Everyone Wants The IBF Title, Nobody Wants Iglesias

From there, the landscape narrows fast.

Jaime Munguia is the next logical option, but expectations around the division are that he will also pass. Hamzah Sheeraz, ranked just below, has multiple alternatives and little incentive to step into a risky fight against a mandatory opponent widely viewed as the most dangerous man in the class. Neither scenario points toward resolution.

Callum Simpson, ranked #5, might have been a fallback name only weeks ago. That door closed on December 20 when he was knocked out by Troy Williamson. With Simpson removed, the rankings below Iglesias thin out sharply.

The names that follow are real, but the leverage is not. Fighters like Pavel Silyagin, Simon Zachenhuber, and William Scull are ranked, but none bring commercial gravity or institutional urgency. Bruno Surace, Kevin Lele Sadjo, and Aslambek Idigov fill out the list without changing the underlying problem.

Even fighters with higher profiles elsewhere, such as Diego Pacheco or Bektemir Melikuziev, are not positioned as obvious solutions. Some are tied to other sanctioning paths. Others are not yet in a place where the risk aligns with the reward. At the bottom, Oliver Zaren rounds out a list that feels more procedural than practical.

That is the bind. Iglesias has done what the system asks. He earned his ranking, accepted immediately, and made himself available. The title is vacant. The slot is open. But the incentives are tilted the wrong way.

Being the boogeyman comes with a cost. Everyone knows what Iglesias represents. Until someone decides that the belt is worth walking through that door, the vacancy remains less about bureaucracy and more about avoidance.

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2026-01-02 23:33:23

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