
With 8-Division Champion Pacquiao Era Ending, Fighters Are Exploring Other Routes to Greatness
By Teodoro Medina Reynoso
PhilBoxing.com
Thu, 25 Nov 2021

Pacquiao (L) and Canelo.
Manny Pacquiao has officially retired from professional boxing after 38 years of prizefighting spanning nearly four decades.
He left the fight sport after achieving an unprecedented record of eight world championships in as many weight classes. His nearest competitors, Oscar De La Hoya and Tommy Hearns, with six and five respectively had long retired before him.
Oscar did it from super featherweight or 130 lbs through the middleweight or 160 lbs. in the 90s to the 2000s. Tommy "The Hit Man" Hearns accomplished his from the welterweights or 147 lbs through the light heavyweight or 175 lbs, becoming the first to win five between the 70s and the 90s.
Among the current remaining active top fighters, only Canelo Alvarez and Nonito Donaire have a shot of getting remotely near of his standing record. Of course, the likes of Shakur Stevenson, Gervonta 'Tank' Davis and Naoya Inoue, currently with two to three world division championships tucked under their belts, are still young and have yet to hit their best primes. But they would be extremely lucky to get four or five at most in their respective careers.
Experts are unanimous in saying that it would take another unforeseen lifetime and very special fighter to match Pacquiao's record.
Given that, today's elite fighters and world champions are exploring other routes to establish greatness or distinguish themselves in the reckoning of history or at least in the record books.
Canelo Alvarez, particularly in his reported bid for a fifth division championship at cruiserweight (200 lbs maximum weight limit) versus defending WBC titlist Ilunga Makabu will also be trying to set a record in the biggest weight jump of 46 pounds starting from his first world title at super welterweight (154 lbs maximum weight limit).
The current official record is 42 lbs. also held by Pacquiao who first won a world boxing championship at flyweight or 112 lbs in 1998 and won his last at super welterweight or 154 lbs in 2010.
Most others, perhaps acknowledging the impossibility or futility of trying to at least match Pacquiao's record, have been targeting winning all four major belts in their current divisions to become undisputed world champions of their weight class.
Being undisputed world champion is an elite distinction by itself. Since the beginning of the four world belt era in the early 80s with the addition of the IBF and a little later, the WBO, only six fighters have won and reigned as undisputed world champions, namely Oleksander Usyk (cruiserweight), Canelo Alvarez (super middleweight), Floyd Mayweather, Jr. (welterweight), Vasily Lomachenko (lightweight) Terence Crawford and Josh Taylor, both at super lightweight.
If Oleksander Usyk, now unified WBA-IBF-WBO heavyweight titlist eventually add the WBC (and the Ring Magazine lineal) belt over Tyson Fury next year, he will become the first fighter to become undisputed world champion in two weight divisions. If Fury wins, he will become the undisputed world champion, only the seventh fighter to accomplish the feat.
The undisputed world championship has been such a big deal that it had even been used to somewhat degrade Pacquiao's eight world division championships record.
Some are saying Manny never won an undisputed world championship, meaning all the major belts, in any of the eight weight divisions he had fought and won world titles in.
But Manny never had, or needed to.
In at least half of the eight world division boxing titles he won, Manny defeated the recognized lineal world champions, the primus inter pares, the first among equal titlists, namely Chatchai Sasakul who beat the man who beat the man at flyweight, Yuri Arbachakov; Marco Antonio Barrera who beat Erik Morales at featherweight; Juan Manuel Marquez at super featherweight after also beating Morales and Barrera, and Ricky Hatton, conqueror of the great Kostya Tyzsu, at super lightweight or junior welterweight.
It goes without saying that Manny could have beaten the other lesser champions too in those divisions had he opted to unify all the belts thereat.
Anyway, at least three Filipino current world champions have the chance to become undisputed world champions in their respective classes: Nonito Donaire and Johnriel Casimero, WBC and WBO bantamweight titlists, respectively, both at 118 lbs and long reigning IBF super flyweight titleholder Jerwin Ancajas at 115 lbs.
But they have to win their fights this December, Donaire and Casimero in title defenses and Ancajas in a still to be finalized world title unification versus WBO titlist Kazuto Ioka in Japan.
Donaire particularly has to win for him not only to continue to vie for the undisputed world championship at bantamweight versus Naoya Inoue and or Casimero depending on circumstances, but also to try to win an official fifth world title by going yet another division down to the super flyweights or 115 lbs.
Nonito is now among the very few fighters to have won at least two world championships by going down in weight class. He will be the first to try for another world title by going down in a third lower weight division.
The way things are going, record wise, Manny Pacquiao's record of greatness will not be the only one in the books, particularly for Filipino fighters.
But that would just be fine, if you asked me.
The author Teodoro Medina Reynoso is a veteran boxing radio talk show host living in the Philippines. He can be reached at teddyreynoso@yahoo.com and by phone 09215309477.
Click here to view a list of other articles written by Teodoro Medina Reynoso.
Recent PhilBoxing.com In-House articles:
Ocum is WBC Asian lightweight champ
By Lito delos Reyes, Tue, 27 Jan 2026Kingsley “The Black Lion” Ibeh Believes he will stop Jarrell Miller this Saturday at Madison Square Garden
Tue, 27 Jan 2026David Ray Sarmiento finishes second place in Cologne January Blitz 2026.
By Marlon Bernardino, Tue, 27 Jan 2026THE PAST WEEK IN ACTION 25 JANUARY 2026: Raymund Muratalla Edges Andy Cruz; Walsh Outpoints Ocampo
By Eric Armit, Mon, 26 Jan 2026MFPI 5th Mindanao Summit at Mt. Apo on February 19-22
By Lito delos Reyes, Mon, 26 Jan 2026OLYMPIC BOXING 8: 1948 OLYMPICS AT LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM
By Maloney L. Samaco, Mon, 26 Jan 2026Golden Gloves Launches on Meta Quest Store, Establishing the First Official Esports Competition Pathway for Amateur Boxing
Mon, 26 Jan 2026Andy Cruz vs Raymond Muratalla: Who Will Execute?
By Chris Carlson, Sat, 24 Jan 2026Libranza to fight undefeated Tso for IBF Pan Pacific bantam
By Lito delos Reyes, Sat, 24 Jan 2026Filipino Cue Artist RJ Bautista Ready to Shine at the Las Vegas Open 2026
By Marlon Bernardino, Sat, 24 Jan 2026MURATALLA VS. CRUZ WEIGHTS AND RUNNING ORDER
Sat, 24 Jan 2026Xander Zayas vs. Abass Baraou Fight Week Events to Stream LIVE on Top Rank’s Social Media Channels
Sat, 24 Jan 2026Ballesteros not yet ready against Ocum
By Lito delos Reyes, Sat, 24 Jan 2026Chocolatito Gonzalez to undergo shoulder surgery
By Gabriel F. Cordero, Sat, 24 Jan 2026NM Nika finishes Sixth in Czech Republic Blitz chess tourney
By Marlon Bernardino, Sat, 24 Jan 2026