Carl Froch
-
Why did so many of the fighters that emerged in the early 2000s fail to dislodge Floyd Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao, Wladimir Klitschko and Bernard Hopkins to become all-time greats?
-
Rory McIlroy, Lewis Hamilton and Gareth Bale are the bookies' favourites but who do you think should win the award?
-
Lewis Hamilton, Rory McIlroy and Charlotte Dujardin are in the running for the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award
-
-
Rory McIlroy is the frontrunner to win this year’s BBC Sports Personality of the Year award, with the current Open and USPGA champion among the 10 shortlisted names
-
Carl Froch is hopeful of securing a showdown with Julio César Chávez Jr in Las Vegas next year after revealing that his promoter Eddie Hearn is to hold talks this week
-
George Groves returns to the ring next week still feeling his bout against Carl Froch was stopped too soon, but a referee should end a fight one punch too early rather than one punch too late
-
-
George Groves has said he intends to put his two defeats to Carl Froch behind him when he fights Christopher Rebrassé at Wembley Arena
-
-
James DeGale beat the American Brandon Gonzales in four rounds to become the mandatory challenger for Carl Froch’s IBF super-middleweight title
-
Sean Ingle: The Eddie Hearn-promoted Froch v Groves II at Wembley Stadium proved one important fact: the sport of boxing is still fighting
-
The promoter Eddie Hearn is plotting a return to Wembley but the glitz and glamour of Las Vegas is likely to tempt Carl Froch first
-
Carl Froch’s victory over George Groves was about more than retaining his world title belts – it was about gaining the recognition he deserves
-
The 80,000 at Wembley Stadium got value for their money and celebrated long into the night after a thrilling rematch
-
-
The 36-year-old Carl Froch admitted he is tempted by a big-money fight in Las Vegas after his defeat of George Groves
-
Sean Ingle: Opponents such as George Groves keep telling themselves the old man is not going to catch up with them but he keeps doing it
-
-
Round-by-round report: Carl Froch landed a stunning right hook on George Groves in the eighth round to win their much-anticipated fight at Wembley. Jacob Steinberg was watching and wincing
-
Carl Froch stopped George Groves in the eighth round of their world super-middleweight title fight at Wembley with a powerful straight right punch
-
Tom Jenkins' best pictures from Carl Froch's victory over George Groves in their Wembley rematch
-
-
Barry McGuigan: The key to Saturday’s rematch is whether Groves can keep his distance, if he gets drawn in there is only one winner
-
Carl Froch and George Groves both vowed to secure a famous victory during a highly charged weigh-in for their super-middleweight title rematch at Wembley on Saturday
-
Kevin Mitchell: Groves threw one barb too many, overstepping the mark with a late descent to trash-talk, and has heightened the danger from Froch who can win their world title fight in the closing rounds
-
Donald McRae spent time behind the scenes with George Groves, the challenger for Carl Froch’s world super-middleweight titles, and built a fascinating portrait of the fighter and family man
-
Thursday’s press conference had each insisting that the other was on the back foot, though Groves was unusually subdued
-
Kevin Mitchell: Could it be the age-old lure of the revenge drama and was boxing fiercer when poverty’s impact was more keenly felt?
-
Kevin Mitchell: Carl Froch and George Groves meet at Wembley on Saturday for their second fight, but it will have to be pretty special to live up to some of the greatest other reruns in the sport
-
George Groves has predicted he will knock Carl Froch out with a left hook at Wembley Stadium on Saturday night
-
-
The fighters talk to the press at Wembley ahead of their rematch at the stadium on Saturday evening
-
The Guardian's boxing correspondent looks ahead to the biggest domestic bout for decades
-
-
Transforming Wembley from a football arena for England v Peru to a boxing venue for Froch-Groves II will prove a huge challenge
-
The bookies have Carl Froch as slight favourite but George Groves is having none of it. Who do you think will win?
-
Sean Ingle: David Haye smashed up his client in November 2010 but it was a key stepping stone in Eddie Hearn’s domination of British boxing en route to Saturday night’s Wembley showdown
-
As their much-anticipated Wembley rematch looms, Nottingham’s WBA and IBF champion Froch sees his rival Groves as a divisive figure lacking in humility, he tells Kevin Mitchell
-
Johnny Nelson: George Groves may prefer a storming start and Carl Froch a dog-fight but, since tactics may dictate the winner, both fighters must play to their strengths
-
Kevin Mitchell: George Groves may be the calmest boxer around, but he is desperate to turn the tables in this super-middleweight rematch
-
George Groves predicted he will stop the champion Carl Froch in three rounds in their Wembley rematch
Sportblog Top five postwar British boxers – where does Carl Froch come now?