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Lee Selby bids to end heartbreak with December defence of IBF crown

LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 15:  Lee Selby defeats Jonathan Victor Barros and claims the IBF World Featherweight title at Wembley Arena on July 15, 2017 in Lond
Image: Lee Selby's December 9 opponent is still to be confirmed

Lee Selby will fight to put a heartbreaking year behind him when he makes the latest defence of his IBF featherweight title on December 9.

The 30-year-old has been told that should he succeed at London's Copper Box Arena - against an opponent still to be confirmed - he will next summer fight mandatory challenger Josh Warrington at Leeds' Elland Road.

Thereafter the match-up with Carl Frampton he has long sought, potentially at Belfast's Windsor Park, would become increasingly likely given the Northern Irishman is also working with promoter Frank Warren.

Lee Selby (right) in action against Jonathan Victor Barros during their IBF World featherweight title at Wembley Arena, London.
Image: Selby beat Jonathan Victor Barros at Wembley Arena in July

For all that he relishes those prospects, when he returns next month it will be with a heavy heart. Days before his points defeat of Jonathan Victor Barros in July, his mother Frankie had died.

The Selby family had already faced the death of his oldest brother Michael in 2008, after he fell into a river in Weston-super-Mare, and the champion has revealed that grandfather Peter - his "number one fan" - died following a battle with Alzheimer's a week after his mother.

"It's been tough: my grandfather passed away as well, so it's been tough," said the Welshman. "I've still got my focus and my goals and what I want to achieve.

"I haven't had any luck in anything, in boxing, in life in general, so hopefully now my luck is changing.

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"He was my number one fan. He didn't come to shows so much as he got older; he got a bit sick so couldn't really follow me around.

"The boxing: that's my gateway from everything. That's when I'm at peace, when I'm spending hours in the gym, that's when my mind's clear. It's when I'm sat around and have time to think... when I'm in the gym I just switch off.

"I try not to get involved when I'm boxing, I try to cut my emotions off and just focus.

"It's almost like I've got a split-personality: when I'm in the ring I'm one person, outside I'm a totally different person."

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