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| align="center"|{{flagicon|DNK}} [[Mikkel Kessler]]<ref name="unified"/><br/>38-0 (29 KO)
| align="center"|{{flagicon|DNK}} [[Mikkel Kessler]]<ref name="unified"/><br/>38-0 (29 KO)
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|DNK}} [[Mikkel Kessler]]<br/>38-0 (29 KO)
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|DNK}} [[Mikkel Kessler]]<br/>38-0 (29 KO)
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|GER}} [[Robert Stieglitz]]<br/>
| rowspan="2" align="center"|vacant
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|WAL}} [[Joe Calzaghe]]<br/>42-0 (31 KO)
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|WAL}} [[Joe Calzaghe]]<br/>42-0 (31 KO)
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|WAL}} [[Joe Calzaghe]]<br/>42-0 (31 KO)
| rowspan="2" align="center"|{{flagicon|WAL}} [[Joe Calzaghe]]<br/>42-0 (31 KO)

Revision as of 00:30, 13 December 2006

This is a list of current boxing world champions who are certified by the four major boxing sanctioning bodies[1] and The Ring magazine. Each champion's professional boxing record is shown in the following format: wins-losses-draws-no contests (knockout wins).

The World Boxing Association (WBA) was founded in 1921 as the National Boxing Association (NBA)—a national regulating body of the United States. On August 23, 1962, the NBA became the WBA—a Venezuelan-based worldwide regulating body.[2] According to WBA championship rules, when a boxer holds both a WBA world title and a world title from at least one of the other three major sanctioning bodies, the boxer is granted special recognition: unified champion (if he holds two titles), undisputed champion (three titles), or super champion (all four titles). The 'regular' WBA world title is then vacated.[3]

The World Boxing Council (WBC) was founded in Mexico City, Mexico on February 14, 1963 in order to establish an international regulating body.[4] The WBC established many of today's safety measures in boxing, such as standing eight-counts,[5] a limit of 12 rounds instead of 15,[6] and additional weight classes.[6]

The International Boxing Federation (IBF) originated in September 1976 as the United States Boxing Association (USBA) when American members of the WBA withdrew in order to legitimize boxing in the United States with "unbiased" ratings.[7] In April 1983, The organization established an international division that was known as the United States Boxing Association-International (USBA-I).[7] In May 1984, the New Jersey-based USBA-I was renamed and became the IBF.[7]

The World Boxing Organization (WBO) was founded in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 1988. Its motto is "dignity, democracy, honesty."[8] Some media sites do not include the WBO in their list of champions,[9][10] whereas others do.[11][12]

The Ring is not a sanctioning body but is a boxing magazine that was founded in 1922. In 2002, The Ring created a championship system that is "intended to reward fighters who, by satisfying rigid criteria, can justify a claim as the true and only world champion in a given weight class."[13] There are only three ways that a boxer can win The Ring's title: defeat the reigning champion; unify the WBA, WBC, and IBF titles; or win a box-off between The Ring's number-one and number-two rated contenders (or, sometimes, number-one and number-three rated).[14] There are also only three ways that a boxer can lose The Ring's title: lose a championship fight, move to a different weight class, or retire.[14] (The Ring does not strip its champions' titles like the sanctioning bodies do.)

Current champions

Heavyweight (200+ lb, 90.7+ kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Russland Nikolai Valuev
45-0-0-1 (33 KO)
Russland Oleg Maskaev
34-5 (26 KO)
Ukraine Wladimir Klitschko
47-3 (42 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Shannon Briggs
48-4-1 (42 KO)
vacant

Cruiserweight (200 lb, 90.7 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Jamaika O'Neil Bell[15]
26-1-1 (24 KO)
Jamaika O'Neil Bell
26-1-1 (24 KO)
Polen Krzysztof Włodarczyk
37-1 (27 KO)
Wales Enzo Maccarinelli
25-1 (19 KO)
Jamaika O'Neil Bell
26-1-1 (24 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Virgil Hill
50-5 (23 KO)
Russland Valery Brudov[16]
33-1 (25 KO)

Light heavyweight (175 lb, 79.4 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Italien Silvio Branco
55-8-2 (34 KO)
Polen Tomasz Adamek
31-0 (21 KO)
England Clinton Woods
40-3-1 (24 KO)
Ungarn Zsolt Erdei
25-0 (15 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Bernard Hopkins
47-4-1-1 (32 KO)

Super middleweight (168 lb, 76.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Dänemark Mikkel Kessler[15]
38-0 (29 KO)
Dänemark Mikkel Kessler
38-0 (29 KO)
vacant Wales Joe Calzaghe
42-0 (31 KO)
Wales Joe Calzaghe
42-0 (31 KO)
vacant

Middleweight (160 lb, 72.6 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Vereinigte Staaten Jermain Taylor[17]
26-0-1 (17 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Jermain Taylor
26-0-1 (17 KO)
Deutschland Arthur Abraham
22-0 (17 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Jermain Taylor
26-0-1 (17 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Jermain Taylor
26-0-1 (17 KO)
Argentinien Mariano Natalio Carrera
30-4 (21 KO)

Super welterweight (154 lb, 69.9 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Vereinigte Staaten José Antonio Rivera
38-4-1 (24 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Oscar de la Hoya
38-4 (30 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Cory Spinks
35-3 (11 KO)
Ukraine Sergiy Dzindziruk
33-0 (21 KO)
vacant
Vereinigte Staaten Travis Simms[18]
24-0 (18 KO)

