Leo Atang,
Adam Maca and
Tiah Mai-Ayton have all debuted under the Matchroom banner in recent months, with high hopes for all three amateur standouts in their respective divisions.
The teenage trio are scheduled to return next month, while another from their age-group will make his professional debut next weekend in Queensberry-backed John Joe Carrigan.
The teenage Cumbrian, whose social media feeds read like an honour roll with victories on domestic, European and the world scene, is bullish that his success will continue into the paid ranks as the latest prospect with world championship aspirations to one day realise.
Having turned professional in May under Frank Warren's stable, he hoped for an outing by the end of summer but instead returns to the Scottish capital for his debut, where his Queensberry deal was unveiled during the
Josh Taylor-Ekow Essuman bill in Glasgow.
Slated to face Poland's Dawid Przybylski (2-3, 1 KO) in a four-round contest on the
Nathaniel Collins-Cristobal Llorente undercard, the esteemed amateur represents another welcome addition to a junior middleweight division needing new blood on British shores.
The jury remains out on Matchroom's 23-year-old talent
Junaid Bostan, who rematches Bilal Fawaz for the vacant English title as part of the Dave Allen-Arslanbek Makhmudov undercard on Oct. 11 after their January 30 meeting
ended in a contentious split draw.
Sam Gilley-Ishmael Davis for British honours is set for the
Chris Eubank Jr-Conor Benn 2 bill the following month, between two boxers with a likely ceiling at European level.
The same can be said for the Fail twins, aged 28,
enduring injury and inactivity at a time where the sport's ever-changing landscape favours availability - just look at
Davis' recent conqueror Caoimhin Agyarko.
"I'm not being big-headed but geniunely believe I can beat anyone at the weight. I know I'm still young and have time to do it, but in my head, anyone they put in-front of me, I'll continue beating as I have done before," Carrigan confidently told
The Ring.
What gives him the confidence to say that?
"No-one has seen me spar as a pro - I'm a different person - hurting guys in sparring, hurting middleweights, and with 10 ounce gloves, I put people to sleep. Obviously I'm starting with four rounders, but I'm ready to do much more if needs be."
Listening to advice from two-weight world champion
Billy Joe Saunders and rubbing shoulders with The Ring's No. 9-rated light heavyweight contender
Willy Hutchinson, it's clear to see that besides his youthful exuberance, the 18-year-old has an encouraging base to start from.
He posted pictures sparring with former English 154-pound champion Lee Cutler in June and has changed gyms, moving to be trained by John Studds and Anthony Kelly down at the Tenacity Gym after a ten-year stint with Border City ABC during his junior years.
On the change, he said: "It was just natural for me to be with John and Ant, John got me ready for the World Championships, helped secure sparring and pad sessions - I've loved it.
"I'm the strongest 18-year-old at 154-pounds, not many can prove it and I can punch but also box too. I was always slick as an amateur, making people miss and making them pay.
"I look at the end goal,
Vasiliy Lomachenko completed boxing and I want to be like him when I'm finished, a slick boxer who can punch, not just one-dimensional, it's important to have a plan A, B and C if things don't go your way."