In boxing, the undisputed champion of a weight class is the boxer who simultaneously holds world titles from all major organizations [1] [2] recognized by each other and the International Boxing Hall of Fame. There are currently four major sanctioning bodies: WBA, WBC, WBO, and IBF. There were many undisputed champions before the number of major sanctioning bodies recognizing each other increased to four in 2007, but there have been only 19 boxers (9 male and 10 female) to hold all four titles simultaneously.
Prior to the 1960s, most champions were "undisputed", [3] although the term was rarely used (it does not appear in one 1970 Boxing Dictionary). [4] Early boxing champions at various weight divisions were established by acclamation between 1880 and 1920. Once a consensus champion had been awarded the title, the championship could usually be taken only by beating the reigning holder, establishing a lineal championship.
The New York State Athletic Commission (NYSAC) recognized champions from its foundation in 1920. [5] The National Boxing Association (NBA) was founded by other U.S. state bodies in 1921, and began recognising champions in 1927. [5] Until the 1960s, both usually recognised the same lineal champion. [3] However, disputes could arise if the champion retired or moved to a different weight class. Occasionally, the International Boxing Union (renamed the European Boxing Union in 1946) recognised a different champion. The disputes were usually short-lived as a lucrative fight would be organised between the rival champions. The longest split was ten years, of the middleweight title, between Mickey Walker's move up to heavyweight in 1931 and NBA champion Tony Zale's defeat of NYSAC contender Georgie Abrams in 1941. [6] An early use of "undisputed" appears in a New York Times preview of the 1941 fight. [7]
The growing popularity of boxing outside of the U.S. led to creation of various boxing organizations, each strengthening their influence –most notably the British Boxing Board of Control (BBBofC) –and having their own champion. This resulted in a growing number of boxers claiming to be legitimate champions. The disruption in boxing was solved after World War II when the World Championship Committee (WCC) was created with NBA as its unanimous authority. The committee, however, was disbanded in 1955 when NBA, along with its new members (which included the Orient, Mexican and South American federations and boxing commissions of the Philippines and Thailand) left WCC citing lack of control over the organisation. The NBA's voting scheme guaranteed one vote for each state commission as well as one vote for each foreign country. [8] [9] On August 23, 1962, the NBA officially became the World Boxing Association and moved their headquarters to Panama City, Panama.
A year later NYSAC along with European Boxing Union and BBBofC supported creation of the World Boxing Council. WBC was officially established on February 14, 1963, in Mexico City, Mexico by 11 countries (the U.S., Argentina, U.K., France, Mexico, Philippines, Panama, Chile, Peru, Venezuela and Brazil) that were invited by the President of Mexico Adolfo López Mateos to form an international organization to unify all commissions of the world to control the expansion of boxing. [10] The reason for the move were concerns about WBA's alleged lack of desire to support professional boxing outside of the U.S.. [11]
In April 1983, members of United States Boxing Association along with Robert W. Lee (a former WBA vice-president) voted to expand the organisation and form the USBA-International. The organization later changed the name to International Boxing Federation. [12] The inaugural IBF heavyweight champion was Larry Holmes, who relinquished the WBC title to accept IBF's recognition, thus helping the newly formed organization to establish its legitimacy. [13] The fragmentation of titles was thus increased. After some negotiations, the heavyweight title was unified in the heavyweight unification series, a series of coordinated bouts in 1986 and 1987, with Mike Tyson emerging as the first undisputed champion (WBA, WBC, and IBF) since Leon Spinks in 1978. [14] The title was split again in 1992 when Riddick Bowe forfeited the WBC title.
Another major sanctioning body, the World Boxing Organization, was established in 1988 in San Juan, Puerto Rico by a group of local businessmen. At the beginnings, when most of the challengers for WBA, WBC, and IBF titles were Americans, WBO had a wider variety of countries, mainly European, represented in title bouts. Before the Klitschko Era, the United Kingdom tied the United States for most wins in WBO heavyweight title fights with eight. [15] In 1997, WBO titlist Naseem Hamed was allowed to unify titles for the first time in WBO history; on February 8, he defeated Tom Johnson to become unified WBO and IBF featherweight champion. By 2001, the WBA was giving the same recognition to WBO champions as to WBA, WBC, and IBF champions. [16] In 2004, the WBC began naming WBO champions on its ranking listings. [17] The IBF did not recognise the WBO in May 2006, [18] but was doing so by February 2007. [19] Conversely, the WBO has been explicitly recognizing the other three sanctioning bodies since at least October 1, 2008. [20]
Until at least 2008, many considered it sufficient to hold the WBA, WBC, and IBF titles. [21] [22] [23] Other bodies such as the IBO, IBU, and World Boxing Foundation are disregarded.
