Conor Benn looks lean and fight-ready at 156lbs, 10 weeks from his Nov. 15 rematch with Chris Eubank Jr at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Punters may favour Benn to make weight comfortably and press a faster pace, while Eubank’s prior dehydration scare raises concerns about his stamina—bettors might prefer a Benn decision or a close points outcome over a late stoppage.
Conor Benn has revealed a ripped physique as he ramps up for the November 15 rematch with Chris Eubank Jr at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The 28-year-old, a natural welterweight who moved up two divisions for the first fight, tipped the scales at roughly 70.8kg (156lbs) in footage from his Essex gym, showing clear visible definition as camp progresses.
Their first meeting in April produced a gripping contest that went the distance, with Eubank Jr awarded a unanimous decision. Benn, undersized for the middleweight bout, nevertheless pushed the contest to the final bell, earning plaudits for his heart and work-rate. The rematch carries the same weight stipulations: both fighters must make the 160lb limit, with a strict rehydration cap.
Eubank Jr will again be required to hit 160lbs on the Friday weigh-in and will be barred from rehydrating above 170lbs at the second weigh-in on fight morning. That 10lb rehydration clause was contentious during the buildup to the first fight, with concerns raised about prolonged weight depletion and its medical dangers.
The rule aims to limit extreme rehydration swings that can create unfair size mismatches, but it also forces heavy cutting strategies that risk performance on fight night. For a fighter who naturally sits below the middleweight ceiling, like Benn, the clause can be an advantage; for a boxer who struggles to make 160, it can be punishing.
Eubank Jr required hospital treatment after the first fight as he recovered from severe dehydration. He later described vivid symptoms—IV fluids, retained fluid that would not pass, facial puffiness, a major cut and intense headache—highlighting how extreme the weight-cut took a toll on his immediate post-fight recovery.
Benn’s current condition suggests he’s comfortable at his camp weight and may carry extra energy into the rematch. Eubank Jr’s past dehydration issues create legitimate questions about his ability to withstand another brutal cut without affecting in-ring performance. Expect discussions around stamina, late-round sharpness and whether either man will change their approach to avoid another medical scare.
With Benn looking in strong physical shape and the rehydration clause still in place, the rematch shapes up as a tactical, high-intensity contest where conditioning could decide the outcome. Bettors should factor Benn’s apparent comfort at camp weight and Eubank’s past dehydration risk into markets such as rounds totals, decision vs stoppage, and late-round outcomes.
Conor Benn looks ripped and ready 10 weeks out from his rematch with Chris Eubank Jr.The bitter rivals are set to renew their hostilities on November
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