Shakur Stevenson rejected proposed terms for one particular fight, potentially distancing himself from several of his most lucrative options.
The 28-year-old is coming off arguably the best performance of his career against Teofimo Lopez, winning the WBO super lightweight title with a dominant scoring run in January.
In doing so, Stevenson not only became a four-division world champion, but also established himself as one of the top five pound-for-pound operators, alongside the likes of Oleksandr Usyk and Naoya Inoue.
Because of this, however, many doubted that the skillful southpaw would ever be beaten, suggesting that a move up to 147 pounds might be his only hope of finding a worthy challenge. Stevenson recently said he would do so if any opponent signed a £10 hydration clause.
If he decides to do just that, most would consider WBO welterweight champion Devin Haney as his toughest test, although Ryan Garcia and Conor Benn have also been mentioned as possible options.
Immediately after his victory over Lopez, Stevenson came face to face with Benn Garcia shouted out the American after his victory over Mario Barrios in their WBC title fight earlier this month.
For both potential fights, Stevenson requested a catchweight limit of 144 pounds, which Garcia verbally agreed to before the fight with Barrios.
However, since then, the 27-year-old’s father and trainer, Henry Garcia, has insisted that Stevenson make 147 pounds, but the super lightweight champion said THE WHOLE FIGHT AGAINST SMOKE that this is not an option.
“I think so [Garcia is] grave. I think he is [does] I want a fight. I just think that in this business everything has to work well, everything has to make sense.
“Before [Barrios] fight, I heard them say they would fight me at 144 pounds[lbs]. Then, after the fight, I hear 147[lbs].
“I’m not going to make 147 anytime soon. I think that will be my last weight class that I’ll be in. I don’t think that at 28 years ancient now, I’m just going to [to go] to 147.”
Benn did not comment on a possible catchweight of 144 pounds, but given his fight against Regis Prograis on April 11 at 150 pounds, it seems that in his case such a request is not worth considering.
If Stevenson is adamantly opposed to a full move to welterweight, that would also likely rule out a fight with Devin Haney, who has said he felt like a “shell of himself” at the lower weights.