As first reported by Jake Donovan of BoxingScene, Berlanga is currently fielding multiple offers while navigating free agency, which places him in a position to be selective rather than reactive. That reality makes a fight with Adames unlikely, regardless of how clean the callout may sound on paper.
The primary obstacle for this matchup is the lopsided risk-to-reward ratio. Adames is a technically sound, heavy-handed fighter who rarely finds himself in an easy night. For Berlanga, taking this fight presents several problems.
Someone who can beat you decisively but won’t necessarily double your career earnings in the process. Until Adames builds more of a promotional footprint at 168, or a sanctioning body forces the issue, he may find the top names in the division are suddenly very hard to reach.
Adames (25-1-1, 18 KOs) is coming off a 12-round decision win over Austin Williams and has indicated he is ready to leave 160 behind after running out of viable unification options. He has the style and toughness to trouble opponents at 168, but that is also the issue. He brings risk without bringing a major commercial upside.
The Adames move is a classic “forced hand.” He dominated Austin Williams just last week and clearly realized that staying at 160 is a dead end. He’s already fought Hamzah Sheeraz to a draw, and with unification being a nightmare to coordinate, the jump to 168 is his only path to a massive payday.
Here is the breakdown of why this situation is such a stalemate:
Adames is in that dangerous position where he’s too good for his own good. He has the power to end Berlanga’s night early and the chin to walk through Berlanga’s best shots. However, outside of hardcore boxing circles, he doesn’t bring the massive pay-per-view numbers that would make a fighter like Berlanga ignore the risks. He’s essentially asking Berlanga to put his entire career on the line for a “respect” win.
The timing of this callout is particularly problematic because of Berlanga’s free agency. The rumors linking him to Zuffa Boxing are getting louder by the day. If he’s about to become one of the faces of a new, UFC-style league, the last thing his new handlers want is for him to get derailed by a Dominican powerhouse before the ink is even dry on the contract.
Berlanga hasn’t responded because, in his mind, there is no “win” here. If he wins, people will say Adames was too small and was moving up in weight. If he loses, his status as a “top-tier” draw is essentially over after three straight big-stage setbacks (Canelo, Sheeraz, and then Adames).
Adames is doing the right thing for his career by being vocal, but without a mandatory status from the WBC at 168, he has no leverage to force Berlanga into the ring. Unless a major promoter or a site like Riyadh Season decides this is the “people’s main event” and throws an undeniable amount of money at it, Berlanga will likely keep his eyes on more “marketable” names like Chris Eubank Jr. or a rebuilding fight under a new promotional banner.
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