Q: What do you regard to be your best performances or most important wins?

Eubank: I put on breathtaking displays against Reginaldo Dos Santos and John Jarvis, nobody else would of been able to do what I did as I did it because I was quite Simply The Best.

Most important wins is a better question. I fought a German, he was 6'3" and he was a southpaw, he had 35 wins in 35 fights, he was a former and future World title holder, I defended my World Championship against him in his hometown of Berlin and beat him soundly on points. I was coming off the back of back-to-back draws so had to do something or risk being lynched back home where I was despised. The racist chanting just spurred me on, it was one of my best wins. That, and the Benn first fight. Benn was a national hero, he crossed the Atlantic with nothing and came back with a World title. While he was away, I built up a 24-0-0 record. But I was only 24-years-old and very untested, the reason I was untested was because nobody could test me because I was too good. I was that good. But the Benn first fight proved that I was for real, although it was harder than I expected. All I had to do was show up I thought, the win was a full gone conclusion before the fight had even started, but I was proved very wrong indeed. What the Benn first fight did was bring me back down to earth and make me humble, it was a learning curve. Even though I won, it made me realise just how tough the sport was. A win more important that those two though, far more important infact, was Anthony Logan. You see, he was world-class and I was just a novice at the time. I beat him on points without even breaking a sweat though. It was important because it was later that night that I decided to make a career out of boxing and really go for it from then.