Fighting Boxing: Ricky Hatton retires after Vyacheslav Senchenko defeat

Former two-weight world champion Ricky Hatton has announced his retirement from boxing following his loss to Vyacheslav Senchenko in Manchester.

British boxer Hatton, 34, had not fought since 2009, but his return to the ring on Saturday ended with a ninth-round stoppage.

“I needed one more fight to see if I had still got it – and I haven’t,” he said. “I couldn’t have done any better.

“A fighter knows and I know it isn’t there any more. I have got to be a man and say it is the end of Ricky Hatton.”

Hatton announced his return to the ring in September, 14 months after initially calling time on his career.

His opponent Senchenko, while a year older, had only one defeat on his record and proved more than a match for Hatton in front of 20,000 fans at the Manchester Arena.

Hatton started brightly and fought aggressively, but his defences weakened as he tired. A body shot to his ribs in the ninth ended the fight, and Hatton left the ring in tears.

“I got in the best shape I possibly could but if I hadn’t been hit with that body shot I would have just scraped over the line,” he admitted.

“It’s too many hard fights, I’ve burned the candle at both ends, I’ve put my body through the mire in and out of the ring.”

Hatton suffered a painful knockout in his previous fight in Las Vegas in 2009 against Manny Pacquiao.
He retired following that defeat, but suffered personal problems outside of the ring and Hatton said his return was a chance of redemption and an opportunity to make his friends and supporters “proud”.

Despite the loss on Saturday, he insisted he had achieved his goal: “I’m a happy man tonight. I don’t feel like putting a knife to my wrists.”

“I have got the answers I needed. I can look at myself in the mirror and tell myself I did my best.”

Former undisputed heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis said he was confident Hatton was in a better place, mentally, to cope with retirement this time.

He told BBC Radio 5 live’s Sportsweek programme: “I hope that he came away with some good things because it’s very important we have to improve upon ourselves all the time and think positively.”

“Hopefully he’s learned from all those bad things that happened and he can go forward and lead a better life. I think he should be all right.”

 


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