By Chris Glover

Dublin, Ireland  - Jamie Conlan moved to (15-0, 9 KOs) after a superb display of skill in a four round controlled demolition of Adrian Dimas Garzon.

Conlan started quickly against his veteran Argentinian opponent establishing himself as the aggressor, varying his attacks from head to body.

'The Mexican' continued to dominate showing a variety of punches which included an excellent jab.

Conlan continued to show a variety of punches throughout, in what started to look like an exhibition of his skills that are being nurtured under the guidance of Danny Vaughan.

The end came in the fourth round as Conlan put his Argentinian opponent down in the fourth from a right hook to the head. Shortly after the referee decided enough was enough after a flurry of punches came in from Conlan.

Conlan will now look to set up a big British and Irish showdown with Paul Butler in the early months of 2016.

UNDERCARD

Peter McDonagh proved tonight that age is just a number and that records are for DJs as he rolled the clock back and produced a magnificent display to become a three weight Irish Champion after defeating Dean Byrne 97-94 on referees Mickey Vann's scorecard.

McDonagh out worked Byrne in the first round. McDonagh looking the bigger and physically stronger man looking of the two.

McDonagh's jab looked to be the difference between the both in the opening rounds. His footwork was something that Byrne probably hadn't planned for as McDonagh controlled the fight from range with relative ease.

Byrne attempted with some success in dragging McDonagh into a scrap in the mid rounds, however McDonagh's strength suited a more physical style of fight. McDonagh went back to the jab and move style, adding the right hand carefully and precisely when it was needed.

The latter rounds were more of the same. Byrne attempted to pressure McDonagh having success in the eighth however it was too little too late as McDonagh had dominated the first seven rounds.

War broke out in the eight and ninth with referee Mickey Vann deciding to deduct a point from Byrne in the ninth round as desperation tactics set in as he tried to drag McDonagh into a war knowing he had to stop him to win at these stage. The point deduction was due to a low blow and rabbit punch in extremely quick succession.

The final round saw Peter McDonagh on his bike and coast to the finish line in the best boxing display of McDonagh's career. Referee in charge Mickey Vann scored the contest 97-94 in favour of McDonagh who moves to (25-28-1, 3 KOs). Byrne drops to (17-6-2, 6 KOs).

David Maguire was masterful inside the first round as he overwhelmed Josef Kusmirek within a round; picking his shots well as he moved to (5-0, 2 KOs).

Kusmirek looked outgunned and outclassed from the first 10 seconds as Maguire was switch hitting and only taking a handful of shots as he hurt his opponent early in the first round.

After a few 'slips' by Kusmirek, Maguire managed to catch his opponent with a cracking shot pole axing him to the floor. The referee had seen enough.

The Viking is a man who will be in a hurry for titles in the near future.

WBO European Super Middleweight Championship - Jamie Cox (20-0 12 KOs) demolished Ferenc Albert inside just two minutes of the first round as he aims to crack on to world level in the very near future.

Cox started at a rapid pace putting his opponent down within the first minute, throwing straight left hands and right hooks. The first knockdown came from a right hook around the guard.

The end came shortly after as Cox landed a massive right hook when his opponent Albert launched his first attack. The hook caught Albert clean on the chin and it was goodnight Vienna for the Hungarian as Cox looked devastating.

Jamie Kavanagh (20-1-1, 10 KOs) returned to Irish soil with a win against the very negative Ozkar Fiko via a seventh round knockout.

Both fighters started the contest fast with each man loading up with shots from the outset. Kavanagh was cut midway through the first, possibly by a head clash.

Kavanagh worked in close and tried to walk his opponent down. Fiko was throwing his head in when Kavanagh came in as both fighters looked to land big shots throughout the second and third round.

Kavanagh started slowing his Romanian opponent down with body shots, and began focusing his attack downstairs. The referee took a point from Fiko after he repeatedly held on to Kavanagh every time 'the nuisance' came in close.

Kavanagh continued walking his Romanian opponent down as he pressed for the stoppage. Jamie's work rate remained high throughout as Fiko's began to slow down. The Romanian Fiko began to spoil and survival tactics as Kavanagh continued to try and walk Fiko down but became a victim of repeated holding.

