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Rivalry That Elevated Boxing: Crawford and Errol Spence Jr. Finally Settle the Debate

For years, boxing fans argued, debated, and waited. Pound-for-pound lists were rewritten. Social media wars raged. Two undefeated champions ruled the welterweight division on parallel paths, both claiming supremacy, both daring the other to prove it in the ring. Terence “Bud” Crawford and Errol “The Truth” Spence Jr. were not just champions — they were inevitabilities. And when their worlds finally collided, the fight didn’t just decide a winner; it redefined a generation.

Errol Spence Jr. entered the rivalry as the embodiment of pressure and punishment. A relentless southpaw with a granite chin, Spence built his reputation by breaking elite fighters down round by round. His victories over Kell Brook, Shawn Porter, and Danny Garcia established him as the division’s physical enforcer — a fighter who drowned opponents with body shots and suffocating pace.

Terence Crawford, on the other hand, was boxing’s ultimate problem solver. Switch-hitting, precise, and ruthless, Crawford didn’t just beat opponents — he figured them out. Whether it was the surgical dismantling of Julius Indongo to become undisputed at 140 pounds or his cold, calculating stoppages at welterweight, Crawford carried an aura of inevitability. Once he found the key, the fight was over.

The Fight That Defined an Era

When Crawford and Spence finally met, the stakes were monumental: undisputed welterweight champion, legacy, and bragging rights that would echo through boxing history. What unfolded shocked even seasoned observers.

READ MORE : “Everything on the Line: Anthony Joshua Steps Into the Most

Crawford didn’t just win — he dominated. From the opening bell, he neutralized Spence’s pressure, countered his jab, and punished every mistake with surgical precision. The knockdowns came not from wild swings, but from timing, balance, and mastery. By the time the fight was stopped, the narrative had shifted dramatically. Crawford had delivered one of the most commanding performances ever seen at the elite level.

Anthony Joshua

For Spence, the defeat was devastating but not defining in the way critics might claim. He stepped into the ring after years of inactivity, a life-threatening car accident, and a damaged eye — and still dared to face the most dangerous fighter of his era. That courage matters. Spence remains a champion in spirit and a key figure in boxing’s modern golden age.

For Crawford, the victory cemented immortality. Already a two-division undisputed champion, he separated himself from his peers and silenced every lingering doubt. The win over Spence wasn’t just another belt — it was validation. Proof that skill, adaptability, and mental sharpness can conquer even the strongest force.

A Rivalry That Elevated Boxing

Crawford vs. Spence was more than a fight. It was a reminder of what boxing can be when the best fight the best. No gimmicks. No shortcuts. Just elite fighters daring to answer the hardest question in the sport: Who is truly better?

In the end, history will remember this rivalry not for the trash talk or delays, but for the moment when two great champions stood across from each other — and greatness was finally decided.

Unstoppable Mind, Ruthless Hands: Terence Crawford Won’t Be Stopped

Terence “Bud” Crawford is not just one of the most skilled boxers of his generation — he is one of the most unforgiving. Quiet, calculated, and cold in the ring, Crawford has built a career on dismantling elite opponents and making greatness look routine. While others chase fame, Crawford chases domination, and his legacy continues to grow with every calculated step he takes.

From Omaha to the Mountaintop
Crawford’s journey began far from boxing’s glamour hubs. Raised in Omaha, Nebraska, he fought his way out of obscurity with grit and discipline. Those early battles shaped his edge — a sharp, survivalist mindset that still defines him today. When he captured his first world title, it was clear he was no ordinary champion. He was a problem the sport wasn’t ready to solve.

A Rare Kind of Greatness

What separates Crawford from nearly every fighter of his era is versatility. He can switch stances mid-fight, read opponents like a chess master, and punish mistakes with ruthless precision. Becoming an undisputed champion at junior welterweight cemented his place in history, but it didn’t satisfy him. Crawford wanted more — bigger fights, bigger challenges, and undeniable respect.

