BOXING

Why did the IBF strip Crawford of the title? We have (some) answers

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Terence Crawford was stripped of his IBF title months after he won the 147-pound belt from Errol Spence Jr. in July.

The ninth-round TKO victory crowned Crawford as the undisputed welterweight champion and cemented his place as ESPN’s No. 1 pound-for-pound boxer.

Crawford, 36, still owns the WBC, WBA and WBO belts, but Jaron “Boots” Ennis is now the IBF titleholder after he was elevated from interim champion.

Why was Crawford stripped of his title so soon after winning it? What did Ennis accomplish to earn the title? ESPN answers those questions and more:

Why was Crawford stripped by the IBF?

Boxing’s four recognized sanctioning bodies (WBC, WBA, IBF and WBO) govern world titles across 17 weight classes.

When a fighter holds one more than one title in a weight class — such as Crawford, Canelo Alvarez or heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk, among others, there’s a rotation system to decide which mandatory defense is due next.

Terence Crawford

There are also optional defenses that the four sanctioning bodies allow along with exceptions to mandatory defenses for unification fights and other major fights in special circumstances.

After Crawford defeated Spence, the IBF didn’t allow for even one optional defense. On Aug. 25, the IBF ordered Crawford to begin negotiations with Ennis to be concluded by Sept. 24.

But there was one issue: the Crawford-Spence bout contained a two-way rematch clause that meant the loser of the bout could contractually exercise his right to an immediate rematch.

Even if Crawford wished to fight Ennis rather than take part in a far bigger matchup against someone like Alvarez, he would have to face Spence after the latter exercised the rematch clause in August.

Unlike the other three sanctioning bodies, the IBF doesn’t recognize rematch clauses as an exception to a mandatory defense, so Crawford was stripped with the title handed to Ennis.

When was the last time Spence made a mandatory defense?

Somehow, Spence has made only one IBF mandatory defense, a first-round KO of fringe contender Carlos Ocampo in June 2018.

How Ocampo inherited that position in the first place is a mystery, par for the course when it comes to boxing’s sanctioning-body shenanigans.

Spence won the IBF title from Kell Brook in May 2017 via 11th-round KO. Since then, he’s suffered two serious injuries — a car accident that hospitalized him for days and a detached retina that scrapped a fight with Manny Pacquiao — and fought seven times.

Three of those seven fights were unifications (fights against Shawn Porter, Yordenis Ugas and Crawford). The IBF allows such unification bouts against other champions to take precedence over mandatory fights.

Following a mandatory defense, a fighter is typically allowed to make a voluntary defense against someone who is ranked. One such voluntary defense took place against Mikey Garcia. Another against Lamont Peterson. Danny Garcia was a WBC mandatory defense.

What isn’t clear: Why the IBF didn’t crown an interim champion until January when Spence dealt with two yearlong-plus layoffs.

“We probably should have ordered an interim earlier given the extent of Spence’s injuries,” IBF president Daryl Peoples told ESPN on Friday. “We typically try to stay away from interims but concede that it should have been done earlier. We underestimated his recovery time. I have to own that. Nothing nefarious.”


What did “Boots” Ennis accomplish to earn the title?

Ennis (31-0, 28 KOs) is undoubtedly one of boxing’s fastest-rising stars. The 26-year-old from Philadelphia has impressed with his blend of athleticism, punch variety and power.

What Ennis hasn’t been able to do: secure name opponents.

“What’s gonna be their excuse now?!” Ennis wrote on Instagram on Thursday, referring to his new status as champion.

Ennis won the interim title in January when he scored a shutout decision over fringe contender Karen Chukhadzhian. Ennis made his first defense in July in his first “Showtime Championship Boxing” main event, a homecoming of sorts in Atlantic City with a 10th-round of Roiman Villa.

Now, Ennis should be lined up for some meaningful fights, even if he’s unlikely to ever fight Crawford or Spence, who could meet again at 154 pounds.

The best option for Ennis could come against the winner of a planned bout between Eimantas Stanionis and Keith Thurman next year.

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