The World Boxing Association says it wants fewer champions. Boxing heard the same thing in 2013.
More than a decade later, the organization is making the same commitment again, with 43 champions on its books.
The WBA announced this week that it remains committed to reducing the number of world champions while also seeking to tighten the championship structure.
The statement reads:
“The WBA remains committed to its goal of reducing the number of world champions and our recent decisions continue to move in that direction.
“In this context, it should be noted that the three recently announced fights have not yet been approved by the WBA.
“Following recent media reports regarding bantamweight, minimum and airy flyweight world title fights, the WBA clarifies that these fights have not yet received official approval.
“We will receive an official statement from the Championship Committee soon.”
Fourth time
To longtime observers, the announcement sounded familiar.
In 2013, WBA vice president Gilberto Mendoza told World Boxing News that the organization was considering the future of its controversial super and interim championships and considering ways to simplify its title structure.
The same conversation resurfaced in 2021 when the WBN removed WBA recognition from its championship lists amid concerns about multiple champions and title designations.
The recognition was later restored after improvements were made.
By 2024, the number of champions has increased again. Now, in 2026, the WBA is once again promising fewer champions.
Top position
The number is 43
This is where the latest commitment faces its biggest challenge after growing by 55 percent in recent years.
The WBA currently recognizes 43 titleholders in its divisions, including the super, regular, interim, recessionary and WBA Gold titles.
Just a few weeks ago, WBN documented how, despite repeated reform efforts, the number has increased from 27 champions in June 2024 to 43 in June 2026.
Former WBO president Paco Valcarcel recently described the WBA championship structure as a “joke” after bantamweight titleholder Seiya Tsutsumi publicly admitted he wasn’t sure where he was in the title picture.
The timing is intriguing because proposed changes to the Muhammad Ali Act would limit sanctioning bodies to one world title per division in the United States. If this ever happens, the days of multiple champions in the same weight class will be numbered.
Boxing heard this promise in 2013, heard it again in 2021, and heard it again in 2024.
Now, with 43 champions on the books, this is the fourth time he’s heard it.
After thirteen years, four reform drives and 43 WBA champions, she has reached the point where only results matter.
About the author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Since 2010, he has been interviewing world champions, breaking down international titles exclusively and reporting from the ring. His work is distributed on major platforms including Apple News. Read the full biography.
Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz could soon have his next fight lined up.
ESPN’s Salvador Rodriguez reported that Cruz is being targeted to face Puerto Rico’s Néstor Bravo in a light welterweight bout on Sept. 19 in the United States. Arizona and California are being discussed as potential host states, although no official announcement has been made.
Bravo (24-1, 17 KOs) has quietly worked his way into contention with a string of victories since suffering the lone defeat of his career. The 31-year-old Puerto Rican would receive the biggest opportunity of his professional career against the former world champion.
Cruz (28-3-1, 18 KOs) is looking to reestablish himself in the title picture after losing his WBA light welterweight title to Jose Valenzuela in August 2024. The popular Mexican rebounded by stopping Angel Fierro in their rematch earlier this year and remains one of boxing’s most aggressive pressure fighters.
A Mexico vs. Puerto Rico matchup has long been one of boxing’s most marketable rivalries, making the proposed fight an attractive addition to the September schedule if contracts are finalized.
Rodriguez also noted that Arizona and California remain the leading venue options. Reports circulating on social media have linked the date to other bouts, including a proposed IBF bantamweight title fight between Jose “Chapulín” Salas and Michael Angeletti, though those plans have not been officially confirmed either.
Pitbull Cruz will be defending his WBC interim light welterweight title, while Bravo has an opportunity to claim the biggest victory of his career.
Will Arons is a veteran boxing journalist with more than a decade of experience covering the global fight landscape. A contributor to Boxing247.com, he reports on championship bouts, major developments, and rising prospects with a focus on accuracy, sourcing, and industry-informed analysis.
Carl Froch has assessed the chances of Conor Benn pulling off a sizable upset against Ryan Garciawho he is expected to face in September.
Their welterweight showdown was reportedly set to be announced on Friday, with Dana White inviting both fighters to the stage at a UFC weigh-in.
According to boxing journalist Dan Rafael, however, there are still some issues that must be ironed out on Garcia’s sidewhich concern the involvement of DAZN and Oscar De La Hoya’s Golden Boy.
Benn, meanwhile, has reportedly completed his side of the agreement to challenge for Garcia’s WBC world title in Las Vegas on September 12.
The 29-year-old signed with White’s Zuffa Boxing earlier this year, before unanimously outpointing a faded Regis Prograis over 10 rounds in April.
Yet it seems the promotional and broadcast situation for his clash with Garcia – expected to be streamed on Netflix – is far from straightforward, being that the WBC champion seemingly has an existing contract with Golden Boy and DAZN.
If it does go ahead, though, then Froch has suggested on his YouTube channel that Garcia would prove too skilled for his less proven opponent, giving Benn just a 30% chance of victory.
“This one is exciting, because you get to find out where Conor Benn belongs. Does he belong at world level?
“Ryan Garcia … Would you say he’s an elite-level champion? He’s been down, he’s been beat, [but] you’ve got to say he’s world-class.
“So this is a massive step-up for Conor Benn. I’m not sure it’s the fight he will win. He probably can win it, if he gets the tactics right, but it’s a really tough ask.
“He’s the underdog – he’s probably 70/30 against.”
Garcia claimed his WBC title by dethroning Mario Barrioswho he floored in the opening round before winning their February encounter by unanimous decision.
Tony Bellew has advised Moses Itauma against facing an opponent who, based on his superior experience, could become the first man to drag him into deep waters.
The heavyweight prodigy already has his hands full, of course, as he will face seasoned veteran Filip Hrgovic at London’s O2 Arena on August 29.
On paper, this is undoubtedly his toughest test thus far, with Hrgovic’s only professional defeat having come via an eighth-round stoppage against Daniel Dubois in June 2024.
Itauma, on the other hand, has never made it past six rounds, but was close to doing so before dispatching Jermaine Franklin with a fifth-round finish in March.
Having cemented himself as a formidable knockout artist, the 21-year-old is now ranked No.1 with both the WBO and WBA, seemingly closing in on a major opportunity.
According to former world champion Bellew, though, the talented southpaw should steer well clear of Oleksandr Usykwho relinquished his WBC, IBF and WBA belts last month.
Even at the age of 39, and after having to grind out a 11th-round stoppage against Rico Verhoeven in May, the Ukrainian is still the lineal heavyweight champion and, more generally, a generational great.
For this reason, Bellew has told Fight Your Corner that, even at this stage in their careers, Itauma is not ready for an elite competitor like Usyk.
“Moses [shouldn’t] go near him at the minute. I think that it would be absolutely insane to throw Moses Itauma into [an] Usyk [fight] after not going past six [rounds] yet.
“Would you throw a fighter like that in with someone like [Usyk]? [Usyk’s] game plan would be, ‘I have only got to see past six rounds with you, kid. I am going to take you to places that you have never been’.”
While a matchup between Usyk and Itauma has been widely discussed, it does appear that the two southpaws will ultimately go their separate ways.