That hunger carried him through multiple divisions, where he continued to dominate champions and contenders alike. Each victory wasn’t just a win; it was a lesson delivered the hard way.

READ MORE :“Everything on the Line: Anthony Joshua Steps Into the Most

Silencing the Doubters
For years, critics questioned Crawford’s resume, pointing to politics and promotional barriers rather than his ability. But when the moment finally arrived against elite opposition, Crawford erased every doubt. His performances weren’t close — they were conclusive. He didn’t just beat champions; he broke them.

Anthony Joshua

In the process, Crawford forced the boxing world to reconsider its rankings. Pound-for-pound debates suddenly had a clear answer, and Bud’s name was impossible to ignore.

Legacy Over Popularity

Unlike many stars, Crawford has never relied on theatrics or trash talk. His statement is made between the ropes. That quiet confidence, combined with his ruthless efficiency, has earned him respect from fighters who know just how dangerous he is.

At this stage of his career, Crawford is no longer chasing validation — he’s chasing immortality. Titles, records, and money matter, but legacy matters more. Each fight feels like a calculated step toward cementing his name among the all-time greats.

What Comes Next
As Crawford continues to push into new weight classes and seek defining matchups, the stakes only rise. Age, expectations, and history all loom large, but if there’s one thing Bud has proven, it’s that pressure sharpens him.

Terence Crawford is not loud. He is not flashy. He is inevitable.

And until someone finds a way to stop him — if anyone ever does — the era of Bud Crawford remains firmly in control.

“Everything on the Line: Anthony Joshua Steps Into the Most Dangerous Fight of His Life”

Anthony Joshua’s name still carries weight in boxing circles around the world. Long after the bright lights of Wembley and the deafening roar of 90,000 fans, Joshua remains one of the most talked-about heavyweights of his generation. But in 2025, the story surrounding AJ is no longer just about belts and knockouts — it’s about legacy, redemption, and the final chapters of a career that has already defined an era.

From Olympic Glory to Global Superstar
Joshua’s rise was meteoric. After winning gold at the 2012 London Olympics, he turned professional and quickly became boxing’s most marketable heavyweight. His blend of raw power, athleticism, and discipline made him a nightmare for opponents. Knockout wins over Charles Martin, Wladimir Klitschko, and Joseph Parker crowned him a unified world champion and the face of the heavyweight division.

At his peak, Joshua wasn’t just winning — he was dominating. Every fight felt like an event, every punch carried menace. Fans believed they were watching a future all-time great in real time.

The Shockwaves of Defeat

Then came the moments that changed everything. The stunning upset loss to Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2019 sent shockwaves through boxing. Though Joshua reclaimed his titles in the rematch, the aura of invincibility was cracked. Later, back-to-back defeats to Oleksandr Usyk further complicated his journey, exposing technical gaps and raising questions about confidence, adaptability, and hunger.

READ MORE :Chaos Outside the Ring: Terence Crawford Slammed With

Rebuilding the Warrior

What separates Anthony Joshua from many fallen champions is his refusal to disappear. Instead of retreating, he rebuilt. New trainers, new philosophies, and a renewed focus on fundamentals followed. Recent performances have shown flashes of the old AJ: sharp jabs, controlled aggression, and devastating power.

Terence Crawford

But more importantly, there is a mental shift. Joshua now speaks openly about pressure, expectations, and self-belief — topics once avoided by elite fighters. It’s a more human version of a former champion, and paradoxically, a more dangerous one.

The Fights That Define Everything
The boxing world is obsessed with what comes next. A long-awaited showdown with Tyson Fury still looms as the biggest fight British boxing can make. There’s also talk of risky matchups, controversial opponents, and even crossover spectacles that divide fans.

Each option carries consequences. One wrong move could close the door on a title run forever. One iconic victory could instantly rewrite the narrative.

Legacy on the Line
Anthony Joshua’s legacy is already secure in many ways: multiple-time heavyweight champion, Olympic gold medalist, and global icon. But boxing is unforgiving. Fans remember endings as much as beginnings.

