Alan Hubbard

News that boxing is to make a comeback at the Royal Albert Hall is music to my ears - almost literally so.

The last time I was there a Russian heavyweight named Tchaikovsky was topping the bill, courtesy of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Next time, on Friday, March 8, it will be a symphony of sock at the venerable venue, courtesy of Frank Warren and featuring some classical pugilistic percussion as composed by some of Britain's finest fighters.

Among them, rising heavyweight star Daniel Dubois will have his 10th professional fight against Romanian giant Razvan Cojanu. Double Olympic gold medallist Nicola Adams will also be in action, sharing top billing in a bid for her first world professional title in a super show televised live by BT Sport.

Adams will challenge the World Boxing Organization (WBO) world flyweight champion, Mexican Arely Mucino, having won the interim world title in October with a clear-cut points victory over Isabel Millan in her fifth professional contest.

"To fight for the WBO world title at the Royal Albert Hall is a dream come true when you consider the great names that have performed there and I want to make this another memorable occasion," said Adams.

In the 1960s and 1970s the London arena hosted boxing legends including Muhammad Ali, Sir Henry Cooper and Frank Bruno.

In over half-a-century I have covered boxing from Manchester Arena to Madison Square Garden, from Wembley Stadium to the Superdome in New Orleans, from Kuala Lumpur to Kinshasa. But no venue has more history, grandeur or atmosphere than the terracotta-clad circular edifice, with its ornate balcony boxes and acoustically perfect auditorium housed under a glazed dome.

Las Vegas may have the MGM Grand, but no fight venue is grander than the Royal Albert Hall.

Boxing is due to return to London's famous Royal Albert Hall ©Getty Images
Boxing is due to return to London's famous Royal Albert Hall ©Getty Images

Warren calls it "a posh York Hall" and indeed it is a West London-version of East London's iconic emporium - but bigger and with gold-plated knobs on.

Here is boxing in the round - round-by-round.

The construction of the world-renowned building began in 1867 when Queen Victoria laid the Hall's foundation stone. She named it in memory of her husband, Prince Albert, who had died six years earlier.

It has a long association with the ABA Championships and professional boxing there goes back some 100 years.

Although there were boxing displays within other events, the first proper tournament took place on December 11 and 12 in 1918. The contestants were soldiers and sailors of the armed forces - The British Empire v The American Services.

This led to a series of 12 boxing events between December 1, 1919 and November 30, 1920. These were held under Championship conditions, for gold trophies or cups, but not for prize money.

The French matinee idol Georges Carpentier fought three exhibition rounds on December 26, 1919. Shortly after, on January 13, 1921, the Prince of Wales, a great boxing fan, sat ringside to watch American Pete Harman beat Welsh legend Jimmy Wilde in the 17th round.

In 1925, the first of a series of contests with prize money was allowed.

Italy's Ambling Alp, the giant Primo Carnera, boxed in Britain for the first time at the 5,500-capacity Hall, which was regarded as an excellent venue for boxing where no spectator was far from the ring. The ring could therefore be smaller than anywhere else with the result that there was more spectacular in-fighting.

The great Ali boxed eight exhibition rounds on October 19, 1971, and his old foe Cooper fought there four times.

Naseem Hamed knocked out Colombian Juan Polo Perez on July 1, 1995 and Lennox Lewis began his pro-career there, appearing seven times in his early years.

Bruno's career was also forged there, fighting on 15 occasions. It was where Britain's most famous fistic chant of "Broo-no, Broo-no" first reverberated around an arena.

The last World Championship contested at the Royal Albert Hall before a 12-year break was between Marco Antonio Barrera and Paul Lloyd on April 3, 1999. Also on the bill that night was a British heavyweight title fight between Julius Francis and Danny Williams as well as a young Ricky Hatton.

In the same year the Hall lost its licence for boxing following concerns from local residents about noise levels.

But in April 2011, the Court of Appeal overturned the ruling and as Hall of Fame promoter Warren said at the time: "Boxing's been at the Royal Albert Hall since 1920 and there's not been any problems to my knowledge. It certainly is not as loud as a rock concert." 

Or, indeed, Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture. The drumbeats are still thudding in my eardrums.

Boxer Nathan Cleverly makes a nod to the Royal Albert Hall's musical tradition outside the venue ©Getty Images
Boxer Nathan Cleverly makes a nod to the Royal Albert Hall's musical tradition outside the venue ©Getty Images

Following the lengthy break, boxing returned to the Hall on October 7, 2011, with a contest between the UK Armed Forces and the US Armed Forces in association with the charity Tickets For Troops.

The last pro-tournament staged there was seven years ago on April 28, 2012, when former Olympian Billy Joe Saunders disposed of Tony Hill in just 30 seconds to win the Commonwealth middleweight title.

Other noteworthy moments included the notorious Kray twins, Reggie and Ronnie, with their elder brother Charlie, appearing on the same bill on December 11, 1951. Several years later, when their gangster exploits became well-known, the promoter Mickey Duff barred them from entering the arena as fans. The twins responded by sending a parcel to his wife containing two dead rats.

The grand old venue had a rather less auspicious spell during the 1960s when pushover pugs, mainly from Mexico, were imported as fodder for British prospects. They became known as the Tijuana Tumblers.

My own memories of many magical hours spent ringside at the Royal Albert Hall are highlighted by the real blood and thunder scrap between two fierce-hitting American heavyweights, Leotis Martin and Thad Spencer in May 1968; the peerless Howard Winstone's acquisition of  the world featherweight title against Japan's Mitsunori Seki a couple of months earlier and, back in April 1963, my one-time flatmate Frankie "Tiger" Taylor's sixth round knock-out of Lenny "The Lion" Williams, a featherweight punch-up so pulsating that some fans almost toppled from their balcony boxes in excitement.

Great nights and great fights. Now, after Tchaikovsky and the Tijuana Tumblers, the Royal Albert Hall tunes up again, this time for boxing's 2019 Overture.