1. The rivalrypublished at 22:23 British Summer Time 25 May

    Josh Taylor v Jack Catterall 2

    Andy Burke
    BBC Sport Scotland

    The two years since the first fight, a controversial split-decision win for Taylor, have been punctuated with insults flying between the fighters.

    Terms were agreed for a rematch to take place in February of 2023, only for Taylor to pull out through injury. Catterall then agreed to fight Darragh Foley while Taylor was mandated to defend his WBO world title against Teofimo Lopez.

    For a long time it looked like Taylor v Catterall 2 would not happen, but since the pair signed on for the rematch the promotional events have been fiery affairs.

    The stark contrast in personalities is one of the big selling points of a bout branded ‘Hate Runs Deep’.

  2. Big-fight predictionspublished at 22:21 British Summer Time 25 May

    Josh Taylor v Jack Catterall 2

    Josh Taylor v Jack Catterall 2Image source, Getty Images

    Former two-weight world champion Ricky Hatton: "This is a fight Taylor had to take or he would have lost respect.

    "I'm going for Catterall for a late stoppage. I've seen them both head-to-head this week and Taylor looked drained at the weight.

    "Jack likes to have a look and take his time but I think if he applies pressure Taylor might struggle and get stopped in the later rounds.”

    Former WBC world cruiserweight champion Tony Bellew: "This is a defining fight for Josh because losing sets him back two years in my opinion - it really does.

    "I just think this is a stylistic match-up that doesn't really suit him. I think it's always going to be a hard one.

    "Catterall's style is very unique, very hard to prepare for and he's a lot more heavy-handed than people give him credit for."

    Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn: "I think Josh will come out really aggressive. Jack picks himself to stop this fight by stoppage and I think this fight will end inside the distance. There will be cuts, there will be knockdowns and loads of action."

  3. Postpublished at 22:17 British Summer Time 25 May

    Cheavon ClarkeImage source, Getty Images

    The final undercard fight is over.

    Cheavon Clarke has beaten Ellis Zorro by knockout to become British cruiserweight champion.

    Next, the main event.

  4. Taylor entering hostile atmospherepublished at 22:15 British Summer Time 25 May

    Josh Taylor v Jack Catterall 2

    Andy Burke
    BBC Sport Scotland at First Direct Arena

    First Direct ArenaImage source, Getty Images

    The First Direct Arena in Leeds is sold-out for this massive British showdown between Josh Taylor and Jack Catterall.

    Technically the fight is happening on neutral territory, but with Catterall's hometown of Chorley fewer than 50 miles away, this will feel like a home crowd for the Englishman.

    Taylor has no problem taking on the role of public enemy number one. In fact, you sense he relishes it.

    The Tartan Tornado will want to come into the lion's den and give the travelling Scots something to shout about.

  5. 'No belts, just pride'published at 22:12 British Summer Time 25 May

    Josh Taylor v Jack Catterall 2

    Steve Bunce
    Boxing expert on BBC Radio 5 Live

    They met two years ago, it was controversial, it was hateful.

    This fight has no belts, just pride. I love that.

  6. How to followpublished at 22:09 British Summer Time 25 May

    Josh Taylor v Jack Catterall 2

    BBC Radio 5 Live

    We're obviously doing live text updates, you're reading this so you've found it. Well done.

    And BBC Radio 5 Live will provide audio commentary from 22:30 BST.

  7. Postpublished at 22:06 British Summer Time 25 May

    Josh Taylor and Jack CatterallImage source, Getty Images

    Grudge matches can sometimes be forced. Nah, this one's proper.

    Josh Taylor and Jack Catterall put an intense two-year feud to bed tonight in Leeds.

    "By far the biggest British fight of the year," Eddie Hearn said this week.