Transnational Boxing Rankings Board

The Transnational Boxing Rankings Board (TBRB) is an all-volunteer initiative formed in October 2012 with the intention of providing professional boxing with top-ten rankings, identifying the singular world champion of every division and to insist on the sport's reform. Board members are independent professional journalists, boxing historians and record keepers from around the world.[1] Their rankings and titles are meant to be uninfluenced by promoters and the traditional sanctioning bodies.[2]

Transnational Boxing Rankings
AbbreviationTBRB
Formation2012
FoundersSprings Toledo
Cliff Rold
Tim Starks
TypeVolunteer organization
PurposeBoxing Rankings
Volunteers
50+ professional journalists and boxing historians
Websitewww.tbrb.org

TBRB championships

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The TBRB only awards vacant championships when the two top-ranked fighters in any division meet, and currently recognizes legitimate world champions or "true champions" in each weight class. It also presents the "successions" of these championship "thrones."[3]

Three of its recognized champions were identified by The Ring magazine before the TBRB was founded. Thus, the TBRB was formed to continue where The Ring "left off" in the aftermath of the latter's purchase by Golden Boy Promotions in 2007, and the following dismissal of the editorial board headed by Nigel Collins.[4] After the new editors announced a controversial new championship policy in May 2012,[5][6][7] three members of the Ring Advisory Panel resigned. These three members (Springs Toledo, Cliff Rold and Tim Starks) became the founding members of the TBRB, which was formed over the summer of 2012 with the assistance of Stewart Howe of England.[8]

ESPN boxing analyst and commentator Teddy Atlas praised the TBRB's efforts on-air in March 2013[9] and again during the season finale in August 2013.[10]

British magazine Boxing News announced in 2021 that it would only recognize world champions as voted by the TBRB.[11]

TBRB Voting Panel members

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There are currently 52 members representing 21 countries on six continents: the United States, England, Italy, the Philippines, Ireland, Chile, Cuba, Costa Rica, Scotland, Canada, New Zealand, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Norway, Sweden, Japan, Thailand, Australia, Argentina, Russia and Ghana.[2]

  •   Vittorio Parisi (Chair)
  •   Cliff Rold (Chair)
  •   Tim Starks (Chair)
  •   Springs Toledo (Oversight)
  •   Stewart Howe (Tech)
  •   Adam Abramowitz (board member)
  •   Carlos Aguirre (board member)
  •   Ramon Aranda (board member)
  •   Gonzalo Baeza (board member)
  •   Derek Bonnett (board member)
  •   Shaun Brown (board member)
  •   Brin-Jonathan Butler (board member)
  •   Kevin Byrne (board member)
  •   Michael Carbert (board member)
  •   Lázaro Malvarez Cárdenas (board member)
  •   Lou Catalano (board member)
  •   Abac Cordero (board member)
  •   Jose Corpas (board member)
  •   Tom Craze (board member)
  •   Jake Donovan (board member)
  •   Jeremy Foley (board member)
  •   Oliver Fennell (board member)
  •   Jeandra LeBeauf (board member)
  •   Jorge Lera (board member)
  •   Alex McClintock (board member)
  •   Matt McGrain (board member)
  •   Yuriko Miyata (board member)
  •   Diego Morilla (board member)
  •   Gabriel Muhr (board member)
  •   Gautham Nagesh (board member)
  •   James Oddy (board member)
  •   Takahiro Onaga (board member)
  •   Alister Scott Ottesen (board member)
  •   Harry Otty (board member)
  •   Per-Ake Persson (board member)
  •   Alex Pierpaoli (board member)
  •   Ken Pollitt (Record keeper)
  •   Jeremiah J. Preisser (board member)
  •   Eric Raskin (board member)
  •   Victor Salazar (board member)
  •   Mauricio Salvador (Record keeper)
  •   Michael Shepherd (board member)
  •   Don Steinberg (board member)
  •   Brandon Stubbs (board member)
  •   Alexey Sukachev (board member)
  •   Rey Tecson (Record keeper)
  •   Luis Torres (board member)
  •   Paul Upham (board member)
  •   Dave Wilcox (board member)
  •   Nick Wong (board member)
  •   Steve Zemach (board member)
  •   Marquis Johns (board member)

