Ben Whittaker appeared to goad the corner of Liam Cameron after storming beyond his rival with a statement stoppage victory on Sunday. Was his celebration justified or did he cross the line?
Whittaker answered his critics in style as he powered past Cameron in the second round on what had loomed as a defining night in his career.
The Olympic silver medallist had been accused by his opponent of âquittingâ during Octoberâs first meeting, which was ruled a split draw when an injured Whittaker was left unable to continue after the two fighters bizarrely tumbled over the top rope.
It prompted a sharp and focused performance second time round from Whittaker, who was greeted by a mixture of cheers and boos during his ring walk in Birmingham before ending his rivalry with Cameron once and for all.
Upon stopping his opponent, an animated Whittaker raced around the ring in celebration before sticking his head through the ropes during an exchange with Cameronâs trainer Grant Smith.
âYou heard everybody boo me, theyâre portraying me as a bad guy,â Whittaker told Sky Sports in his post-fight interview when asked if he had spat at Smith. âBut at the end of the day I work very hard, my emotions came out.
âI was roaring like a Lion, if a little bit of dribble came out, a bit of dribble came out.â
Trainer Andy Lee also defended Whittakerâs celebrations, having teamed up with the 27-year-old ahead of a defining night in his career in the wake of his first fight against Cameron.
âNobody can underestimate what this man has gone through the last however many months,â said Lee. âMentally, the barrage of insults, the fact heâs still standing here in the ring tonight, not many people could put up with what heâs gone through.
âHeâs still here and performed like that.
âI know for a fact Iâm not going to spend time with somebody who is not worthy of my time.
âThis guy is the best person youâll ever spend time with. He is an emotional guy, he did lose control but itâs only natural with what heâs been through the last six or seven months.â
Coldwell: Whittaker let himself down
Dave Coldwell was critical of Whittakerâs reaction post-fight and suggested he allowed emotions to get the best of him.
âThatâs classless, I donât care if the crowd boo you or not, their man just got beat and stopped, thatâs classless. Thereâs no excuse for that,â said Coldwell on Sky Sports.
âThe performance was outstanding, sharp from the first minute, he was on full alert. The finish was brilliant. He spoilt it at the end.
âWhat has Grant Smith or any of Cameronâs team got to do with that? Thereâs no excuse for that. I get it, I understand when everybody is at you. But you show your class.
âHeâs got the best man in the world looking after him and showing him how to behave because Andy Lee is an unbelievable human being. I understand about human emotion but I think he let himself down.â
British and Commonwealth middleweight champion Callum Simpson, who has openly welcomed a potential fight with Whittaker, also questioned Whittakerâs behaviour.
âIâve never been booed in my life, especially in your home town, it says something about yourself,â Simpson said on Sky Sports.
âHeâs shown his true self now, Grant Smith doesnât deserve that, itâs bang out of order.
âYou know how much of a good guy Grant Smith is. He doesnât deserve that.â
Nelson: It was human emotion
Johnny Nelson insisted Whittaker could be forgiven for his reaction, having been faced with accusations that he bowed out too easily during Octoberâs clash.
âIt was emotion coming out. Frustration. Because of what heâs gone through, heâs been vilified, chastised,â said Nelson.
âItâs him saying âIâm not washed up, everything youâve said about me is complete rubbishâ. Itâs human emotion.â
âUnfortunately again after the win heâs going to get criticised. Heâs got the job done. Look at it again and again, you watch his face. Itâs hurt him, it was human emotion.â
Whittaker had been unfazed by the mixed atmosphere on Sunday night as he delivered a vastly-improved performance, rocking Cameron with a crashing right hand by launching a vicious assault that would spell the end for his opponent.
âBen Whittaker did everything right and got the job done,â Nelson continued. âThat should have happened in the first place. Itâs better off itâs happening now than 19 fights down the line.
âWe had to see that. He was unhappy with a silver medal in the Olympics, we had to see that and he needed it for himself.
âHe has been under immense pressure, we know heâs a talent but the pressure is there. He doesnât do himself any favours because his mouth gets in the way at times, but we love him or loathe him. Itâs why he sells out arenas.â
Watch Chris Eubank Jr vs Conor Benn on Saturday live on Sky Sports Box Office.
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