Only ten men have held all four versions of the belts at the same time, three of whom have been the only male boxers to have done so in two divisions.
Only eleven women have held all four versions of the belts at the same time, two have done so in two divisions.
As of January 2024, there have been forty fights with all four belts on the line.
If a fighter wins all the titles but is stripped by one organization of its title, he may continue to be considered the undisputed champion.
Roy Jones Jr. was called the undisputed light heavyweight champion after unifying the WBA, WBC, and IBF titles in June 1999. [24] He was later awarded The Ring championship title. However, two of those titles (WBA and IBF) had been stripped from Dariusz Michalczewski, who had unified them with his WBO title by beating the lineal champion Virgil Hill in June 1997 and subsequently remained unbeaten, defending his remaining title, until his first loss in October 2003. [25] Speaking of Jones' claim to being undisputed champion, one writer opined that the distinction "could just as easily belong to current WBO titleist Dariusz Michalczewski." [26]
Five months after Lennox Lewis unified the WBA, WBC, and IBF titles to become the undisputed heavyweight champion, a U.S. Federal Judge ruled that Lewis would be stripped by the WBA of their world championship belt for fighting Michael Grant instead of the association's #1 contender, John Ruiz. The fight took place on April 29, 2000. Lewis remained a unified world champion until April 22, 2001, when he was defeated by Hasim Rahman. He regained the WBC and IBF titles following victory over Rahman seven months later in a rematch. His reign as a unified world champion ended in September 2002, when he rejected the chance to fight the IBF's #1 contender, Chris Byrd, and was therefore stripped by the organisation of their belt. He retained his WBC title until his retirement in February 2004.
Jermain Taylor won all four middleweight titles from Bernard Hopkins in July 2005, but was stripped of the IBF title for agreeing to a rematch rather than fighting Sam Soliman. [27] Nevertheless, he was still described as "undisputed champion" by some reports. [28] [29]
After Joe Calzaghe's super middleweight victory over Mikkel Kessler in November 2007, he was frequently described as "undisputed champion". [30] [31] [32] [33] Others disputed this, because although he held the WBA, WBC, and WBO titles, he had vacated his IBF title in November 2006 for choosing to face Peter Manfredo Jr. as his next opponent instead of mandatory challenger Robert Stieglitz. [34] [35] [36]
Teófimo López won the WBC Franchise lightweight title in addition to the WBA (Super), IBF, WBO and The Ring magazine titles after beating Vasiliy Lomachenko in October 2020, and was subsequently reported by some media outlets to be the youngest four-belt undisputed champion of all-time at the age of 23 years old; [37] however, the WBC Franchise title is not universally recognized as a major world title. [38] [39]
The unified champion is defined as a boxer that holds at least two world championships of major sanctioning bodies (WBA, WBC, IBF, or WBO) in their respective division. [40] [41] [42] Around 2004, the World Boxing Association recognized three different types: the unified champion (two-titles holder in the weight division or category, obliged to defend the title against WBA's No. 1 contender in 18 months periodically), the undisputed champion (three-title holder, mandatory defense against WBA's challenger in 21 months regularly), and the super champion (four-title holder, WBA's mandatory defense in 24 months periodically). The rules required only one unified/undisputed/super champion per weight class; the purse in the bid would be distributed in a 65/35 ratio in favor of the unified champion. [43] However, along with the changes to "super" status (besides holding more than one title, the super titles were awarded to champions that were able to defend the WBA title 5 times), [41] the term "undisputed" was dropped completely.
