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Paul Gallen knocks out Lucas Browne in round 1

Lucas Browne has hit back over claims he was physically unprepared for Paul Gallen after being humiliated in the first round last night. Relive the action.

Lucas Browne says he trained properly for his showdown against Paul Gallen, and will continue boxing, after suffering a shock knockout loss in just 115 seconds.

Gallen announced himself as a genuine heavyweight boxing threat after stopping former world champion Browne in the opening round at Wollongong’s Entertainment Centre, leading to a savage reaction from observers.

"He hit me with a great shot, you can't fault that from his end and he just swarmed, I didn't have the equilibrium and he capitalised," Browne said.

"[This is] definitely not the last fight [for me], it's been a year-and-a-half since my last fight, I want to stay as active as I can, whether it be someone like a Solomon Haumono, but I do want in the next couple of months to have another fight."

Gallen questioned Browne's training, or lack thereof, prior to the bout, but the 42-year-old said he had trained professionally.

Paul Gallen KOs Lucas Browne with three devastating right hands.
Paul Gallen KOs Lucas Browne with three devastating right hands.

"I did, honestly," Browne said.

"He was talking about me leaving it too late, I did all my fitness and work in Perth first, before I came here [to NSW].

"But the future will hold a lot of fitness in Perth, but I'll come over here three or four weeks out from the fight rather than two just to make sure everything sits in and the game plan is where it should be."

For former NRL star Gallen, this is one of the biggest upsets in Australian boxing history.

He dropped Browne with three savage right hands.

Browne beat the count, but Gallen followed up with a heavy combination of blows that left his much bigger rival sprawled on the canvas.

Lucas Browne slumps into the ropes.
Lucas Browne slumps into the ropes.

Browne had weighed in at 117.08kg, compared to Gallen at 102.2kg, and was the favourite for the bout, though most of the betting money had been placed on Gallen.

Gallen (11-0-1, 6KO) has the biggest scalp on his blossoming boxing career, and compared this to his NRL premiership with Cronulla Sharks in 2016.

"I don't know why but all today - I didn't say this to anyone - but I said 'I'm going to win this in the first round, I'm going to knock him out in the first round'," Gallen said.

"When I hurt him, I just jumped on him.

"When I got the opportunity to throw [the overhand right] I did, and I felt it crack, I knew I got him, I knew I hurt him.

“I’ve been training to be a boxer for eight to 10 months.

“It’s amazing what you can do when you put your mind to something.

“The more I trained, the more I sparred, the better I became at boxing and it showed tonight.”

Paul Gallen has shocked the boxing world.
Paul Gallen has shocked the boxing world.

Browne (29-3, 25KO) showed none of the scary power that took him to a WBA heavyweight title in 2016, and there should now be serious questions around his planned fight against Australian champion Justis Huni.

Gallen is off contract with promoter No Limit, but said he hoped to continue the partnership beyond this fight, and believes he can continue boxing for another two years as bouts against Sonny Bill Williams, Huni and a rematch with AFL legend Barry Hall loom on the horizon.

Questions had lingered about the quality of opposition Gallen had faced thus far; having beaten largely rival footballers and an unfit Mark Hunt in his last start.

Browne was another level, although he looked woefully inept against an opponent that he enjoyed every advantage; power, height, reach and experience.

Stevie Spark was electric in his win over Jack Brubaker.
Stevie Spark was electric in his win over Jack Brubaker.

On the undercard, Liam Wilson maintained his undefeated record, but was made to work through a rugged 10 rounds by Francis Chua in the super-featherweight division.

Wilson (9-0, 6KO) won with superior speed and power, staggering Chua (8-2-1, 3KO) in the sixth round before the 36-year-old showed grit to put pressure on late.

Wilson, 25, revealed afterwards he’d hurt his right hand early in the fight.

Steve Spark survived a first-round knockdown to win his grudge match against Jack Brubaker via eight-round decision.

Brubaker dropped Spark with a short right in the opening round, but the Queenslander regained his legs quickly to dominate the rest of the bout.

Spark (12-1, 11KO) had stepped up from super-lightweight to win his debut bout at welterweight, while Brubaker’s record dropped to 16-4-2 (8KO).

Bruno Tarimo defeated Kye McKenzie to retain his IBF International Super-featherweight title while also claiming the vacant IBO Intercontinental strap with a relentless 10-round assault.

Tarimo was on McKenzie’s chest for the entire fight and had his opponent rocked in the seventh round, while continuing to pepper him with a body barrage.

Tarimo moved to 26-2-2 (5KO) while McKenzie drops to 21-2 (17KO) after claiming a unanimous decision win.

Lenny Zappavigna made an impressive return after nearly three years out of the ring, blasting out Danny Kennedy in the third round.

Zappavigna, 33, dropped Kennedy with a powerful left hook.

Kennedy rose to keep fighting, however the brutal ensuing barrage of hooks to body and head saw referee Les Fear stop the bout.

Zappavigna (38-4, 28KO) is chasing a fight against former world champion Jeff Horn.

BELOW: RE-LIVE ALL THE ACTION FROM GALLEN V BROWNE IN OUR BLOG

Originally published as Paul Gallen knocks out Lucas Browne in round 1

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Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/sport/boxing-mma/paul-gallenlucas-browne-fight-start-time-gloves-debacle-livestream-live-updates/live-coverage/ccf29dc54860813d1d1779dd79003cc9