Is Joshua chasing another world title? Is he seeking closure against rivals? Or is he fighting for something deeper — respect, self-validation, and a final statement to the sport that made him famous?

One thing is certain: when Anthony Joshua steps into the ring, the world still watches. And in heavyweight boxing, that power — attention, expectation, belief — can be just as dangerous as any punch.

The next chapter isn’t written yet. But if history has taught us anything, it’s this: never count out Anthony Joshua. 🥊

Another belt is officially up for grabs, IBF Orders Contenders to Negotiate for Crawford’s Vacant Title

At some point, Terence “Bud” Crawford’s name will be removed from the championship slot across the board, given his recent retirement. The unbeaten and now former five-division world champion has officially vacated the IBF 168lbs title, the sanctioning body confirmed on Tuesday.

“The International Boxing Federation (IBF) received official confirmation on December 23, that Terrence [sic] Crawford has retired from the ring thus relinquishing the IBF Super Middleweight title,” the IBF confirmed to BoxingScene and other outlets in a media statement. “The IBF will proceed to request availability and order the two leading available contenders in the IBF Super Middleweight rankings to negotiate for the vacant title.”

Crawford, 42-0 (31 KOs) dethroned undisputed champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez, 63-3-2 (39 KOs) via unanimous decision on September 13 at Allegiant Stadium, home to the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders.

His reign ended after just three months and without another fight upon his announced retirement. WBO president Gustavo Olivieri confirmed days after that Crawford vacated the sanctioning body’s belt.

As was well publicized a few weeks ago, the 38-year-old fighting pride of Omaha, Nebraska was relieved of his WBC belt after he refused to pay what he described as exorbitant sanctioning fees demanded by the Mexico City-headquartered organization.

READ MORE : If the last fight has already been fought, Terence Crawford’s

To date, the WBA has yet to confirm that Crawford has turned in that belt as well. However, BoxingScene has learned that plans are already in place for Armando Resendiz, 16-2 (11 KOs) – the current WBA interim 168lbs titlist – to receive an upgrade. The move will likely coincide with the forthcoming announcement of his first defense, likely to come on the February 21 Mario Barrios-Ryan Garcia PBC on Prime pay-per-view undercard.

Terence Crawford

As for the IBF, red-hot contender Osleys Iglesias, 14-0 (13 KOs) is the current mandatory challenger. His high-risk, little-to-no-reward style and profile could prove problematic in the IBF formalizing a challenger for the vacant belt.

Behind the Berlin-based Cuban knockout artist are Alvarez and Tijuana’s Jaime Munguia, 45-2 (30 KOs), the latter who is also in a favorable position to challenge for the WBC belt.

Eddy Reynoso, Alvarez’s career-long trainer, previously confirmed that the former four-division champ underwent elbow surgery and will not return until May at the earliest. He previously stated an intention to wait until next September, though at a time when it was believed that a Crawford rematch was on the table.

Regardless, there stands a greater chance that BoxingScene will gain favor with Riyadh Season and Turki Alalshikh (who funded Crawford-Alvarez) than Alvarez speeding up his rehabilitation process to face a young contender as dangerous as Iglesias.

Behind Alvarez and Munguia is England’s Callum Simpson, though he will drop from the No. 5 position due to his upset knockout loss to Troy Williamson over the weekend.

Hamzah Sheeraz is presently No. 6 – but was already named in ordered vacant title fight by both the WBC and WBO.

The unbeaten Brit was summoned to enter talks with WBC interim titlist Christian Mbilli, 29-0-1 (24 KOs) for the vacant full version of the WBC belt. He was also recently instructed to open negotiations with undefeated South Central Los Angeles-based contender Diego Pacheco, 25-0 (18 KOs) for the WBO strap.

That would then push the current list to Russia’s Pavel Siylagin, 16-0-1 (7 KOs) – precisely the type of fighter who winds up fighting for a vacant IBF belt.

