The fight between Jai Opetaia and Brandon Glanton on March 8th at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, NV was one that could be described as one of the hottest rising stars in the sport going against a top contender, who may eventually also be considered among the best in Boxing, that shined a light on the often lightly regarded and consistently lacking name recognition, Cruiserweight division. A synopsis that frankly did not need controversy.
For the unbeaten Opetaia, however, the fight would have such a shadow of controversy as the fighter, recognized by both the International Boxing Federation (IBF) and Ring Magazine as World Cruiserweight champion, would see the IBF withhold sanctioning of the bout two days before it took place due to what it felt was a lack of respect by the promoter Zuffa Boxing, who is attempting to establish it's own world championships for fights held under its banner in an attempt to establish Unified Boxing Organizations (UBO’s). A format that seems to mirror that of the sport of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) that has in itself created controversy for its proposed changes to the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act. While the broader subject is one that requires its own column, and perhaps a series of columns to go over everything that it entails, what it meant for this fight was that only the vacant Zuffa World Cruiserweight championship along with Opetaia’s recognition from Ring Magazine would be on the line and the IBF would strip the champion of its world championship for competing in an unsanctioned contest.
The ugliness of the politics that be in the sport of Boxing aside, what would take place in the ring was a superb performance by a potentially great fighter. From the opening bell, Opetaia used his footwork and angles to consistently beat Glanton to the punch. Glanton, who applied constant pressure on Opetaia from the outset was unable to successfully cut the ring off and minimize Opetaia’s movement for a sustained period of time as the fighter known for his ability to score devastating knockouts, put round after round in the bank by frequently landing left hands from the southpaw stance and mixing in combinations.
Although some would say that the only thing missing from Opetaia’s performance in this fight was a knockout, the ability to show there is more to his skillset than just punching power, being made to use his movement more than had been the case previously in his career, and dominate a determined opponent, who never took a backwards step was impressive in winning a wide and convincing twelve round unanimous decision victory and becoming the first world champion under the Zuffa Boxing banner. Despite the controversy regarding the IBF prior to the bout, Opetaia celebrated his victory with his IBF belt prominently displayed.
While one would think there will be much more to come in terms of established sanctioning organizations and Zuffa Boxing that might see the battleground go from the Boxing ring to the courtroom, one can only hope that Zuffa’s goal is not ultimately to phase out the existing standards in which Boxing has been governed for decades and all of the above will realize there are more benefits to collaboration than being enemies. If everyone involved does indeed have the same goal, to help elevate and grow the sport.
“And That's The Boxing Truth.”
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