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How to watch Wood vs Warrington Live On Free Full Fight Boxing 21 February 2026
The lights have dimmed, the chorus of “Sweet Caroline” has faded, and the tension inside the Motorpoint Arena is thick enough to cut with a boxing wrap. It is Saturday, February 21, 2026, and we are witnessing the final chapter of one of British boxing’s most volatile modern rivalries.
In one corner, the local hero Leigh “Leigh-thal” Wood (28-4, 17 KOs). At 37, Wood has built a career on the “Nottingham Renaissance,” a series of come-from-behind victories that defy logic. In the other, Josh “The Leeds Warrior” Warrington (32-4-1, 8 KOs), the relentless pressure-cooker who believes he was robbed of his dignity by a “premature” stoppage in their first encounter nearly three years ago.
This isn’t about world titles tonight; there are no major belts on the line. This is about legacy. In 2023, Warrington was boxing a masterclass, up on all scorecards, until a single Wood right hook in the 7th round turned his legs to jelly. The referee’s decision to wave it off remains the catalyst for a “bad blood” feud that has simmered ever since.
Both men arrive at a career crossroads. Both are coming off tough bouts—including shared defeats to the formidable Anthony Cacace—and both have hinted that the loser tonight likely heads into retirement. For the winner, a final domestic mega-fight or a swan song at the elite level awaits.
Tale of the Tape
Feature Leigh Wood Josh Warrington
Record 28-4 (17 KOs) 32-4-1 (8 KOs)
Weight 129.8 lbs (Super Feather) 129.7 lbs (Super Feather)
Age 37 35
Style Explosive Power / Counter-puncher Relentless Volume / Pressure
Hometown Nottingham, UK Leeds, UK
Round-by-Round: Live Commentary
Round 1: The Pressure Cooker
The bell rings and the arena erupts. Warrington starts exactly as expected—bolting out of the corner like a man possessed. He’s doubling up the jab and targeting Wood’s ribs. Wood looks calm, keeping a high guard and looking for that short uppercut. A clinical start for the Leeds man.
Verdict: 10-9 Warrington.
Round 2-3: The Gritty Inside Game
Warrington is suffocating Wood. He’s not giving the Nottingham man an inch of breathing room, keeping the fight in the “phone booth.” A heavy clash of heads in Round 2 (a Warrington staple) leaves a small nick over Wood’s left eye. Wood lands a clean straight right in the third, but Warrington barely blinks, firing back with a four-punch combination.
Verdict: 20-18 Warrington.
Round 4: A Shift in Momentum?
Wood begins to find his range. He catches Warrington coming in with a beautiful check hook. For the first time tonight, Warrington’s forward momentum pauses. Wood is starting to “sit” on his punches more. The Leeds man is still busy, but the quality of the work is shifting toward the home fighter.
Verdict: 10-9 Wood (Total: 39-37 Warrington).
Round 5: High-Stakes Chess
It’s a tactical battle now. Warrington is trying to rough Wood up on the inside, using his shoulders to dictate the space. Wood is trying to create distance to launch that devastating right hand. A massive left hook from Wood at the end of the round momentarily stuns Warrington! The bell saves the Leeds Warrior.
Verdict: 10-9 Wood (Total: 48-47 Warrington).
Tactical Breakdown: The Keys to Victory
Warrington’s Key: He must stay “inside the pocket.” If he allows Wood to step back and reset, he is walking into a firing squad. He needs to make this a grueling physical battle and bank rounds through sheer activity.
Wood’s Key: Patience. He is trailing on my card, but as he proved in the first fight, he only needs 0.5 seconds of clean contact. He needs to lure Warrington into over-committing to an exchange.
The Atmosphere: A Divided Arena
The Motorpoint Arena is split down the middle. One side is draped in the white of Leeds, the other in the red of Nottingham Forest. Every time Wood lands, the roof nearly lifts off. Every time Warrington pushes Wood into the ropes, the Leeds contingent roars. This is domestic British boxing at its absolute peak.
Ringside Note: Referee Michael Alexander is under immense pressure tonight. After the controversy of the first fight, he is letting the boys work through the clinches, clearly wanting a definitive, undisputable finish.
The Stakes for the Second Half
As we head into the middle rounds, the narrative of the first fight is repeating itself: Warrington is ahead on work rate, but Wood carries the “Equalizer.” If Warrington can maintain this pace for 12 rounds without walking into a power shot, he will exact his revenge. If Wood finds that one opening, it’s curtains for the Leeds Warrior’s career.

