The International Boxing Federation’s ruling that stripped Jai Opetaia of its cruiserweight title has also exposed a wider issue for the fledgling Zuffa Boxing promotion.
In its detailed explanation of the decision, the IBF reiterated that it first became aware of the planned Opetaia vs Brandon Glanton bout through social media before reminding the champion’s representatives of Rule 5 governing IBF titleholders.
Discussions followed between the sanctioning body and representatives connected to the event, including promoter Michael Francis, attorney Joshua Dubin, and mediator Sean Gibbons. The IBF eventually agreed to sanction the contest under specific conditions, including assurances that the proposed Zuffa belt would not be promoted as a rival championship.
In correspondence cited by the IBF, it was stated that any Zuffa belt would be treated as “a trophy or token of recognition” rather than a competing world title.
However, matters changed during the March 6 press conference in Las Vegas when the fight was publicly promoted as being for the “Zuffa World Cruiserweight Championship.” The IBF immediately withdrew sanction for the bout.
Under IBF Rule 5.H, a champion who participates in an unsanctioned contest within the division’s weight limit automatically vacates the title regardless of the result.
The federation’s Board of Directors later confirmed that Opetaia’s cruiserweight championship had been vacated.
Zuffa title question
The situation highlights a potential structural clash between Zuffa Boxing and the existing sanctioning body system that has governed professional boxing titles for decades.
Zuffa faces something of a title dilemma, although the promotion may not view it that way. The organization appears willing to offer its own championship belt, which may have been the intention from the outset.
But fighters pursuing the traditional route of recognized world titles could view the situation differently. Opetaia has repeatedly spoken about his ambition to become the undisputed cruiserweight champion, a path that relies on holding and defending belts from the major sanctioning bodies.
The IBF decision effectively establishes the first precedent for how those bodies may respond when a reigning champion participates in a bout promoted around an alternative championship structure.
That dynamic could present a difficult choice for fighters weighing up a move to Zuffa while holding a recognized world title.
IBF champion Richardson Hitchins has already admitted reservations about joining the promotion if it meant surrendering his belt.
Champions
So far, Opetaia is the only current world champion to have signed with Zuffa, and the IBF ruling immediately cost him the title he carried into the contest.
Given Opetaia’s previously stated ambitions to unify the cruiserweight division, it will now be interesting to see how the Australian responds to the situation.
Despite Dana White’s recent suggestion that Zuffa could work with other promoters and sanctioning bodies, the road to formal title recognition still looks complicated.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a veteran boxing reporter with 15+ years of experience. He has interviewed world champions, broken international exclusives, and reported ringside since 2010. Read full bio.

