On Wednesday evening, some of Britain's brightest prospects appeared on Matchroom's Indigo Fight Night show in London.
Some - like the exciting
Adam Maca and middleweight hope
Emmanuel Buttigieg - were kept busy against overmatched opponents while others were given the opportunity, graduating to title level.
The Ring has a look at what the future may hold for some of the night's biggest winners.
Giorgio Visioli (10-0, 6 KOs)

The unbeaten 23-year-old lightweight was taken 10 rounds for the first time in his short career but
outboxed the determined Joe Howarth to win the English title.
Visioli impressed and barely stopped moving from first bell to last. That constant movement may cause him problems against a smarter pressure fighter able to cut the ring off and close the distance without absorbing the level of punishment Howarth had to.
Visioli has the talent to be much more than a mover.
Fighters like
Shakur Stevenson,
Keyshawn Davis and
Abdullah Mason are all beautiful boxers and smart fighters but also showed the ability to slow a fight down, establish their range and completely disarm aggressive pressure fighters before stepping up to world level.
It may seem ridiculous to mention Visioli in the same breath as fighters of that calibre but those are the levels Visioli must aspire to if - as his backers suggest - he is to reach the very top of the 135-pound division.
Visioli has fast hands, excellent reflexes and has shown the ability to finish fights with well-timed counter shots.
He will be able to beat the majority of British opponents using a quicksilver style but as he progresses through his career, the challenges will get tougher and it would be interesting to see him start setting his feet and punishing opponents for stepping to him now, rather than figuring out how to do it later.
There are plenty of opponents for Visioli to practice against.
British champion
Louie O'Doherty is unbeaten and aggressive while former British champion Liam Dillon barely takes a backwards step.
Former British, Commonwealth and European champion
Gavin Gwynne, has pressure tested
Cameron Vuong’s credentials twice over the past 12 months and, by next summer, would provide Visioli the ideal opportunity to prove he has what it takes to reach a higher level.
If Visioli could beat Gwynne on his own terms rather than squeaking by and surviving the ordeal, it would be a very encouraging sign.
John Hedges (12-0, 3 KOs)

The 6ft 6in tall Hedges used his size and boxing ability to
neuter the experienced Ellis Zorro, easing to a comfortable 10-round decision in the first defence of his English cruiserweight title.
The lack of fireworks will cause people to overlook the result but Hedges beat Zorro in far more comfortable fashion than his
explosive domestic rival Aloys Junior managed in July.
Hedges has endured a difficult year outside of the ring but has managed to stay on track inside it.
Earlier this year he spilt with longtime trainer, Mark Tibbs, and quickly linked up with his friend and former two-weight world champion, Ricky Hatton, before his English title win over Nathan Quarless.
Hatton’s tragic death in September threw Hedges' future plans into disarray and he
trained with Frank Greaves before the Zorro fight.
There will be immediate calls for Hedges to be rushed into a fight with Aloys Junior or the aggressive 2024 Olympian
Pat Brown, but should be given time to settle with a new trainer and spend some time building and improving, rather than having to cobble together training camps and gameplans.
If he can spend three months in the gym and wait for the British Boxing Board of Control to mandate somebody to challenge him for the English title, he will be far better placed to challenge for the British title next summer.
Of course, the Board could take matters out of Hedges' hands by ordering him into a shot at
Viddal Riley's British title. Although it is unlikely Riley would be interested, Hedges would then quickly find himself right at the sharp end of the British cruiserweight scene.
Tiah Mai Ayton (4-0, 4 KOs)
Within the space of four professional fights,
Tiah Mai Ayton's right hand has become arguably the most dangerous weapon in women's boxing.
Ayton dismantled, dropped and hurt Brazil's usually solid Ana Moraes in three rounds. It was her fourth consecutive stoppage victory since she turned professional in June.
In her post-fight interview, the 19-year-old said that she believes she can become a world champion in 2026 and mentioned the name of Australia's undisputed bantamweight beltholder,
Cherneka Johnson.
Given that Ayton has competed in over 300 fights across many disciplines, it shouldn't come as any surprise that she appears poised and confident from the second she steps into the ring. She also fights as if her heart rate never rises above 60 beats per minute.
It's the teenager's one-punch power that separates her from the rest of the pack. It is a rare gift for a female bantamweight to possess and Ayton has quickly worked out how to use it.
It will be all but impossible to hold Ayton back in 2026. Matchmakers will struggle to find opponents skilled, robust and determined enough to take her rounds and whilst she has stated her desire to win a British title outright, it may be hard persuading British fighters to step into the ring with her.
At some point next year, Ayton will box for a world title. Until then, Matchroom will need to keep her as busy and visible as possible.