Conor Benn, Lawrence Okolie and Joshua Buatsi all picked up victories at London's York Hall on Friday night.
Conor Benn was at his destructive best as he blasted aside Kane Baker in the second on his York Hall debut.
The 20-year-old, son of boxing great Nigel, continued his unbeaten streak in the pro game by landing a huge combination in the second stanza that forced the referee to waive the contest off.
Lawrence Okolie went the scheduled distance for the first time in his career but still remains unbeaten after outpointing Blaise Mendouo.
The Rio Olympian has made a destructive start to his professional career, but Mendouo proved a game opponent as Okolie, who did record a knockdown, was taken the distance where he eventually won via a score of 59-54.
Despite taking his time to find his range, Okolie, 24, quickly troubled the Cameroonian with a crunching right uppercut in the opener, but it wasn't enough to stop 'The Sauce' going the full three minutes for the first time in his professional career.
Olympian Joe Cordina made it four first-round stoppage wins from as many fights with a spiteful finish of Jamie Speight.
The Rio 2016 representative supremely dominated the lightweight contest and finished the fight after a relentless onslaught forced the referee to call a halt to proceedings.
The Welsh wizard is still yet to reach the second round in the paid ranks
Joshua Buatsi earned a fifth-round stoppage win over Baptiste Castegnaro to make it two wins inside the distance from as many fights.
It was only the second outing in the paid ranks for the 24-year-old light-heavyweight, who after claiming bronze at last summer's Rio Olympics, gave another glimpse of his undoubted power and talent.
Croydon's Buatsi used the opening round to work out his French opponent who was very much making it his goal to smother the work of Buatsi and make it a messy affair.
Jake Ball outpointed Joe Sherriff in a thrilling English title eliminator shootout while Ted Cheeseman won in somewhat strange circumstances.
Ball, nicknamed 'The Blade', made a brisk start but quickly returned to his heavy-handed relentless approach to get two knockdowns on his way to a 97-94 points win to move a step close to an English light-heavyweight title shot.
English super-welterweight champion Cheeseman took little time to defeat Italian Francesco Lezzi, albeit in bizarre fashion, as he extended his record to 10-0.
The finish came in the third round as Lezzi, who spent most of the fight complaining, was disqualified for pushing the referee.

