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Part of the proposed Ali Revival Act removes the requirement for promoters to disclose financial details to fighters and commissions. That means a boxer may no longer see the full breakdown of what a promotion earns versus what they are paid. It shifts power further away from the fighter at the same time the sport is moving toward a more centralized system.

The push is coming from the same group building a model where the promoter, the rankings, and the titles all sit under one roof. That brings order, but it also removes independence. If the same entity controls who fights, how they’re ranked, and what they can earn, the system stops being competitive and starts being managed. That’s the trade.

The proposed changes include rules that sound sensible on the surface. One belt per division. Limits on interim titles. Clearer structure. Those are long-standing complaints in boxing, and fixing them would clean up a lot of confusion.

But other parts of the proposal raise bigger issues. Higher costs tied to testing and insurance could push smaller promoters out, leaving fewer paths for young fighters to develop outside a system that controls the full route to the top. The sport becomes easier to organize at the top, but thinner everywhere else.

The sanctioning bodies have diluted titles and complicated the sport, but they also sit outside any one promoter’s control. Removing them clears the picture, but it also removes that separation.

Boxing has needed change for a long time. A cleaner system has always been the goal. But replacing a flawed structure with one that concentrates more control in fewer hands creates a different kind of problem.

The old system spreads authority too thin. The new one risks putting too much of it in one place.

There’s a version of this reform that could work. Clear titles, independent rankings, and protections that keep fighters informed and able to negotiate. What’s being proposed doesn’t fully guarantee that balance.

The sport is close to getting what it has been asking for. It just may not like how it looks once it arrives.

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