Morrell was ordered to face Smith for the WBO interim light heavyweight title last July. Since then, the matchup has dragged through long negotiations, a delayed announcement, and then a cancellation when Smith withdrew from the scheduled April 18 fight because of injury. No replacement date has been confirmed.
This is a classic save your own career move from David Morrell. While the WBO interim title route with Callum Smith looked good on paper, the reality of it, with dragged-out negotiations, Smith’s injury-forced withdrawal from the April 18 date, and zero clarity on a reschedule, was quickly becoming a trap.
For a 28-year-old fighter, Morrell, who should be hitting his stride, waiting indefinitely is a form of professional suicide. He’s coming off a competitive win over Imam Khataev and should be pushing toward meaningful fights at 175. Instead, nearly a year has passed with no real progress. Mandatory positions can help a contender, but they can also freeze a career when the other side cannot move.
Chelli gives Morrell rounds, activity, and a paycheck, but it is not the destination. It is a sign that the Smith route has become unreliable.
Smith may still return later this year, and the WBO may still keep the order alive, but Morrell cannot keep spending prime months on paperwork and recovery schedules that are not his own. Fighters lose more than dates when they stay idle. They lose visibility, timing, and ground in a crowded division.
May 9 is less about Zak Chelli than it is about Morrell refusing to let 2026 disappear while others decide his next move.
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