Keys:
Weight class | Champion | Recognition | Consec. defenses | Reign began |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mini flyweight | Oscar Collazo | WBA, WBO | 0 | November 16, 2024 |
Light flyweight | vacant | |||
Flyweight | vacant | |||
Super flyweight | vacant | |||
Bantamweight | vacant | |||
Super bantamweight | Naoya Inoue | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | 3 | December 26, 2023 |
Featherweight | vacant | |||
Super featherweight | vacant | |||
Lightweight | vacant | |||
Light welterweight | vacant | |||
Welterweight | vacant | |||
Light middleweight | Sebastian Fundora | WBC, WBO | 0 | March 30, 2024 |
Middleweight | Janibek Alimkhanuly | IBF, WBO | 0 | October 14, 2023 |
Super middleweight | Canelo Álvarez | WBA, WBC, WBO | 8 | December 19, 2020 |
Light heavyweight | Artur Beterbiev | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | 6 | October 18, 2019 |
Cruiserweight | Gilberto Ramírez | WBA, WBO | 0 | November 16, 2024 |
Heavyweight | Oleksandr Usyk | WBA, WBC, WBO | 3 | September 25, 2021 |
Keys:
Weight class | Champion | Recognition | Consec. defenses | Reign began |
---|---|---|---|---|
Atomweight | Eri Matsuda | WBA, WBO | January 12, 2024 [44] | |
Mini flyweight | Seniesa Estrada | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | March 25, 2023 [45] | |
Light flyweight | Evelin Bermúdez | IBF, WBO | March 10, 2023 [46] | |
Flyweight | Gabriela Alaniz | WBA, WBC, WBO | April 27, 2024 [47] | |
Super flyweight | vacant | |||
Bantamweight | Dina Thorslund | WBC, WBO | 1 [48] | September 1, 2023 [49] |
Super bantamweight | Ellie Scotney | WBO, IBF | April 13, 2024 [50] | |
Featherweight | Amanda Serrano | WBA, IBF, WBO | February 4, 2021 [51] | |
Super featherweight | Alycia Baumgardner | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | November 13, 2021 [52] | |
Lightweight | Katie Taylor | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | April 29, 2018 [53] | |
Light welterweight | Katie Taylor | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | June 1, 2019 [54] | |
Welterweight | vacant | |||
Light middleweight | Ema Kozin | WBC, WBO | November 18, 2023 [55] | |
Middleweight | Claressa Shields | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | June 22, 2018 [56] | |
Super middleweight | Savannah Marshall | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | July 1, 2023 [57] | |
Light heavyweight | vacant | |||
Cruiserweight | vacant | |||
Heavyweight | vacant | |||
Keys:
Name | Title recognition | Division | Title bout wins | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Wladimir Klitschko | WBA, IBF, WBO | Heavyweight | 15 |
2. | José Nápoles | WBA, WBC | Welterweight | 14 |
Muhammad Ali | WBA, WBC | Heavyweight | ||
4. | Marvin Hagler | WBA, WBC, IBF | Middleweight | 13 |
5. | Carlos Monzón | WBA, WBC | Middleweight | 12 |
Roy Jones Jr. | WBA, WBC, IBF | Light heavyweight | ||
7. | Evander Holyfield | WBA, WBC, IBF | Heavyweight Cruiserweight | 11 |
8. | Bob Foster | WBA, WBC | Light heavyweight | 10 |
Carlos Ortiz | WBA, WBC | Lightweight | ||
10. | Bernard Hopkins | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | Light heavyweight Middleweight | 9 |
Mike Tyson | WBA, WBC, IBF | Heavyweight | ||
12. | Emile Griffith | WBA, WBC | Middleweight Welterweight | 8 |
Nino Benvenuti | WBA, WBC | Middleweight Light middleweight | ||
Vicente Saldivar | WBA, WBC | Featherweight | ||
15. | Pernell Whitaker | WBA, WBC, IBF | Lightweight | 7 |
16. | Lennox Lewis | WBA, WBC, IBF | Heavyweight | 6 |
Juan Manuel Márquez | WBA, IBF, WBO | Lightweight Featherweight | ||
Gabriel Elorde | WBA, WBC | Super featherweight | ||
Rubén Olivares | WBA, WBC | Bantamweight | ||
20. | Floyd Mayweather Jr. | WBA, WBC | Light middleweight Welterweight | 5 |
