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Dillian Whyte and Joseph Parker enter the ring at London's O2 arena on Saturday night (Sky Sports Box Office, 10pm approx) chasing the same goal - a rematch with Anthony Joshua.
Each man suffered the only blemish on their record to 'AJ' and a place towards the front of the queue for another crack at British boxing's golden boy is the reward in this intriguing non-title bout.
The bookies are struggling to split them, with Parker edging favouritism at and Whyte available at , and the obvious starting point is to compare how they fared against Joshua.
Parker became the first man to go the distance with Joshua in late March and very much held his own for the first half of the fight, with his excellent jab and well-timed counters making his usually aggressive opponent cautious. Joshua took control after halfway as Parker seemed to become more wary of AJ's power, and the Kiwi was also not helped by the referee breaking them up every time he looked to work on the inside, which most people saw as his main chance for success.
The wide scores didn't tell the story of what a competitive fight it was and the New Zealander was never seriously troubled by his big-punching foe. However, he also failed to inflict any significant damage on Joshua, which cannot be said of Whyte in his tussle with the Olympic gold medalist.
This could be well become a battle of the jabs and Parker may have the edge in that department judged on his latest outing, his first since elbow surgery and it certainly had the desired effect. Another notable improvement from Parker in the Joshua fight was his defence, as he was much more elusive and there is every chance that the 26-year-old is still improving. He has been known to carry his right hand low and cannot afford to do so here, as Whyte's money punch is his vicious left hook, but Parker and his team will be fully aware of this.
It will be Whyte's fight if he can drag the visitor into a tear-up, but Parker should be too experienced for that and I see the younger man boxing his way to a decision at .
Barring punch power, it is hard to see what Whyte does better than Parker and, perhaps crucially, the former champion looks to have the superior speed of hand and foot. This can enable him to 'be first' more often than not and land those scoring shots that catch the eyes of the judges.
Two of their former foes provide chief support as Chisora and Carlos Takam engage in what should be a fun crossroads fight.
This is the latter's reward for a gutsy showing against Joshua eight months ago when the challenger believed he was halted prematurely in the 10th round, showing he is not quite damaged goods yet. Chisora, on the other hand, looked precisely that when outpointed by Agit Kabayel in November in career loss number eight and there is plenty of mileage on that clock now.
Similar in size, they both like to come forward and can take a good shot, so we look set for 12 rounds of good action here, with the sharper and cleaner work of Takam earning him a decision at .