“I want to put it out there. At 168, I can face anyone as well,” Adames said on DAZN, while also noting there is “a long list” of fighters available to him at 160.
That line landed harder than anything else he said. The middleweight division has fighters waiting. Names have been circling the title for months without movement. Yoenli Hernandez is one of several contenders still looking for a clear path to a shot. Adames didn’t close that door, but he didn’t point to it either. Instead, he widened the conversation.
A champion talking about another division right after a defense sends a message, even if it isn’t stated directly. It suggests the next fight might not come from the group already in place at 160. For contenders, that reads like more time on hold.
Adames has options. He showed against Williams that he can control a fight over distance, manage pace, and keep rounds from slipping. That gives him room to look around. It also means the division has to wait on his choice.
He said he can make 160. He even mentioned 154. But the line about 168 is what changes the picture. If Adames is considering temporarily freezing his WBC 160-lb title while he goes up to super middleweight in search of money fights, the contenders will be left waiting.
Nothing has been finalized. No opponent has been named. The belt is still at middleweight. The issue is what he chose to talk about after winning. Adames left Orlando with his title intact, but he didn’t leave the division with direction.
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