Terence Crawford

The mad scramble to vie for vacant belts only further illustrates the extraordinary legacy left behind by Crawford, who won at least one title at 135lbs, 140lbs, 147lbs, 154lbs and 168lbs. He is also the only male boxer to achieve undisputed championship status in three weight divisions during the multi-belt era and just one of three to claim the lineal crown at four weights.

“Crawford’s achievements in boxing are remarkable and the IBF is proud that he was our champion,” the sanctioning body noted.  “His legacy marked by his dedication and relentless pursuit for greatness will inspire many boxers for years to come.

We congratulate [Terence] Crawford on an exceptional and extraordinary career and wish him well in his future pursuits.”

‘Fight Them or Be Exposed’- Anthony Joshua Drops Two SHOCK Names for Jake Paul’s Next Bout”

Despite knocking him out in the sixth round, and breaking his jaw in two places in the process, Anthony Joshua was left rather impressed by Jake Paul’s grit and determination when the two shared the ring together in Miami, Florida, on the 19th of December.

In a highly controversial fight that was streamed live on Netflix, The Problem Child, who used to be a Disney star and is still a YouTuber, took on former two-time world heavyweight champion, AJ, in a crossover bout that stunned the combat sport world.

Unsurprisingly, Joshua was the heavy favourite heading into the fight, but he made hard work of it, failing to get the American out of there until round six… just two rounds before the fight would’ve gone the distance.

Paul used the early rounds to avoid the Brit, which is no surprise really, but once fatigue set in, he was a sitting duck, which in the end resulted in him hitting the canvas for a fifth and final time in the sixth round.

Speaking in his post-fight press conference, Joshua was full of praise for his controversial opponent, highlighting how much respect he has for him for actually stepping into the ring in the first place.

Up until fighting AJ, Paul had only really faced veterans of the combat sport world or people who simply weren’t boxers, bar Tommy Fury, who he lost to, so Joshua was complimentary of the YouTuber for agreeing to fight him and then actually going through with it.

“Jake has spirit,” he said.

Anthony Joshua

“He has some heart. He tried his best, and I take my hat off to him because No. 1, a lot of fighters haven’t got in the ring with me, and Jake did. Secondly, even when he got knocked down, he kept on trying to get up, and I take my hat off to him.”

Obviously, due to sustaining a broken jaw, Paul will have to spend some time on the sidelines, but AJ is fully backing him to make a return to the ring in 2026, and has even picked out two potential opponents for him.

Anthony Joshua used his post-fight presser to send a message to America about Paul, and said that if he really wants to make a dent in boxing, he could do if his heart remains in it.

“So, America, I think you have someone who could potentially — if he still has the heart for it — come back again, dust the dust off his shoulder and come again and maybe sell out this place sometime in 2026.

Continuing, Joshua then mentioned two possible opponents for Paul in his return fight, stating: “Maybe against a Gervonta Davis, a Ryan Garcia, who knows.”

For now, Jake Paul will have to rest up and recover from his broken jaw, but it’s clear he’s left a positive lasting impression on Anthony Joshua. They will now go their separate ways, with the latter eyeing up Tyson Fury in 2026, while maybe we’ll see the former in the ring again next year as well, possibly against either Davis or Garcia.

“We could sign it Again” Congratulations Pour In for Anthony Joshua as Shock World Title Fight Offer Drops

After defeating Jake Paul, Anthony Joshua may be just one win away from a long-awaited showdown with Tyson Fury. Although, the two-time heavyweight champion has been offered the chance to fight for a world title in his next outing

Anthony Joshua ended 15 months of inactivity when he stopped Paul after six rounds and his plan for 2026 now seems pretty clear. ‘AJ’ is expected to return to action in February, where a victory will supposedly tee up a clash with long-term rival Fury for the second half of the calendar.

As far as Joshua’s opponents go for his February return, Dutch kickboxer and former Fury sparring partner Rico Verhoeven has emerged as a frontrunner, with fight news expected imminently.

However, Queensberry promoter Frank Warren told The Stomping Ground that he would be willing to stage a clash between his newly crowned WBO heavyweight world champion Fabio Wardley and Joshua, to potentially add a world title to the blockbuster dust-up with Fury.