Welterweight (147 lb, 66.7 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Puerto Rico Miguel Angel Cotto
28-0 (23 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Floyd Mayweather Jr.
37-0 (24 KO)
Puerto Rico Kermit Cintron
27-1 (25 KO)
Mexiko Antonio Margarito
34-4-0-1 (24 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten Floyd Mayweather Jr.
37-0 (24 KO)

Super lightweight (140 lb, 63.5 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Frankreich Souleymane M'Baye
35-1 (20 KO)
England Junior Witter
34-1-2 (19 KO)
Kolumbien Juan Urango
17-0-1 (13 KO)
Kolumbien Ricardo Torres
30-1 (27 KO)
England Ricky Hatton
41-0 (30 KO)

Lightweight (135 lb, 61.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Vereinigte Staaten Juan Díaz
31-0 (15 KO)
Cuba Joel Casamayor
34-3-1 (21 KO)
Mexiko Jesús Chávez
43-3 (30 KO)
vacant Cuba Joel Casamayor
34-3-1 (21 KO)
Vereinigte Staaten David Díaz[16]
32-1-1 (17 KO)
Mexiko Julio Díaz[16]
33-3 (24 KO)

Super featherweight (130 lb, 59 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Venezuela Edwin Valero
20-0 (20 KO)
Mexiko Marco Antonio Barrera
63-4-0-1 (42 KO)
Südafrika Malcolm Klassen
19-3-2 (10 KO)
Dominikanische Republik Joan Guzman
26-0 (17 KO)
vacant

Featherweight (126 lb, 57.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Indonesien Chris John
38-0-1 (20 KO)
Mexiko Rodolfo López
19-2-1 (13 KO)
vacant Mexiko Juan Manuel Márquez
46-3-1 (35 KO)
vacant

Super bantamweight (122 lb, 55.3 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Panama Celestino Caballero
25-2 (18 KO)
Mexiko Israel Vázquez
41-3 (30 KO)
Kanada Steve Molitor
23-0 (9 KO)
Mexiko Daniel Ponce de León
30-1 (28 KO)
Mexiko Israel Vázquez
41-3 (30 KO)

Bantamweight (118 lb, 53.5 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Ukraine Wladimir Sidorenko
19-0-1 (6 KO)
Japan Hozumi Hasegawa
21-2 (7 KO)
Mexiko Rafael Márquez
36-3 (32 KO)
vacant vacant

Super flyweight (115 lb, 52.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Japan Nobuo Nashiro
9-0 (5 KO)
Mexiko Cristian Mijares
29-3-2 (11 KO)
vacant Mexiko Fernando Montiel
32-2-1 (24 KO)
vacant

Flyweight (112 lb, 50.8 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Venezuela Lorenzo Parra
27-0 (17 KO)
Thailand Pongsaklek Wonjongkam
63-2 (31 KO)
Armenien Vic Darchinyan
27-0 (21 KO)
Argentinien Omar Andrés Narváez
23-0-2 (15 KO)
vacant
Panama Roberto Vásquez[16]
24-1 (17 KO)

Light flyweight (108 lb, 49 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Japan Koki Kameda
12-0 (10 KO)
Mexiko Omar Niño Romero
24-2-2 (10 KO)
Mexiko Ulises Solis
22-1-2 (16 KO)
Mexiko Hugo Cázares
24-3-1 (18 KO)
Mexiko Hugo Cázares
24-3-1 (18 KO)

Minimumweight (105 lb, 47.6 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Japan Yutaka Niida
20-1-3 (8 KO)
Thailand Eagle Kyowa
17-1 (6 KO)
Indonesien Muhammad Rachman
51-7-4 (23 KO)
Puerto Rico Ivan Calderón
27-0 (6 KO)
vacant
Japan Katsunari Takayama[16]
18-2 (7 KO)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The official rules and regulations of the WBA, IBF, and WBO all mention by name the other three major sanctioning bodies in their title unification rules. The WBC does not mention by name any other sanctioning body in its rules, but it does list the other three major sanctioning bodies' champions on its ratings page. Thus, all four organizations consider only themselves and the other three organizations to be major sanctioning bodies. They do not consider organizations such as the IBO and IBA to be major sanctioning bodies.
  2. ^ Bastidas, Angel M. World Boxing Association History. World Boxing Association. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  3. ^ WBA officials. World Boxing Association World Championships Regulations. World Boxing Association. PDF accessed 6 July 2006.
  4. ^ WBC officials. World Boxing Council: History & Founding Fathers. World Boxing Council. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  5. ^ WBC officials. Rules that have changed the History of Boxing. World Boxing Council. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  6. ^ a b WBC officials. Permanent Medical Research Program. World Boxing Council. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  7. ^ a b c IBF-USBA officials. History of the IBF. 4 December 2000. IBF-USBA. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  8. ^ WBO officials. WBO logo. World Boxing Organization. JPEG accessed 6 July 2006.
  9. ^ The Sports Network editors. Current Boxing Champions. 5 July 2006. SI.com. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  10. ^ Yahoo! editors. Current Boxing Champions. 5 July 2006. Yahoo! URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  11. ^ Eisele, Andrew. Boxing Champions. 2 July 2006. About.com. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  12. ^ BBC Sport editors. List of Champions. 3 July 2006. BBC Sport. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  13. ^ The Ring editors. About The Ring. 26 June 2006. The Ring. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  14. ^ a b Kellerman, Max. "Gatti vs. the unknown." 22 January 2004. ESPN.com. URL accessed 6 July 2006.
  15. ^ a b Unified champion.
  16. ^ a b c d e Interim champion.
  17. ^ Undisputed champion.
  18. ^ Champion in recess.

References