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WBC demotes Terence Crawford to welterweight ‘halt champion’

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Terence Crawford’s credentials are unquestionable. (Hogan photos)

The king of the division was stripped of another welterweight title.

Terence “Bud” Crawford has been demoted to the WBC “Champion in Recess” title, the sanctioning body confirmed on Monday. The decision was made due to the inactivity of the 147-pound champion of The Ring, who will fight at 154 in his next fight.

“The WBC Board of Governors has voted to accept the title of WBC welterweight champion Terence Crawford during his welterweight hiatus,” the WBC noted in a press statement. “Terence Crawford won the WBC welterweight championship with a spectacular performance, defeating the previously undefeated [Errol] Spence, July 29, 2023

“Crawford will fight on August 3 at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, California in Riyadh’s debut season promotion in the United States. His upcoming fight will be at super welterweight against Israil Madrimov.”

Crawford (40-0-1, 31 knockouts) holds The Ring’s 147-pound crown and is ranked third in the pound-for-pound rankings. Madrimov from Uzbekistan (10-0-1, 7 KO) is ranked 3rd with a score of 154 by The Ring magazine.

The most uptight traditionalists in sports are likely to apply the decision to further condemn sanctioning bodies. However, since his victory over Errol Spence (28-1, 22 KO) on July 29, Crawford has not fought to fully unify the division. He has since been stripped of his IBF belt for failing to defend against Jaron “Boots” Ennis (31-0, 28 KO).

The WBC and WBO have already scheduled interim title fights in anticipation of Crawford’s final departure from the division.

On September 30, Mario Barrios (28-2, 18 KO) defeated former WBA champion Yordenis Ugas and won the interim WBC belt. He defended it in a twelve-round decision over Fabian Maidana on May 4 in Las Vegas.

Interestingly, Monday’s news did not say whether the San Antonio native would be elevated to full champion status.

Brian Norman (26-0, 20 KO) won the WBO interim belt two weeks later. On May 18 in San Diego, Crawford’s former sparring partner knocked out Giovani Santillan in the tenth round. Their fight took place with the understanding that Crawford would enter the fight against Madrimov as the full WBO title holder.

These moves didn’t leave Crawford completely out in the chilly. In fact, sanctioning authorities have bent over backwards to continue working with the undefeated three-division champion.

On August 3, Madrimov’s WBA belt will be at stake, in addition to the interim WBO 154-pound title – for now. The WBO will vote on stripping Sebastian Fundora of his full belt. Fundora was granted diseased leave on the condition that he fulfills the obligation by December 31. Instead, he will face Spence in October and will likely only fight for the WBC title.

Crawford may also be ready for another challenge for the belt. The WBC agreed to punish Madrimov-Crawford as a final eliminator, even though two other titles were already on the line. If he wins, he will have to inform the WBC at what weight he plans to fight next.

The same scenario would also result in a WBA decision as Crawford would have titles in both weight classes. Eimantas Stanionis (15-0, 9 KO), third in the welterweight rankings of The Ring organization, currently holds the WBA “Regular” title.

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Tevin Farmer knows he’s Shakur Stevenson’s test for William Zepeda

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Lightweight Tevin Farmer knows the game all too well. A sneaky hunter, he became a measuring stick for promoters trying to gauge how their fighters would fare against WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson. Farmer, with his slick defensive style and southpaw attitude, sees a pattern and is ready to prove he is more than just a test case for the next massive name.

On November 16, Farmer (33-6-1, 8 KO) returns to the ring in Riyad, Saudi Arabia, to face Mexican William Zepeda (31-0, 27 KO) in a fight that could make or break his career.

Farmer, a former IBF junior lightweight titleholder, is looking at a close decision loss to Raymond Muratalla – a fighter who, like many, is close to facing Stevenson. Now Farmer faces Zepeda, an aggressive, high-performance fighter who is on a four-fight knockout streak.

The farmer is fully aware of what is at stake. He had been here before, but this time the pressure was greater.

“They say me and Shakur [Stevenson] I have a similar style and I’m the one who wants to see how good Zepeda is to see if he’s ready for Shakur,” Farmer said. “But I promise you it won’t get to Shakur.”

28-year-old Zepeda looks unstoppable, and his last fight ended with a third-round knockout of Giovanni Cabrera. But Farmer, 34, still sees himself as a force to be reckoned with, despite setbacks. After losing the title to Joseph Diaz Jr. in January 2020. Farmer took a three-year hiatus before returning to win three fights in the Northeast. His recent loss to Muratalla was a close call, and now he’s determined to bounce back and clarify how he sees himself.