READ MORE :Deontay Wilder on Anthony Joshua: As long as we’re

“Fight Fabio Wardley, do it tomorrow, sign it tomorrow. If he says yes, I’ll go round to his house right now. Christmas Day I’ll go round there, and we will get the deal done. Why wouldn’t you do it?

You said you want to fight for a world title, fight Fabio Wardley. In the meantime, if you’re not [wanting to fight for a world title] and you want to wait for Tyson, then wait for Tyson.

Deontay Wilder

All of these people keep saying he needs to do these things to get back [and fight] for a world title, he’s no spring chicken, he’s been around and he’s a two-time world champion. If he wants to jump back in, then there you go, Fabio Wardley – another guy who has had no amateur experience.

Let me tell you what it is, what he doesn’t need to do, AJ, is fight anybody who can punch, because then there won’t be a fight with Tyson.”

Eddie Hearn has previously admitted that a world title fight is Joshua’s preferred option, rather than a Fury fight, but money talks and his lucrative meeting with Fury is surely too big to put at any kind of risk by facing a tough February opponent.

Deontay Wilder on Anthony Joshua: As long as we’re both active, we must meet

Deontay Wilder has said he would still like to face Anthony Joshua.There was a spell when the fight seemed close when both were unbeaten heavyweight titlists. However, the mouthwatering showdown between the Englishman and the outspoken puncher from Alabama never happened.

Now, Wilder, 44-4-1 (43 KOs), is 40 and Joshua, 29-4 (26 KOs) are potentially lined up for a 2026 showdown. Joshua last night knocked out Jake Paul in six rounds and then called out Tyson Fury in the aftermath. Victory for Joshua there and Wilder could conceivably follow.

Another tune-up for Joshua was planned for February; followed by another long-awaited bout, Tyson Fury, which – like the one with Wilder – is well past the best possible date.

“Almost definitely. Hands down. I’m a fighter,” Wilder told BoxingScene, asked whether he’d entertain a fight with the 35-year-old Joshua. “He’s a fighter. I’m still active. He’s still active. And that’s one of the biggest fights people still want to see. You know what I mean? 

“That’s a big fight people still want to see. And like I said, we both are still in this business. And so as long as we’re still in this business, we must meet.”

Wilder turned pro after capturing a bronze medal at the Beijing Olympics in 2008. Joshua turned over after capturing gold four years later in London.

It seemed like they might fight heading into Joshua’s bout with Andy Ruiz in 2019, but Ruiz sprung an upset. Joshua took the rematch, two months before Wilder fell to Fury in their February 2020 rematch to end his WBC title reign.

“Usyk Gets the Green Light” – WBC Clears Heavyweight Champion for Voluntary Defense as Deontay Wilder Fight Looms 

Oleksandr Usyk has been granted the opportunity to make a voluntary defence of his WBC heavyweight title after saying he wanted to fight Deontay Wilder next.

Unified heavyweight champion Usyk said this week that Wilder was his “first option” for his next fight.

Wilder is not ranked in the WBA, WBC or IBF’s top 10, meaning Usyk may have to vacate some of his titles to fight him.

But the WBC announced at their annual convention that they would not immediately call a mandatory defence for the Ukrainian for their belt, opening the door for a world title fight between the pair.

“Heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk can make a voluntary defence. He’s already said he would like to fight Deontay Wilder,” a WBC statement said.

Usyk last fought in July when he stopped Londoner Daniel Dubois in round five to become two-time undisputed heavyweight champion.

But in November, the 38-year-old decided to relinquish his WBO title, elevating Britain’s Fabio Wardley to heavyweight champion.

At the time, Usyk informed the WBO he would not be proceeding with a mandatory title defence against Wardley.

READ MORE :“I Was Pushed to the Edge” — Anthony Joshua breaks

Usyk remains the WBA, IBF and WBC heavyweight champion.

Anthony Joshua

The WBC also confirmed that a potential fight between British boxers Lawrence Okolie and Moses Itauma would determine the next mandatory challenger for the WBC belt.