Successions

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The following are the lineal champions recognized by the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board:

Heavyweight

  •   Oleksandr Usyk W12   Anthony Joshua (20 August 2022 – Usyk and Joshua were the top two Transnational-Ranked heavyweights at the time of this bout. Throne declared open as of 15 August 2022 when Fury finally confirmed repeated claims of retirement by vacating a belt.)  
  •   Tyson Fury TKO7   Deontay Wilder (22 February 2020 – Fury and Wilder were the top two Transnational-Ranked heavyweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Tyson Fury W12 Wladimir Klitschko (28 November 2015). (Fury officially abdicates throne 18 October 2016).
  •   Wladimir Klitschko W12   Alexander Povetkin (5 October 2013 – Klitschhko and Povetkin were the top two Transnational-Ranked heavyweights at the time of this bout).

Cruiserweight

  •   Jai Opetaia W12 Mairis Briedis (2 July 2022)
  •   Mairis Briedis W12   Yuniel Dorticós (26 September 2020 – Briedis and Dorticós were the top two Transnational-Ranked cruiserweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Oleksandr Usyk W12   Murat Gassiev (21 July 2018 – Usyk and Gassiev were the top two Transnational-Ranked cruiserweights at the time of this bout). (Usyk officially abdicates throne 15 October 2019).

Light heavyweight

Super middleweight

  •   Saul Alvarez W12   Caleb Plant (6 November 2021 – Alvarez and Plant were the top two Transnational-Ranked super middleweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Andre Ward W12   Carl Froch (17 December 2011 – Ward and Froch were the top-two RING-rated super middleweights at the time of this bout). (Ward officially abdicates throne 16 March 2016).

Middleweight

Super welterweight

  •   Jermell Charlo TKO10   Brian Castaño (14 May 2022 – Charlo and Castaño were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. middleweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Floyd Mayweather Jr. W12   Saul Alvarez (14 September 2013 – Alvarez and Mayweather were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. middleweights at the time of this bout). (Mayweather officially abdicates throne 21 September 2015).

Welterweight

  •   Terence Crawford TKO9   Errol Spence Jr. (29 July 2023 – Crawford and Spence were the top two Transnational-Ranked welterweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Manny Pacquiao W12   Timothy Bradley (12 April 2016 – Pacquiao and Bradley were the top two Transnational-Ranked welterweights at the time of this bout). (Pacquiao officially abdicates throne 19 April 2016).
  •   Floyd Mayweather Jr. W12 Manny Pacquiao (2 May 2015 – Mayweather and Pacquiao were the top two Transnational-Ranked welterweights at the time of this bout). (Mayweather officially abdicates throne 21 September 2015).

Super lightweight

  •   Teófimo López W12 Josh Taylor (10 June 2023)
  •   Josh Taylor W12   José Ramírez (22 May 2021 – Taylor and Ramírez were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. welterweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Mikey Garcia W12   Sergey Lipinets (10 March 2018 – Garcia and Lipinets were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. welterweights at the time of this bout). (Garcia officially abdicates throne 3 March 2020).
  •   Terence Crawford W12   Viktor Postol (23 July 2016 – Postol and Crawford were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. welterweights at the time of this bout). (Crawford officially abdicates throne 6 March 2018).
  •   Danny Garcia W12   Lucas Matthysse (14 September 2013 – Matthysse and Garcia were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. welterweights at the time of this bout). (Garcia officially abdicates throne August 2015).

Lightweight

Super featherweight

  •   Shakur Stevenson W12   Óscar Valdez (30 April 2022 – Stevenson and Valdez were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. lightweights at the time of this bout). (Stevenson officially stripped of the throne 23 September 2022 after missing weight).

