TASIF Khan is celebrating another Bradford triumph in London after marking his return to the ring in emphatic style.

The Girlington super-flyweight roared back from a two-year sabbatical with a 65-second demolition job at York Hall.

In his first outing since December 2012, Khan proved far too strong for experienced Hungarian Richard Voros.

His former kick-boxing opponent had tried to come out quickly but Khan immediately wrestled control from him, landing a jab and then a double-handed flurry.

Voros was forced to cover up, allowing Khan to dance around him and pick him off – sending him to the canvas just 30 seconds in.

Khan refused to let up from the restart and continued to connect with shots to the body and the head, dropping the Hungarian again with a thudding right hand.

Voros stumbled up to beat the count, only to succumb to another barrage of punches. With nothing coming back, referee Ken Curtis had no option but to step in.

Khan, watched by Bradford's former world champion Junior Witter, said: “I’m happy with the result and the way the win came about.

“I felt good, I felt strong, I was relaxed and so pleased to be back fighting again. I had brilliant support and so many people travelled down from Bradford to support me.

“I knew he’d come out fast and I was expecting that because he’s naturally a bigger fighter. He’s really from a division or two bigger than me.

“I was expecting him to use his size advantage and put the pressure on me. He normally fights at featherweight or super-feather.

“I did expect that but not how crude he was. He liked to use his head and hold a lot, just trying to make it a messy fight.

“It is hard to look good in those type of fights but thankfully I caught him with a good shot and picked it up from there. It landed sweet.”