The Welter Lauren Price weight easily exceeded Natasha Jonas to settle their domestic rivalry and become a unified world champion in a moment of change of guards for women's boxing at the Royal Albert Hall.
The speed, sharpness and youth of the 30 -year -old were too much for the veteran Jonas, who had a hard time with his timing on 10 rounds during the main event of a fully women's card in London.
Jonas de Liverpool, 40, has reduced a deflated figure to the last bell, unlike the exuberant celebrations of the Wales Prize.
The judges marked him 98-93, 100-90 and 98-92 in La Galloise.
Any doubt about identification information at the level of the Price elite and the ability to manage the opportunity were expelled by a virtuoso performance which suggested that the newport fighter could well dominate sport for the years to come.
In only its ninth professional fight, the Olympic gold medalist retains its WBA title and captures WBC and IBF belts in Jonas.
She called for an undisputed title against the winner of WBO Champion Mikaela Mayer and Sandy Ryan, who fight later this month.
“Tash is one of the best in the division, I honestly believe that I can become indisputable. I want to continue and create a great inheritance,” said Price.
There is an uncertainty surrounding Jonas's career, however, because the beautiful race for the twilight of Liverpudlian's career is interrupted.
Jonas – A two -weight world champion – loses for the third time in 19 professional fights and suggested that she could call time.
“It's something I'm going to look at when I get home,” she said. “Right now, I'm going to go home and spend time with my daughter.”
A change of guards to the Royal Royal Albert Hall
The noisy atmosphere was in contradiction with the Auditorium Regal 5,272-Capacity, which has hosted British boxing since 1918 and was around 80%.
The crowd, divided equally also between men and women, sits in plush and cushion seats to enjoy the boxing theater.
The price, in all black, walked first for a huge choir of hooks drowned by the Welsh folk song Yma O Hyd, which exploded from the audio system.
The Jonas Pioneer – The very first British woman to box on an Olympic Games – rightly entered an extraordinary being by Emeli Sandé and Beyonce's Run the World (Girls).
In the locker room before the fight, coach Joe Gallagher pierced in Jonas how to face the breakup of punch from Price, but `Miss Gb '' fought with the speed of his opponent from the start.
Jonas was supported on the strings in the second, felt the power of a left counter, then fell when he was caught by a right.
The prize has bounded with confidence on its toes and continued to assert domination while Jonas failed wildly.
As a sister, footballer Nikita Parris, looking with some of his teammates in England, as well as television celebrities, including presenters Romesh Ranganathan and Stacey Dooley, Jonas began to leave his hands to the fifth.
The success was short -lived. A sensational right hand sent Jonas's head running in the seventh.
“You have to throw a few punches, love,” coach Gallagher told Jonas. Everything seemed a little too late because the result became more and more inevitable.
People sitting at the second level and the gallery had a breathtaking view of the action of the action while Jonas struck the canvas in the ninth after a shift.
Price continued to separate Jonas until the last seconds.
The future of Price shines, but is it over for the Pioneer Jonas?
Price became the very first world champion in Wales when she beat Jessica McCaskill last year.
Less than a year later, she was a victory for the unification of the division. A victory over American Mayer would present Price to a world audience, while a entirely British confrontation with Ryan de Derby could make the headlines of the British newspapers.
“I want to follow in the footsteps of Katie Taylor-I am Welsh, I am Olympic champion, I have a nation behind me,” she said.
Jonas, meanwhile, has achieved so much in sport, but after a long arduous career could be the time to hang up the gloves.
She is a fantastic and articulated expert, manages young combatants and also helped the coach Gallagher in the area.
With all her experience and knowledge of sport, she will be an integral part of British boxing – in any way – for the years to come.