Both fighters already have bouts scheduled, with Itauma fighting Jermaine Franklin on 24 January in Manchester and Okolie boxing in Nigeria later this month against a yet-to-be announced opponent.

Several other Britons could also put themselves into world title contention next year, with a potential bout between Joshua Buatsi and Ben Whittaker expected to determine the next mandatory challenger at light heavyweight.

Britain’s Conor Benn was also named the number one challenger for Mario Barrios’ WBC welterweight world title.

The WBC has stripped Terrence Crawford of his super-middleweight belt, saying the American hasn’t paid his past two sanctioning fees and calling it a “slap in the face”.

Crawford remains the WBA ‘Super’, WBO and IBF super-middleweight champion.

If the last fight has already been fought, Terence Crawford’s greatness needs no further proof.

Terence “Bud” Crawford has always fought like a man who wanted to leave no room for argument. Not simply to win, but to win so cleanly that dissent collapses on contact. So his retirement announcement on Tuesday didn’t feel like a sudden fade-out so much as the closing of a file: tidy, decisive, signed in his own hand. Three months after scaling two weight divisions to outclass Canelo Álvarez in Las Vegas and become the undisputed super-middleweight champion, Crawford says he is stepping away “on his own terms”. In the cruellest sport, that is rarer than a perfect record.

Boxing is purpose-built to keep you in. To lure you back with one more payday, one more belt, one more chance to settle a score that only exists because the promoters or the public insist it should. The hurt business has never been conducive to happy endings. The preferred vernacular is violent or sad or compromised: a stoppage you don’t see coming, a dubious decision, a diminished version of yourself preserved forever in high definition.

The 38-year-old Crawford, undefeated in 42 professional fights with 31 wins by knockout, is leaving with no such asterisks. No late-career survival acts. No sense of erosion. He exits while still clearly the best fighter in the world – only Naoya Inoue and Oleksandr Usyk are in the conversation – fresh off the biggest win of his career, with opportunity still rapping loudly at the door.

Plenty of champions have gone out on top in theory. Very few have done so in practice when they’re at the height of their earning power. Almost none have done so like this: as the best pound-for-pound fighter alive, unchallenged across five weight classes, without a single fight that left observers leaning forward in the late rounds and wondering whether the moment had finally arrived. With no judge having even once scored in favour of an opponent during his career. Not Gene Tunney. Not Rocky Marciano. Not Lennox Lewis. Not Joe Calzaghe. Not Floyd Mayweather Jr. Not Andre Ward. With Crawford, the question was never if a fight would tilt, only when.

READ MORE :“There’s Way More Left” – Anthony Joshua Sends Powerful

Anthony Joshua

To tell his story properly, you have to start in Omaha, because Omaha never leaves the frame. The kid from North 33rd Street, where options narrowed early and the gym became a kind of moral architecture. Long before boxing gave Crawford a livelihood, it gave him a structure. Chin tucked. Hands high. Elbows in. Keep your word. He would switch stances from orthodox to southpaw just to see how it felt.

When he broke his right hand in a school fight, he kept showing up for training anyway, drilling left-handed until it felt natural. He never moved his centre of gravity to the coasts or reinvented himself as a brand. Even as the money started pouring in, Omaha remained home – a place he fought for, returned to and built around, even on the rare occasions it didn’t love him back.

There is also the moment that sounds like myth until you remember it happened to a real body in a real car: the 2008 dice game, the winnings accounted for, the gunshot through the rear window, the bullet grazing beneath his ear. Crawford drove himself to the hospital, recovered, and kept the course. In another fighter’s story, it would be assigned a deeper meaning. In his, it remains a prelude to the work ahead.

That work made him boxing’s most reliable problem-solver. Crawford didn’t overwhelm opponents immediately; he dismantled them methodically from an orthodox or southpaw stance with equal menace. He downloaded information in the early rounds, probed reactions with the jab, catalogued habits, then altered the geometry of the action. Angles shifted. Distance dissolved. Fights that appeared competitive early became organised, then inevitable. Opponents did not simply lose; they realised, gradually, that the room had been rearranged around them.

