Berinsfield’s national schoolboy champion Jordan Flynn (pictured) was in emphatic form at Trowbridge as he dished out a boxing lesson to Barton Hill rival Andy Grant – a beaten semi finalist at the same weight.

Flynn imposed his authority from the bell, landing repeatedly to both head and body with an array of hooks and solid rights off the jab.

Grant somehow managed to remain upright, although he succumbed to a standing count after an unanswered nine-punch salvo in the final round.

Flynn won by a comprehensive points margin, although it was a bout that could easily have been stopped. Teenage light welterweight Joe Bolton added a second Berinsfield success on the excursion to west Wiltshire with an emphatic victory over Frome’s John Swaby.

Neat head and body clusters forced the Somerset youth onto the back foot early into this encounter and he struggled to reverse the tide.

A straight right rocked Swaby towards the end of the second session with the bell for the interval saving him from an inevitable stoppage.

Bolton consolidated his advantage in the final round, taking no chances as he romped to victory.

But Will Healy was on the receiving end of the night’s most contentious decision in his return match with Chris Smitherman.

Healy bowled over his Trowbridge rival with a right uppercut in the final round before the bell rang prematurely to save Smitherman and, to his surprise, gain victory on a highly-dubious split decision.

Teenage Thame welterweight Gavin Joseph lacked the precision of Chichester southpaw rival Jack Steed as he lost on points at Bracknell.

And Blackbird Leys super heavyweight Kahinde Johnson lost on his debut to more experienced Reading rival Aji Sharif later at the same tournament.