The IBF didn’t give a detailed explanation for Garcia’s placement in its latest ratings update. It seems strange to the fans on social media, who feel that Danny doesn’t belong ranked at #13 at 154 given his lack of actrivity and experience.
If this is a ranking by the IBF based on Danny’s past achievements from over 10+ years ago, it’s troubling. Like in other sports, boxers should be given rankings based on what they’ve been doing lately, not from over a decade ago, like Danny Garcia.
Danny’s new position arrives after a stretch of limited activity at junior middleweight, which is why the ranking immediately draws attention when looking at the division’s current contender list.
Garcia, 37, returned to the ring on October 18, 2025, stopping welterweight Danny “El Gallo” Gonzalez in four rounds in a fight held at junior middleweight. Gonzalez moved up in weight and did not enter the fight as a contender at 154 pounds.
That fight marked The Philadelphia native Danny’s first appearance since his July 2022 victory over Jose Benavidez Jr., a 12-round majority decision that came in Garcia’s debut at junior middleweight in Brooklyn.
Following that win, Danny ‘Swift’ briefly appeared in the WBA’s junior middleweight rankings at #9 during the second half of 2022 before dropping out of the list later that year. The new IBF placement represents his first ranking with that sanctioning body at the weight.
Garcia’s last fight against a championship-level opponent came in September 2024 when he challenged WBA middleweight champion Erislandy Lara. Lara forced Garcia to retire on the stool after the ninth round of that fight. You can’t blame Danny’s loss on age, as Lara was the older fighter at 41.
Earlier in his career, Danny built a resume that included victories over Amir Khan, Lucas Matthysse, Erik Morales, Paulie Malignaggi, Robert Guerrero, and Brandon Rios while holding world titles at 140 and 147 pounds.

Read the full article here