Dick Tiger | WBA, WBC | Light heavyweight Middleweight | ||
Sergey Kovalev | WBA, IBF, WBO | Light heavyweight | ||
Gennady Golovkin | WBA, WBC, IBF | Middleweight | ||
Fighting Harada | WBA, WBC | Bantamweight | ||
Naoya Inoue | WBA, WBC, IBF | Bantamweight | ||
Joe Frazier | WBA, WBC | Heavyweight | ||
Kostya Tszyu | WBA, WBC | Light welterweight | ||
Sven Ottke | WBA, IBF | Super middleweight | ||
Terry Norris | WBC, IBF | Light middleweight | ||
30. | Andre Ward | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | Light heavyweight Super middleweight | 4 |
Julio César Chávez | WBA, WBC, IBF | Light welterweight Lightweight | ||
Terence Crawford | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | Light welterweight | ||
Vic Darchinyan | WBA, WBC, IBF | Super flyweight | ||
George Foreman | WBA, WBC, IBF | Heavyweight | ||
Guillermo Rigondeaux | WBA, WBO | Super bantamweight | ||
Humberto González | WBC, IBF | Light flyweight | ||
Naseem Hamed | WBO, IBF | Featherweight | ||
Anthony Joshua | WBA, IBF, WBO | Heavyweight |
Keys:
Name | Title recognition | Division | Consec. defenses | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Wladimir Klitschko | WBA, IBF, WBO | Heavyweight | 14 |
2. | Marvin Hagler | WBA, WBC, IBF | Middleweight | 12 |
3. | Muhammad Ali | WBA, WBC | Heavyweight | 10 |
Roy Jones Jr. | WBA, WBC, IBF | Light heavyweight | ||
5. | Carlos Monzón | WBA, WBC | Middleweight | 9 |
6. | Mike Tyson | WBA, WBC, IBF | Heavyweight | 8 |
7. | Bernard Hopkins | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | Middleweight | 7 |
Vicente Saldivar | WBA, WBC | Featherweight | ||
9. | José Nápoles | WBA, WBC | Welterweight | 6 |
Pernell Whitaker | WBA, WBC, IBF | Lightweight | ||
11. | Bob Foster | WBA, WBC | Light heavyweight | 5 |
Gennady Golovkin | WBA, WBC, IBF | Middleweight | ||
Carlos Ortiz | WBA, WBC | Lightweight | ||
Gabriel Elorde | WBA, WBC | Super featherweight | ||
15. | Nino Benvenuti | WBA, WBC | Middleweight | 4 |
Sergey Kovalev | WBA, IBF, WBO | Light heavyweight | ||
Fighting Harada | WBA, WBC | Bantamweight | ||
Joe Frazier | WBA, WBC | Heavyweight | ||
Kostya Tszyu | WBA, WBC | Light welterweight | ||
Sven Ottke | WBA, IBF | Super middleweight | ||
Terry Norris | WBC, IBF | Light middleweight | ||
22. | Floyd Mayweather Jr. | WBA, WBC | Welterweight | 3 |
Evander Holyfield | WBA, WBC, IBF | Heavyweight | ||
Terence Crawford | WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO | Light welterweight | ||
Humberto González | WBC, IBF | Light flyweight | ||
Juan Manuel Márquez | WBA, IBF | Featherweight | ||
Vic Darchinyan | WBA, WBC, IBF | Super flyweight | ||
Lennox Lewis | WBC, IBF | Heavyweight | ||
Guillermo Rigondeaux | WBA, WBO | Super bantamweight | ||
Anthony Joshua | WBA, IBF, WBO | Heavyweight |
Tournaments have been arranged to unify the titles in a weight class.
The World Boxing Council (WBC) is an international professional boxing organization. It is among the four major organizations which sanction professional boxing bouts, alongside the World Boxing Association (WBA), International Boxing Federation (IBF) and World Boxing Organization (WBO).
The World Boxing Association (WBA), formerly known as the National Boxing Association (NBA), is the oldest and one of four major organizations which sanction professional boxing bouts, alongside the World Boxing Council (WBC), International Boxing Federation (IBF) and World Boxing Organization (WBO). The WBA awards its world championship title at the professional level. Founded in the United States in 1921 by 13 state representatives as the NBA, in 1962 it changed its name in recognition of boxing's growing popularity worldwide and began to gain other nations as members.
