that make Chris Billam-Smith ‘The Little Engine That Could’?

After all, even though Billam-Smith is the world champion going into this fight, he is widely considered the underdog against this challenger.

For many he exceeded expectations when becoming a British champion, let alone European and then WBO world cruiserweight titlist.

Billam-Smith says he will be ready for whatever Riakporhe brings on fight night and believes he will win by knockout

Billam-Smith gives a strained but polite laugh at the analogy. “I don’t know who gave him that nickname,” he said of Riakporhe.

“He likes to come up with lots of different words, and poems, and names for things and metaphors. He’s trying but they’re not the best. He’s no Muhammad Ali, is he? I guess everyone loves a trier.

“But none of that will matter.”

In the days leading up to this fight, Billam-Smith has exuded a calm confidence with his close-knit training team and family all around him.

He has after all been here before. He won the world championship when he beat Lawrence Okolie at the Vitality Stadium in his Bournemouth hometown. He has defended it in a tough fight with Mateusz Masternak and has ambitions of title unifications.

Riakporhe says he does not play mind games and is excited to get to work against Billam-Smith

Riakporhe does not have that track record. Billam-Smith believes his challenger will be feeling nerves before the first bell chimes on Saturday night.

“I think the closer the fight will get the more he will realise what a big occasion it is and the show’s built around him, isn’t it? That’s going to take its toll for sure if he can’t deal with it,” the champion told Sky Sports.

“He’s coming from boxing on an undercard, quite low down the bill in Wolverhampton, against a low-level opponent to where we’re at now and he hasn’t really had any acid tests. So all that will come to his mind I think.

“It’s another great occasion for me. Which is what I love anyway, otherwise I wouldn’t be in the position that I’m in. It’ll be interesting to see how he deals with it.”

Winning this would mean Billam-Smith will have beaten every man he has faced as a professional. Riakporhe is the only opponent to have beaten him after taking a split-decision victory over him in 2019.

Billam-Smith got a cold response from Riakporhe when he predicted he will retain his WBO world title by knockout

Billam-Smith, though, is plotting what he considers would be the perfect revenge. When they fight at Selhurst Park, Billam-Smith is planning not only on beating him literally on home turf, but on knocking him out there.

“Here we are at another football stadium, which I’m not going to complain about either. It’s great to be involved in these occasions and for it to be another domestic world title fight is amazing and the fact that I get to avenge a loss is the cherry on top. It’s a great position,” Billam-Smith said.

“I’ll rip the script up again. That’s how it feels. That’s how this whole fight feels. It feels like the Lawrence fight, in terms of he’s getting bigged up in terms of being the favourite or what not.

“I’ve come up against punch power and his punch power before and there’s a lot more to boxing than just punch power, especially in a 12-round fight.

Don’t miss our latest episode of ‘The Gloves Are Off’ featuring Billam-Smith and Riakporhe

“How he deals with my pace and intensity will be an interesting factor and that will definitely tire him out. We’ll have to wait and see.

“That’s always the game plan, to put on a good performance and get the stoppage. Sometimes it comes, sometimes it doesn’t. I’m feeling very confident.”

He suggests that, even if Riakporhe can land his best shot, he can take it and keep on pressing forward. “I think when someone does that to you it’s very disheartening,” Billam-Smith said.

Riakporhe, naturally, does not expect to unravel. Their first fight was close with the referee ruling a knockdown against Billam-Smith which the latter still disputes.

This time, Riakporhe reckons, he will fully put Billam-Smith down and keep him there.

On a run of five stoppage victories, Riakporhe has been striking with merciless force. Frazer Clarke, a heavyweight and an Olympic bronze medallist, sparred with gym-mate Riakporhe ahead of his outstanding British title fight with Fabio Wardley.

Clarke identified Riakporhe as the hardest puncher he has been in the ring with. That is quite a claim given that Clarke has boxed or sparred some of the biggest hitters in the world, Anthony Joshua and Olympic gold medallist Bakhodir Jalolov among them.

Ahead of Billam-Smith’s fight with Riakporhe at Selhurst Park, take a look back at some of the biggest stadium fights in British boxing history

Riakporhe considers himself the heaviest puncher in the country, not just at cruiser, heavyweight included.

“I believe that I am. A lot of people say that I do. I have a gift. That’s my gift and all I do is want to show the world it’s a blessing, and it can be a curse if I don’t prepare myself diligently,” he told Sky Sports.

“People say that. To be honest I don’t know anybody that can hit like me. I’ve got a different type of punch.

“The punch doesn’t just hurt. It takes your spiritual energy as well. It zaps you. People wouldn’t understand. The word I would refer to it as is the ‘vim’. The vim. I would say the vim. It’s got that vim on it.

“Once it touches you, it’s sapping your energy, sapping your life out of you.”