Super bantamweight

  •   Naoya Inoue KO10   Marlon Tapales (26 December 2023 – Inoue and Tapales were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. featherweights at the time of this bout).
  •   Guillermo Rigondeaux W12 Nonito Donaire (13 April 2013) (Rigondeaux officially abdicates throne 11 June 2022 by TBRB).
  •   Nonito Donaire TKO9   Toshiaki Nishioka (13 October 2012 – Nishioka and Donaire were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. featherweights at the time of this bout).

Bantamweight

  •   Naoya Inoue TKO2   Nonito Donaire (7 June 2022 – Inoue and Donaire were the top two Transnational-Ranked bantamweights at the time of this bout). (Inoue officially abdicates throne 13 January 2023).

Super flyweight

  •   Juan Francisco Estrada W12 Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (26 April 2019)
  •   Srisaket Sor Rungvisai W12 Juan Francisco Estrada (24 February 2018 – Sor Rungvisai and Estrada were the top two Transnational-Ranked jr. bantamweights at the time of this bout).

Flyweight

Current champions

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As of 9 September 2024
Weight Champion Record
Heavyweight   Oleksandr Usyk (UKR) 22–0 (14)
Cruiserweight   Jai Opetaia (AUS) 25–0 (19)
Light heavyweight   Artur Beterbiev (RUS) 20–0 (20)
Super middleweight   Saul Alvarez (MEX) 61–2–2 (39)
Middleweight vacant
Junior middleweight   Jermell Charlo (USA) 35–2–1 (19)
Welterweight   Terence Crawford (USA) 41–0 (31)
Junior welterweight   Teófimo López (USA) 21–1 (13)
Lightweight vacant
Junior lightweight vacant
Featherweight vacant
Junior featherweight   Naoya Inoue (JPN) 28–0 (25)
Bantamweight vacant
Junior bantamweight   Jesse Rodriguez (USA) 20–0 (13)
Flyweight vacant
Junior flyweight vacant
Strawweight vacant

Pound-for-pound

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As of 09, Sept 2024

Rank Boxer Record Weight class
1   Naoya Inoue 28–0–0 (25) Junior featherweight
2   Terence Crawford 41–0–0 (31) Welterweight
3   Oleksandr Usyk 22–0–0 (14) Heavyweight
4   Dmitry Bivol 23–0–0 (12) Light heavyweight
5   Canelo Alvarez 61–2–2 (39) Super middleweight
6   Artur Beterbiev 20–0–0 (20) Light heavyweight
7   Teofimo Lopez 21–1–0 (13) Junior welterweight
8   Kenshiro Teraji 23–1–0 (14) Light flyweight
9   Junto Nakatani 28–0–0 (21) Bantamweight
10   Gervonta Davis 30–0–0 (28) Lightweight

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "MEMBERS Transnational Boxing Rankings Board". tbrb.org. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Top Rank: Getting To Know The Transnational Boxing Ranking Board". theclassical.org. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  3. ^ "Successions | Transnational Boxing Rankings Board". tbrb.org. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  4. ^ Tim Starks (9 September 2011). "The Ring Magazine Shakes Up Its Leadership, Threatens Its Credibility". The Queensberry Rules. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  5. ^ Springs Toledo. "Occupy the Ring". The Sweet Science.
  6. ^ Tim Starks. "The Horrible New Ring Magazine Championship Policy". Queensberry Rules.
  7. ^ Cliff Rold (10 May 2012). ""The Ring" Changes The Rules, Further Clouds Title Scene". Boxing Scene.[dead link]
  8. ^ Gibson, Paul (2 February 2015). "Boxing loses credibility with every new champion. Can the sport be saved?". The Guardian.
  9. ^ "Stiff Jab — ESPN Highlights Transnational Boxing Rankings..." stiffjab.com. 21 September 2016.
  10. ^ "YouTube – 2013-08-23 ESPN Friday Night Fights". youtube.com. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  11. ^ No more sanctioning body titles. The new Boxing News stance here – Matt Christie, Boxing News, 6 July 2021
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