David Benavidez - Benavidez vs Morrell Ceremonial Weigh-ins
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By Norm Frauenheim 

It’s not exactly the transaction David Benavidez wanted. Benavidez, an instinctive fighter, was hoping to exchange blows for an undisputed title. Instead, he exchanged light-heavyweight belts in a move that was more about process than punches. It didn’t earn him a purse, but it didn’t cost him a sanctioning fee either.

In acronym-speak, Benavidez got “elevated,” from interim to champion without throwing a single jab in a move that was about as elevating as filing taxes. Few fans care, mostly because not much happened in a World Boxing Council shuffle that saw Benavidez move into a title relinquished by Dmitrii Bivol in about the time it takes to send a text message. 

Only when Benavidez elevates a challenger into mid-air with a furious succession of combinations will anybody really care. Maybe, that happens against Callum Smith. Or Anthony Yarde. Until then, however, Benavidez is confronted by skepticism already attached to what fans dismiss as an e-mail title. But don’t blame Benavidez, who understands the inevitable doubts.

“This is not ideal,’’ Benavidez posted on social media in response to a shuffle before a scheduled purse bid last week.

It’s decidedly not. 

But it’s not surprising, either. 

There had been plenty of talk about Bivol-Benavidez instead of a third Bivol-Beterbiev. Benavidez’ growing fan base is impatient, frustrated that Canelo Álvarez continues to say no to their demands for a fight with Benavidez. The Canelo possibility, if there ever was one, looks to be slim-to-none. But the fans’ impatience for Benavidez in an undisputed showdown has followed him up the scale to light-heavy.  

Nevertheless, it was pretty clear that Bivol-Beterbiev 3 would happen — probably this fall — at the moment Prince and promoter Turki Alalshikh  waved three fingers in the immediate aftermath of Bivol’s rematch victory — a majority decision — over Beterbiev Feb. 22 in Riyadh. 

There are reasonable questions about whether the third will be any different than the first or second. Bivol is a slight favorite to win the trilogy fight. But a draw might be the best bet. They are 1-1, each winning by majority decision by identical scores — 114-114, 116-112, 115-113. If there’s a draw in the third, will Alalshikh  wave four fingers? A fourth fight would only heighten the impatience among Benavidez fans.

For the Phoenix-born Benavidez, the good news is that he has a belt that gives him some leverage in potential negotiations with Matchroom-promoted Smith or any other 175-pound challenger. Still, I’m not sure the WBC did Benavidez any favors when the acronym handed him the title. Then again, it’s not as if the WBC did him any favors during his time as the so-called interim champion at 168-pounds. 

That was supposed to lead to a mandatory shot at Canelo.

It didn’t. 

But a Canelo-Benavidez fight was never ordered. There was no purse bid, no threat to strip Canelo and “elevate” Benavidez. Remember, Canelo gets what he wants. It’s the perk that comes with his celebrity and pay-per-view numbers. Now, he has a rich five-fight deal with Alalshikh. 

First, he’ll fight William Scull in a perceived tuneup on the first Saturday in May in Riyadh. Then, there’s the projected date against Terence Crawford, the all-time welterweight great who is coming up from 154 pounds for a 168-pound date in September. After that, who knows? Let’s just say there’s no mention of Canelo-versus-Benavidez. 

There’s been speculation among fans and media that the WBC moved Benavidez into the light-heavy vacancy left by Bivol in part because it wanted to make up for what it didn’t do at super-middle. Maybe. 

The real devil in the fine print, however, appears to be lurking in a looming battle created by Saudi money. In addition to signing Canelo, Alalshikh  bought The Ring, a century-old publication with a trademark name and its own championship belts.

A couple of years ago, the WBC’s Mauricio Sulaiman dismissed The Ring-sponsored titles. The Ring, he said, was just a magazine. But don’t tell that to Alalshikh. He carries The Ring belt around as though it’s permanently attached to one shoulder. Bivol, the man in the middle, relinquished the WBC belt because Sulaiman and Alalshikh left him no reasonable option.

Bivol has a deal with Alalshikh, who underwrote the first two fights with Beterbiev, according to promoter Eddie Hearn. He had a belt with Sulaiman. What would you do? Take the paycheck or keep the belt? Stupid question.

Sulaiman told ESPN Knockout that Bivol had an $8-million offer to fight Benavidez. He said the Bivol offer for a third Beterbiev fight was $2.7-million. The real numbers are impossible to know. It’s not as if the Saudi contracts are public record. 

Even if the numbers are close, however, it’s safe to guess that Bivol sweetened his purse by choosing Beterbiev instead of Benavidez — who according to Benavidez — dominated Bivol in sparring a couple of years ago.

Benavidez, also caught in the middle, got the consolation prize, a belt — a trophy — that comes with a burden of proof. He has yet to fight for it. 

Like Benavidez said, it’s not ideal. But Benavidez is 28. Beterbiev is 40. Bivol is 34.

Longterm, it is ideal.

Ideal for Benavidez.

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