Chicken wings, chocolate milkshake and a holiday in the sun – the tell-tale signs of success for Billy Bird.

And after six weeks of sacrifices, Bird is looking forward to letting off steam on Friday night and enjoying the rewards success brings.

Bird goes into battle against Adam Harper for the vacant English super-welterweight crown at the Ipswich Corn Exchange, desperate to satisfy a ‘home crowd’ after six weeks spent over the border in Norwich preparing for the biggest fight of his career.

“I have based myself up in Norwich for six or seven weeks, Monday to Friday and then Saturday and Sunday I train down my end,” said the 25-year-old, born in Sudbury and now living in Braintree.

“It has been hard being away from home, family, friends and my girlfriend. It has been a case of shutting myself away. Six weeks of pure living, eating and sleeping boxing, that is all it has been.

Sudbury Mercury: Billy Bird with trainers Jon Thaxton, left, and Graham Everett Picture: MARK HEWLETTBilly Bird with trainers Jon Thaxton, left, and Graham Everett Picture: MARK HEWLETT (Image: � 2013 Mark Hewlett)

“But I have actually found a platform where I am at and we are ready to keep on building.

“The hard work is done now.

“It is a case of just keeping sharp. We have our game plan on the night and it is just a case of being careful, not overdoing anything and making sure we go through things and ensure everything is done.

“I feel ready to get the weigh-in done – this is the first time I have made weight this comfortably and I haven’t really had to try. I come straight off one camp on to another. I am in a happy place, we haven’t skipped a thing.”

Sudbury Mercury: Billy Bird, right, in action. Picture: JERRY DAWSBilly Bird, right, in action. Picture: JERRY DAWS (Image: �stilfocusedmedia)

Bird’s opponent had eight straight wins on his career until his last outing, a defeat to Michael Zerafa for the vacant Commonwealth crown – in Australia.

Bird knows Harper’s pedigree, but will rely on the most traditional of boxing instincts.

“I will be honest – every boxer I have ever come up against I have never watched a video of,” he admitted. “I never have done and I never will do. At the end of the day he has got a pair of hands, a pair of feet and a heart like mine.

“It is a case of both going out there and seeing whose heart is bigger – and I believe it is mine and I believe when it comes to fight night I will be victorious.”

And that celebratory feed? “You can’t go wrong with chicken and a milkshake.”