“I feel like I’m a adolescent veteran,” Farmer said. “I started boxing behind schedule, so I still feel adolescent, but I have a lot of fights ahead of me. I have to go out there and beat the guy that everyone is afraid of, and that’s William Zepeda.”

For Farmer, this fight is more than just another notch on his belt. It’s about regaining your place in the sport – or maybe leaving for good.

“The last fight was a do-or-die decision for me, but unfortunately it didn’t go my way,” Farmer said. “This time it’s really a matter of do or die. We come to put on a show.”

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Sources: Naoya Inoue finalizes title defense against Sam Goodman

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Naoya Inoue and Sam Goodman are finalizing an agreement to fight on December 24 in Tokyo for Inoue’s undisputed junior featherweight title, sources told ESPN on Thursday.

The fight will be broadcast on ESPN+ on Christmas Eve morning in the US

Inoue, the third-ranked pound-for-pound boxer on ESPN, will face the Australian for the second year in a row. The Japanese star, known as “The Monster,” scored a seventh-round TKO against TJ Doheny last month.

According to ESPN BET, Inoue (28-0, 25 KO) was a -6500 favorite against Doheny, and while he will have a good chance of beating Goodman, the odds won’t be that high. Goodman (19-0, 8 KO) is ranked the No. 4 junior featherweight by ESPN and has proven his mettle with wins over fellow title challengers Ra’eese Aleem and Doheny.

The 25-year-old Goodman is coming off a July decision victory over Thai rival Thachtana Luangphon.

Inoue’s second defense of his undisputed world title will be his third fight this year and he will fulfill another mandatory obligation. The 31-year-old will have one more mandatory defense after the match against Murodjon Akhmadaliev from Uzbekistan.

Inoue, a future Hall of Famer, has not competed in the U.S. since June 2021, but is scheduled to return to fight stateside next year.

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Jose Ramirez wants Arnold Barboza to win over Teofimo Lopez

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Jose Ramirez vs Arnold Barboza Jr

LOS ANGELES — Jose Ramirez sees Latino Night rival Arnold Barboza as a stepping stone to an even bigger fight with Teofimo Lopez in the near future.

“My dream has always been to become undisputed champion,” Ramirez told World Boxing News and other media outlets this week. “Barboza is standing in the way of me getting my titles back.”

Both Ramirez and Barboza are recent additions to Golden Boy Promotions, with founder Oscar De La Hoya and president Eric Gomez lined up the fighters on the company’s Nov. 16 card, sponsored by Riyadh Season. While the belt is not a foregone conclusion, the winner will likely receive a shot at the championship.

Ramirez and Barboza came face-to-face at the opening press conference WBN attended on Wednesday at the Mayan Theater in downtown Los Angeles, and it quickly became clear to us that there was hostility between the fighters dating back to when both were at the top of the rankings.

“I respect Jose Ramirez as a player and I respect Jose Ramirez as a person,” Barboza said. “But it’s personal… I’ve wanted this fight since 2019, but for some reason it never happened.”

Barboza said he had been calling on Ramirez to fight for years, but only managed to secure the fight when he signed with de la Hoya’s Golden Boy. “I want to acknowledge and thank Oscar,” he said.

In response, Ramirez pointed to his record as unified world boxing champion. “As a fighter, I fight whoever is in front of me,” said the 32-year-old.

Barboza, nicknamed Jaguar, fought many top opponents at 140 pounds, including Jose Zepeda, Maurice Hooker and Jose Pedraza. A victory over Barboza would be the best victory of his career to date. Likewise, Barboza’s victory would also be his greatest victory.

Ramirez told WBN and other media outlets that he would not be impressed by The Venue in Riyad. He has become accustomed to boxing on the international stage as an Olympian, amateur and even professional, defeating Ryusei Yoshida at the Cotai Arena in Macau in 2015.

Therefore, he will “want to make a statement” against Barboza as he looks to regain the WBC and WBO titles currently held by Alberto Puello and Teofimo Lopez respectively.

“As a fighter, I fight whoever is in front of me,” Ramirez said, dismissing any suggestion by Barboza that he was being shunned. He then said he moved to Golden Boy from Top Rank because he “wanted even bigger fights,” and now he faces Barboza in only his second appearance for the De La Hoya brand.

As for why he took this fight, he said it “excites him” because he wants to remind the world who Ramirez is. Barboza, he said, is merely a vehicle to demonstrate this.

But one thing is clear. Barboza may be the WBO No. 1 contender to challenge Lopez for the championship, but Ramirez wants to take that spot and fight for himself.

“I want to take his No. 1 spot and then challenge Teofimo Lopez,” Ramirez said. “This is what I have to do. My goal is to become world champion and I will work demanding to achieve it.”

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