The World Boxing Organization (WBO) is an organization which sanctions professional boxing bouts. It is recognized by the International Boxing Hall of Fame (IBHOF) as one of the four major world championship groups, alongside the World Boxing Association (WBA), World Boxing Council (WBC), and International Boxing Federation (IBF). The WBO's headquarters are located in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Boxing in the 1980s was filled with important fights, events and personalities that shaped the sport. Boxing in the 1980s was shaped by many different situations, such as the continuous corporate battles between the different world sanctioning organizations, the void left by Muhammad Ali as the sport's ambassador and consequent search for a new boxing hero, the continuous presence of Don King as the sport's most famous promoter, the surge of rival promoters as Bob Arum, Butch Lewis and Murad Muhammad, and major rule changes. In 1986, Mike Tyson emerged as a fresh new face in the heavyweight division, which had seen a decline in champion quality level after Ali's retirement and, later on, after longtime WBC ruler Larry Holmes' prime. In addition, the IBF and WBO began operating.
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Roberto Garcia Cortez is a Mexican-American former professional boxer who competed from 1992 to 2001, and held the IBF junior lightweight title from 1998 to 1999. He has since worked as a boxing trainer, and was voted Trainer of the Year by The Ring magazine in 2011, and by the Boxing Writers Association of America in 2012. He is the older brother of professional boxer Mikey Garcia, who was a world champion in four weight classes.
Joseph William Calzaghe is a Welsh former professional boxer who competed from 1993 to 2008. He held multiple world championships in two weight classes, including unified and lineal titles at super-middleweight, and the Ring magazine light-heavyweight title.
Félix Trinidad vs. Bernard Hopkins, billed as And Then There Was One, was a boxing match that took place on September 29, 2001, at Madison Square Garden in New York City, between WBC and IBF middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins and WBA middleweight champion Félix Trinidad to unify all three titles and decide the first undisputed middleweight champion since Marvin Hagler. The winner would also become The Ring middleweight champion. The undercard featured championship fights in three other weight classes.
In combat sports where champions are determined by challenge, the lineal championship in a weight class represents an intangible world title first held by the victor of a bout between top contenders in the division. A fighter who defeats the reigning champion in a match within the same weight class becomes the next lineal champion. In professional boxing, the lineal champion is informally known as "the man who beat the man."
Cecilia Carmen Linda Brækhus is a Norwegian professional boxer and former kickboxer. She reigned as the undisputed female welterweight boxing champion from 2014 to 2020, and is the first woman in any weight class to hold the WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO titles simultaneously. Brækhus is also one of only 11 boxers in history, male or female, to hold all four major world titles simultaneously. She also held the IBO title from 2016 to 2020, and is currently the interim WBC super welterweight champion.
Bernard Hopkins Jr. is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1988 to 2016. He is one of the most successful boxers of the past three decades, having held multiple world championships in two weight classes, including the undisputed championship at middleweight from 2001 to 2005, and the lineal championship at light heavyweight from 2011 to 2012.
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If one fighter manages to capture the titles of all the major organizations at once, this is known as "unifying" the title and the boxer is the "undisputed" champion.
For the purpose of unification of titles, the Champions of the World Boxing Association ("WBA") and the World Boxing Council ("WBC") may be designated as "elite contenders" and may be permitted to fight for the unified title. Unification bouts with other organizations will be considered on a case to case basis.
the undisputed welterweight champion of the world – owner of the IBF, WBC and WBA belts
Antonio Tarver has made his quest to add to his IBO light heavyweight title a playoff-like system. / "Right now, my goal is three fights, three belts, undisputed by the end of the year," Tarver said. / Round 1 begins April 12 against Clinton Woods at the St. Pete Times Forum. According to Tarver, he'll take Woods' IBF lightweight title, then he's going after Danny Green's WBA light heavyweight belt. After that, he'll take on the winner of the Chad Dawson-Glen Johnson fight, which on the undercard of his bout with Woods, for the WBC belt.
He wants to be undisputed, so that means he's got three belts out there that he wants. WBA, WBC, and IBF, those are the titles he wants.
Wright would rather be facing undisputed middleweight champ Jermain Taylor.
Joe Calzaghe was crowned undisputed world super-middleweight champion in Cardiff tonight
Joe Calzaghe, who is now the closest to being the undisputed Super Middleweight Champion of the World. (There's still the IBF Title if he's to have all four of the most recognized belts.)
Lucien Bute, whose claim to the International Boxing Federation title is all that stands between the Welshman and undisputed world champion status
Since when has holding the three major belts not been considered worthy of "undisputed?"