Round seven saw the referee in charge deducted a second point from Fiko for holding as it was visibly spooling the contest. Kavanagh continued his pressure, and managed to unleash a combination to the body on the inside, putting his Romanian opponent down. Fiko was up however the referee in charge had seen enough and judged that Ozkar Fiko was in no position to continue at 2.08 of the seventh round.

Kavanagh moves to (20-1-1, 10 KOs) in a disappointing fight caused by Ozkar Fiko (14-13) negative tactics.

8x3 minute rounds for the Celtic Warrior Cruiserweight title - The battle of Ireland, and a real war of attrition was won by Dublin man Ian Tims in a real close scrap with County Mayo's Michael Sweeney.

Tims started the fighter appearing to try and force his size on Sweeney as he appeared to be the bigger of the two boxers. Sweeney however took the opening round as he started with a higher work rate, varying his attacks from body to head with fluidity.

The second round started differently as the fight began to turn into a tear-up with both fighters looking for big shots throughout the round. Sweeney seemed to have the cleaner work and took the round.

Tims physical strength began showing his strength in the mid rounds. Despite Sweeney having some success he looked somewhat tired, during the third. Tims boxed more efficiently, not wasting many shots when working in close.

Sweeney had a brighter spells however Tims seemed to be doing more of the same, working efficiently on the inside. Then came a disputable knockdown which could be argued was a push that left Tims in disarray.

Tims seemed to have more in the tank going into the latter stages winning the fifth clearly as he focused his attack on Sweeney's body in a fight which turned in Tims favour as Sweeney looked absolutely shattered, smothering Tims work at every opportunity. Sweeney complained in the corner at the end of the sixth he had hurt his hand.

Tims looked the fitter of the two, working from bell to bell from every opportunity. Both fighters showed heart in a real close contest.

The referee awarded the contest 76-75 to Ian Tims as he moves to (11-3, 3 KOs) in a really good fight for the fans to watch. Michael Sweeney drops to (12-4-1, 6 KOs) but can definitely take positives from a hard fought eight rounds.

Talented slick Irish Southpaw Declan Geraghty continued his education in the pro ranks moving to (10-1, 2 KOs) after a shut-out six round victory against Reynaldo Cajina.

Geraghty quickly established himself in the contest, controlling proceedings with his jab from the offset. The former Irish amateur star used his excellent footwork and ring craft to gain control of the ring as he teed off at will against his Spanish opponent.

Cajina looked puzzled throughout the contest as 'Pretty Boy' Geraghty used his excellent footwork to work the angles effectively.

Geraghty visibly hurt Cajina to the body on several occasions during the contest. 'Deco' didn't seem to try and push for the knockout, however Cajina barely landed a shot all night against the slick Irishman as he drops to (14-29-5) as the referee scored the contest 60-54 in favour of Dubliner Declan 'Pretty Boy' Geraghty.

Unbeaten Sunderland welterweight Isaac Macleod started his fifth professional outing at a furious pace against Slovakia's Lubos Priehradnik. Macleod established his pinpoint jab early in the first round before focusing his attack to the body. Macleod continued to press the action in the second round, using his combination punching effectively enough to catch the referee's eye as Mickey Vann decided to call a halt to the contest due to nothing coming back from Priehradnik. Former GB team member Macleod moves to five fights unbeaten with two knockouts. Lubos Priehradnik drops to (10-67-1, 7 KOs)

Heavyweight Sean Turner (7-0, 5 KOs) won in explosive style in just over a minute after knocking down Gabor Farkas (7-38, 3 KOs) three times. 'Big Sexy' put his 6ft 6ins opponent down with a straight right hand in 12 seconds. Turner continued the onslaught putting his overwhelmed Lithuanian opponent down again before closing the show with a devastating right hand in the first round of the scheduled four-round contest.

Vijender Singh vs Dean Gillen (4x3 International Middleweight contest). Singh starting well controlling the centre of the ring with the jab. Half way through round one Singh drops Gillen with a straight right. Singh picked up the tempo and finished off Gillen at the end of round one as he failed to fire back from a barrage of shots which caused the second knockdown of the fight. Millions of Indian fans can be happy after a devastating display from Vijender Singh. An excellent second professional win for Singh. He is now 2-0 with two knockouts to his name.