Ringwalk times

  • Ben Whittaker’s ringwalk for his light-heavyweight contest with Ezra Arenyeka is expected around 9pm on Saturday night.
  • For the Chris Billam-Smith vs Richard Riakporhe main event, ringwalks will be from 9.45pm.
  • Don’t miss the big Selhurst Park bill live on Sky Sports.

He rejects Billam-Smith’s suggestion he is nervous going into the biggest night of his professional career.

“Now we’re here, I’m happy. I knew it was going to come eventually,” Riakporhe said. “The most important thing was not just receiving an opportunity but being prepared for it. I’m prepared for it so we’re ready to go.

“I feel like where I am now in my career, this is perfect timing for me. When people say you’ve been waiting for too long, I think no this is just perfect timing.”

He concluded: “You just have to relax, enjoy the moment and do what you’re trained to do. Simple.”

That last point surely is one Billam-Smith can agree on too. Perhaps the fight will ultimately be simple. It might just come down to who can hit, hurt and take the pain and pressure best.

Billam-Smith is convinced that will be him. Riakporhe is certain it will not.

Which of them is wrong, we will only find out once the bell rings, the crowd roars and the real fight is on.

Watch Chris Billam-Smith defend his WBO cruiserweight world title against Richard Riakporhe at Crystal Palace’s Selhurst Park, live on Sky Sports on Saturday June 15; or Stream with NOW

Luke Littler: Premier League champion gets chance for revenge in return to action at Poland Darts Masters | Darts News

Luke Littler: Premier League champion gets chance for revenge in return to action at Poland Darts Masters | Darts News



Luke Littler will have the chance to avenge his 2023 defeat to Adam Gawlas when the Premier League champion returns to action at the Poland Darts Masters.

Littler lost to the Czech player in their last televised meeting at the 2023 UK Open, but has since taken the darting world by storm, reaching the World Darts Championship final before going on to triumph in the Premier League.

The 17-year-old Briton is participating in the 16-player tournament in Gliwice for the first time, with the opening-round matches taking place on Friday before the final three stages follow on Saturday.

Michael van Gerwen will begin his defence of his title at the World Series of Darts event against Czech star Karel Sedlacek.

Van Gerwen produced averages of 110, 104 and 113 to triumph in the tournament’s inaugural staging in Warsaw last year, and the Dutch supremo will play Czech World Cup star Sedlacek on his return to Polish soil.

Littler won the Premier League in his debut campaign after defeating world No 1 Humphries 11-7 in the final

The draw also pitted world No 1 Luke Humphries against Hungarian newcomer Gyorgy Jehirszki, as the world champion continues his bid for a maiden World Series of Darts crown.

Poland’s No 1 Krzysztof Ratajski will also take centre stage on home soil this weekend, and the former World Matchplay semi-finalist kicks off his challenge against Masters champion Stephen Bunting.

Newly-crowned US Darts Masters champion Rob Cross begins his bid for a second World Series title in the space of a fortnight against home favourite Sebastian Bialecki – a UK Open quarter-finalist in 2022.

Littler hit a nine-darter during the Premier League Play-Off final at London’s O2 arena

Michael Smith, the 2023 world champion, will also face Polish opposition in Radek Szaganski, who regained his PDC Tour Card earlier this year after winning a Players Championship title in 2023.

Elsewhere, World Matchplay winner Nathan Aspinall plays Croatian trailblazer Boris Krcmar, while two-time world champion Peter Wright meets Poland’s big-stage debutant Jacek Krupka.

What’s next on Sky Sports?

The World Cup of Darts will take place from June 27-30 at the Eissporthalle in Frankfurt, Germany.

Wales’ Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton are the defending champions and they will be determined to fend off 39 other nations to retain their title.

Humphries and Smith are in line to represent England but Littler will not feature because the two highest-ranked English players in the PDC Order of Merit are picked. ‘The Nuke’ is currently 25th in the Order of Merit.

Fans are able to stream the entire action on NOW TV through their mobile device or table.

World Cup of Darts: Fixtures

Thursday, June 27 (6pm BST)
Group Stage – Opening Matches

Friday, June 28
Afternoon Session (11am BST)

Group Stage – Second Matches

Evening Session (6pm BST)
Group Stage – Final Matches

Saturday, June 29
Afternoon Session (12pm BST)

Second Round x4

Evening Session (6pm BST)
Second Round x4

Sunday, June 30
Afternoon Session (12pm BST)

Quarter-Finals

Evening Session (6pm BST)
Semi-Finals
Final

What is the format?

  • Group Stage – Best of seven legs
  • Second Round – Best of 15 legs
  • Quarter-Finals – Best of 15 legs
  • Semi-Finals – Best of 15 legs
  • Final – Best of 19 legs

All matches will be played in a doubles format