Kell Brook vs. Amir Khan at long last? Talk as loud as ever

Amir Khan and Kell Brook continue to say they’re willing to fight one another. Could it actually happen this year?

From Floyd Mayweather Jr. to Manny Pacquiao, a lot happened in the last decade. Here’s something that didn’t:

Kell Brook vs. Amir Khan.

Glaciers have melted since fight fans first started talking about Brook-Khan. There’s still no opening bell, yet the talk is still there, suddenly as loud as ever. Khan mentioned Brook last week, perhaps because he is running out of options for some good money. Retirement looms.

Brook, 33, has heard the renewed talk, of course. It must sound like an old song. He knows the lyrics. Yet, the beat goes on. Perhaps, a re-done version will include more than just talk in a new decade. Maybe not.

“Amir knows where I am, I’m here,’’ Brook, a former welterweight champion, told The Mirror while training for a Feb. 8 bout against Mark DeLuca in Sheffield, England. “If he wants to fight, it’s not hard to make. I’m not being awkward and the world knows that.

“He’s reluctant because we’re both British and with him saying how easy he can beat me, he wouldn’t be able to walk the streets knowing he’d been pasted all over the ring by me.

“He’s been saying for years that he will do this, that and other to me, so when I put him flat on his face he wouldn’t be able to walk around the streets. It would do him in. He can lose to Americans. But losing to a Brit — given the history we’ve got — that’s going to hurt. That’s the major issue for him.”

Brook (38-2, 26 KOs) went on to say that he does not expect to hear from Khan if he delivers an impressive performance in a victory over DeLuca (24-1, 13 KOs).

“I’m fed up of saying his name,’’ said Brook, who hasn’t fought since scoring a unanimous decision over Michael Zerafa on Dec. 12, 2018.

However, he hasn’t eliminated the Khan option. Brook’s hopes for 2020:

“DeLuca, world title fight, Khan.”

Then, maybe, a decade without talk of Brook-Khan. That’ll sound strange.

Amir Khan, now 33, looking for big names, big money

Amir Khan is hoping for two or three more fights against well-known opponents after a forgettable 2019 that led to talk about retirement.

Amir Khan begins a new year hoping for two or three more fights after a forgettable 2019 that led to inevitable talk about retirement.

Khan, who turned 33 a month ago, hopes for some good money against known names in 2020.

Longtime U.K. rival Kell Brook continues to be a possibility. Khan also continues to talk about Manny Pacquiao, a 41-year-old welterweight champion who hopes to return to the ring while on break from his duties as a Filipino senator this spring.

“I am in a position where I can fight the top fighters that bring a lot of money to the table, and I am very lucky to be in that position,” Khan (34-4, 21 KOs) told The Bolton News, his hometown newspaper. “I can go to America, or go back to Saudi Arabia and do a fight there, or I do a big fight in the U.K.”

Khan, a former junior welterweight champion, lost to Terence Crawford on April 20 in New York. He said he could not continue after he was hit by what was ruled an accidental low blow in the sixth round. Khan, knocked down in the first round, apologized after the TKO loss. In July, he went to Saudi Arabia, stopping late replacement Billy Dibbs in four rounds.

There has been some renewed interest in a Khan-Brook fight, which looks to be more likely than Pacquiao. It’s a good bet that the Filipino’s next fight will be against Danny Garcia or one of the other welterweights tied to Premier Boxing Champions.

Brook is back on Feb. 8 in Sheffield, England against once-beaten Mark DeLuca in a junior middleweight bout. Brook hasn’t fought since December of 2018, when he struggled in a decision over Michael Zerafa.