Jack Catterall vs Ekow Essuman 15.11.2025

Jack Catterall delivered a commanding and career-affirming display as he halted WBO Global welterweight champion Ekow Essuman in the eleventh round at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on 15 November 2025. Before a packed crowd and a constellation of sporting and celebrity figures, the Chorley southpaw produced one of the sharpest performances of his professional life, blending poise, urgency and precision in a bout that showcased both his refined technique and a renewed sense of aggression.

From the opening bell Catterall set a brisk tempo, using nimble footwork and a crisp right-lead from the southpaw stance to control distance. Essuman, known for his work-rate and durability, attempted to crowd the challenger and drag him into the kind of attritional contest that has served the Nottingham man so well. But each time Essuman edged forward, Catterall met him with a shifting pattern of jabs, angled counters and swift exits that prevented the champion from establishing any rhythm.

The early rounds were dominated by Catterall’s ability to vary the target and tempo. He slid in with single jabs to head and body, then brought combinations off the same line, unsettling Essuman’s attempts to build momentum. By the third, blood was trickling from the champion’s nose, the result of repeated scoring shots from Catterall’s lead hand. The precision and timing, rather than power alone, began to tell.

The defining moment of the early exchanges came late in the fourth. Essuman, pushing forward with greater desperation, walked onto a beautifully judged counter that caught him high on the temple and sent him crashing to the canvas. He beat the count but staggered through the last seconds of the round as Catterall swarmed with disciplined pressure, sensing the breakthrough. Though Essuman survived, the psychological shift was unmistakable: Catterall had found a groove, and the champion knew the threat was constant.

Essuman, however, has never been a fighter to wilt. As the middle rounds unfolded he forced his way back with stubborn determination, tightening his guard, digging to the body and pressing Catterall to work harder than he had earlier. A cut opened above Catterall’s right eye, giving Essuman a visible target and jolting the tide of the fight. For a spell, Essuman’s persistence created discomfort for the challenger, who had to adjust, settle and reinstall his ring generalship.

Yet Catterall remained composed. He steadied himself, returned to his educated lead hand and gradually broke up Essuman’s advances. By the tenth, the champion was marked, fatigued and repeatedly being turned by Catterall’s footwork. The eleventh saw the challenger increase his output once more, stepping in with forceful left hands and chopping hooks until the referee intervened with Essuman under sustained fire.

It was a statement finish from a fighter long recognised for his skill but often criticised for economic output. Here, he combined finesse with authority, showing the benefits of his overseas training and his determination to remain relevant among the division’s elite.

In a contest full of momentum shifts, bruising exchanges and tactical nuance, it was Jack Catterall who proved superior, forcing the stoppage against a valiant and relentless Ekow Essuman to claim the WBO Global welterweight crown.