The titles followed as proof of concept. First at lightweight. Then 140lb, where he became the division’s first undisputed champion of the four-belt era. Then welterweight, where the long-awaited Errol Spence Jr fight ended not in drama but in demolition. Then higher still, until September’s victory over Canelo transformed the argument and lifted him from generational talent into the all-time realm of lionhearted weight-jumpers such as Harry Greb, Henry Armstrong, Roberto Durán and Manny Pacquiao.

RELATED NEWS:Chaos Outside the Ring: Terence Crawford Slammed With

By the end, the résumé read like a lockbox. Only the sixth male fighter in history to win world titles in five divisions, joining Thomas Hearns, Sugar Ray Leonard, Oscar De La Hoya, Mayweather and Pacquiao. Only the third to claim lineal championships in four, alongside Mayweather and Pacquiao. Only the second man to become an undisputed champion in three weight classes after Armstrong in 1938.

Terence Crawford

These feats once guaranteed household fame. Crawford accomplished them in an era fragmented by paywalls, promotional stalemates and the expectation that greatness must also arrive with theatrics attached. He refused that script. He trusted the older logic: keep winning, and eventually the world will have to reckon with you. Now it has. And he is leaving anyway.

That may be the most radical part of all. Many great champions walk away because they no longer want to suffer for their craft. Crawford does not look like a man escaping the grind. He looks like a man who has already finished the work. He leaves without visible decline, without a rival pressing him, without the sense of a question left unanswered.

There is still a paradox here. The same discipline that allows Crawford to step away cleanly is what makes the door behind him feel slightly ajar. He did not say he is done fighting. He said he is stepping away from competition. He framed it as winning “a different type of battle”. That sounds less like a farewell than a man protecting his peace.

If he never returns, his legacy is secure and agency intact. Every era produces a small handful of fighters whose contemporaries insist – stubbornly, forever – that no one could have beaten them. Terence Crawford is now one of those fighters. The argument alone is a kind of immortality. And if he does come back, it will not be because boxing demanded it. It will be because, somewhere in his mind, a new problem arose – and he decided he still wanted to solve it.

Chaos Outside the Ring: Terence Crawford Slammed With $1.5M Lawsuit in Shocking Jewelry Deal Dispute

Another day, another lawsuit. This time boxing icon Terence “Bud” Crawford is confronting a fresh legal challenge days after confirming his retirement. A New York jeweler has sued the undefeated champion, claiming he failed to deliver on a luxury goods promotion tied to his fights.

As reported by our good friends at TMZ, the civil action was filed Thursday in Manhattan Civil Court by Mazza New York. The retailer alleges Crawford visited its store in February 2024 and sought a $139,000 Patek Philippe Aquanaut watch. According to the complaint, Crawford proposed a $35,000 down payment and agreed to promote Mazza on his fight trunks to cover the remaining balance.

Mazza says it accepted the arrangement, delivered the watch, and expected its logo to be visible during Crawford’s bouts. The first attempt allegedly failed during Crawford’s August 2024 fight against Israil Madrimov, when the logo “had completely fallen off” by the fourth round.

READ MORE : Finally, After Reaching the Pinnacle: Terence “Bud” Crawford

The suit claims Crawford’s team acknowledged the issue and pledged to correct it for the next marquee event. But when Crawford faced Canelo Alvarez in September, Mazza says its branding never appeared despite months of coordination and the delivery of both physical and digital materials.

Terence Crawford

The jeweler estimates the lost exposure from the Alvarez fight at roughly $1.5 million, comparing the missed visibility to premium advertising during major sporting events. The lawsuit asserts claims of breach of contract, conversion, and unjust enrichment.

Crawford, 38, retired this week with a perfect 42-0 record. In a social media video announcing his decision, he said he was “walking away as a great with nothing else left to prove.”

A representative for Crawford did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. It remains unclear whether he plans to challenge the allegations or pursue a settlement.