Nick Ball provides update on his career, recent injury woes, and who’s on his hit list!

Newly-crowned WBA World featherweight champion Nick Ball (30-1, 11KO) revealed in an interview with Seconds Out that he was forced to have surgery after defeating Raymond Ford, last June in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Speaking to Danny Flexen from Seconds Out, Ball began by explaining his absence from social media and interviews, “I’m still waiting for the belt to be delivered, so not too happy about that! It’s been about six weeks now since the fight and the belt’s still not here, so dunno what’s going on with that.

“And I had a little operation on Friday [July 12th], yeah had to get fixed up and just been recovering. It was a previous [injury], like in the training up to it [the fight].

“I don’t know how long I’ve had it. It was three areas, off [caused by] running and a lot of strain and things like that. In the fight and after the fight, it was a problem so I had to go and see a specialist and get it sorted and he’s doing a good job on it.”

On his recovery process, he enlightened on what he has to do to get back to training, “Just take it easy, not rushing, like for the first two or three weeks then start in light exercise, then they said return back to your chosen sport after about four or five weeks, so should be all good now.”

Then the 27-year-old expanded on the likely cause of the damage, “He [the specialist] said it was off running and a lot of strain as well, as I’m training hard all year round and I had basically two back to back camps within a week I was straight back in after Rey Vargas and then straight into Ray Ford one so it was non-stop, breaking the body down with the training and the fights; it’s fixed now so I’m all good.”

He then assured that the injury didn’t impact him during the fight with Ford, “Not really, no. He hit my with a good body shot in round one, right in the belly button, so maybe, but not too sure.”

Ball defeated Ford via split decision on the groundbreaking 5 vs 5 event between Queensberry and Matchroom.

“Good event to be a part of really, it was 10-0 weren’t it!” Ball praised Queensberry, his long-term promotional outfit. “Just grateful to be a part of it.”

Both Ball’s world title shots ended on a split, firstly against Rey Vargas for the Mexican’s WBC bauble, then against unbeaten American prospect Raymond Ford for the vacant WBA belt.

The Merseysider compared the two bouts that took place back-to-back in the first half of 2024, firstly explaining that fighting Ford wasn’t as bad as Vargas, “Not really, no, cos he was there to be hit, he didn’t run away. Vargas, it was more frustrating.

“The first couple of rounds with Vargas was tricky, finding the range… I didn’t want to just rush in as well, because obviously he’s a world champion, anything can happen, so I just tried to gauge it and then obviously the second half of the fight I ran him out the ring really. He was running away so that’s frustrating in itself because you can’t pin them down, so Ray Ford was more easier to hit.”

Ball had to wait for a second world title shot before he came a world champion, having held WBC featherweight world champion Rey Vargas to a draw earlier this year in March.



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