Gervonta Davis has been stripped of the world title he admitted years ago he never wanted after the WBA finally ended months of confusion surrounding its lightweight belt.
The World Boxing Association confirmed Davis has been declared Champion in Recess, with Floyd Schofield and Lucas Bahdi ordered to fight for the vacant lightweight title.
The move follows the WBA’s review of Davis’s ongoing legal situation, which the sanctioning body says could prevent him from meeting his championship obligations. It also comes after a failed mandatory order against Floyd Schofield.
However, the development also closes one of the strangest title sagas in recent WBA history.
Gervonta Davis title confusion
When Devin Haney vacated the WBA lightweight crown in late 2023, Davis was due to inherit the full title after previously holding the secondary version.
His response was immediate.
“I don’t want that s***!” Davis said after learning he would be elevated without winning the belt inside the ring.
More than two years later, those words have proven fitting.
Strip Me Once
In January, WBA president Gilberto Mendoza confirmed Davis had been removed as active champion and placed into Champion in Recess status following legal issues and inactivity. WBN subsequently removed Davis from its list of recognized lightweight champions.
Champion in Recess status traditionally allows a titleholder to return and challenge for the championship once circumstances permit. It is not normally applied to an active champion making mandatory defenses.
Only four months later, the WBA appeared to reverse course without explanation.
Floyd Schofield
Strip Me Twice
The organization referred to Davis as the “reigning champion” and ordered him to make a mandatory defense against Floyd Schofield despite never explaining how or when he had been restored as full champion.
WBN highlighted the contradiction at the timequestioning how Davis could simultaneously be a Champion in Recess and the reigning titleholder required to satisfy mandatory obligations.
Negotiations with Schofield ultimately led nowhere, and the WBA has now returned to its original position, declaring Davis Champion in Recess once again while vacating the lightweight title and ordering Schofield to face Lucas Bahdi for the championship.
Tank’s Future
The decision may ultimately have little impact on Davis’ own plans.
The unbeaten Baltimore star already appears to be looking beyond the lightweight division, having publicly engaged in discussions involving bigger names, including Devin Haney.
Davis has also resurfaced on social media under a new, obscure account, where he has again become active in exchanges with fellow fighters despite the legal proceedings that continue to cast uncertainty over his future.
The WBA has finally brought a long period of uncertainty over its lightweight title to an end. Whether Davis ever intended to defend it or not, the championship he publicly rejected in 2023 is no longer his.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a veteran boxing reporter with 15+ years of experience. He has interviewed world champions, broken international exclusives, and reported ringside since 2010. Read full bio.
Teofimo Lopez backs one of the Four Kings to defeat Terence Crawford in a prime-for-prime welterweight battle.
‘Bud’ called time on his Hall of Fame-worthy career in December, just a few months removed from his unanimous decision victory over Canelo Alvarez.
Despite being made a pre-fight underdog, Crawford was able to dethrone the more natural super-middleweight to become a three-division undisputed champion.
His best performances arguably came at 147lbs, though, as the American scored seven straight stoppages before orchestrating a ninth-round finish over Errol Spence Jr in July 2023.
This victory alone has inspired many to compare Crawford with other welterweight greats, including the likes of Floyd Mayweather and Sugar Ray Leonard.
A particularly intriguing fantasy matchup, however, would be between the masterful switch-hitter and Thomas Hearns, who challenged Leonard for the WBC welterweight title in 1981.
Despite suffering a 14th-round stoppage defeat, ‘The Hitman’ was leading on all three judges’ scorecards and would eventually rematch Leonard in 1989, only for their super-middleweight contest to end in a controversial draw.
Standing at 6ft 1in, there are few that could have gotten the better of Hearns between 147 and 168lbs, where his only other defeats came against Marvin Hagler and Iran Barkley.
It is perhaps this size advantage that has inspired Lopez to favour Hearns over Crawford while speaking with Daily Mail Sport.
But it was also the jab of Hearns – a shot refined under the tutelage of Emanuel Steward – that could have posed problems for Crawford, whose 75in reach otherwise represented a key advantage throughout his illustrious career.
“Well, I think it’s more so the fighters’ teams. They’re trying to weigh out their options in terms of what would be the easiest route for them,” said Carrington to Chris Mannix’s channel. “For me, I’m the type of guy that knows I can beat everybody. I have the confidence that I can beat everyone, so it doesn’t matter who comes first.”
Carrington went a step further, saying the lack of movement toward unification is proof that other champions don’t fully believe in their own fighters.
“If these guys had that confidence in their fighter, then they would fight me next. But being that they don’t, they’re finding other alternative routes to reach the top or stay at the top before they fight me because they see that I’m a real threat,” said Carrington.
Those comments are unlikely to convince everyone.
Although Carrington remains unbeaten, many fans believe he has yet to face the type of opposition that justifies calling out the other titleholders. His January stoppage of Carlos Castro earned him the vacant WBC title, but Castro entered the fight coming off a loss and an 18-month layoff. Carrington also had to survive a difficult spell after being badly hurt before rallying for the stoppage.
His previous opponents have also done little to quiet the criticism. Mateus Heita arrived unbeaten but largely unknown on the world stage, while Enrique Vivas and Dana Coolwell were viewed as solid contenders rather than elite featherweights.
Carrington’s 2024 victory over Sulaiman Segawa remains another talking point. While he won a majority decision, many fans felt Segawa had done enough to deserve the verdict. Combined with the problems he encountered against Castro, those performances have led some to question whether Carrington is ready for the division’s top fighter.
That fighter, in the eyes of many, is WBO champion Rafael Espinoza.
Espinoza has strengthened his standing with victories over Robeisy Ramirez and Edward Vazquez and is widely regarded as the man to beat at 126 pounds. As a result, some fans have questioned why that fight has not materialized while Carrington has continued to face less established opposition.
Carrington, however, insists unification remains his goal and identified Espinoza and WBA champion Angelo Leo as the opponents he hopes to face before the end of the year.
Carrington’s explanation is unlikely to change many minds. The questions surrounding his resume won’t go away until he faces Espinoza or another established champion.
“I was catching him with shots the first day we sparred. The second day we sparred, those shots were not landing,” Mendoza said to FightHype.
“People forget he was a high-IQ boxer as an amateur.”
Mendoza said the biggest takeaway was watching Spence make adjustments from one sparring session to the next rather than simply relying on experience.
“For those of you that think he’s done, that he’s just showing up for a paycheck… he’s not working like someone who’s showing up for a paycheck.
“The work ethic I got to see in the couple of weeks I was in camp, and just from being in the ring with him… there were adjustments every day. He’s not someone that’s just showing up.”
Mendoza also addressed another major question surrounding Spence following such a lengthy layoff: whether he can still take a punch.
“I did check Spence’s punch resistance—I can definitely say I sent some missiles his way—and I honestly feel like he responded well.”
Mendoza is in a unique position to compare the matchup, having lost a unanimous decision to Tszyu in October 2023 before recently helping Spence prepare for the Australian.
Both fighters enter the bout looking to revive their careers. Spence has not fought since losing his WBC, WBA and IBF welterweight titles to Crawford, while Tszyu is trying to rebound after defeats to Sebastian Fundora and Bakhram Murtazaliev left his standing among the division’s elite in doubt.
With both men attempting to prove they still belong at the highest level, Mendoza’s assessment suggests Spence is arriving in Australia with more left in the tank than many critics have assumed.