Romero posted on Instagram, writing, “Whole division went missing at 147, guess I gotta take it to 154 now,” alongside a clip of himself hitting the heavy bag. In the video, he jumps into a looping shot aimed at a much taller target, a not-so-subtle reference to Sebastian Fundora, the 6’6″ junior middleweight titleholder.
Rolly appears to be following his established playbook: when a major payday falls through, change the scenery. After the collapse of negotiations for a unification bout with Devin Haney, which reportedly stalled over Rolly’s purse demands, the WBA welterweight champion is signaling a move to 154 pounds.
The collapse leaves him without a clear opponent at 147 and facing a division where the top names are either tied up or unwilling to meet his terms.
A move to 154 would give Romero a fresh entry point, but it also removes the size and physical advantages he has relied on at welterweight. Fundora represents the extreme version of that problem, a fighter whose height and reach force opponents into uncomfortable exchanges, something Romero’s clip appears to acknowledge.
Romero has made a habit of calling out bigger names while navigating around less favorable fights. This latest post follows the same pattern, shifting the conversation toward a new division without resolving his position in the current one.
The Haney fight was the biggest available ticket for Rolly. With Haney now looking at other options and labeling Rolly “delusional” regarding his drawing power, Romero is forced to generate new headlines to maintain his leverage.
If Rolly had decided to stick around at 147, his options for a big payday are almost non-existent.
Rolly staying at 147 would mean defending his title against tough, hungry contenders for a fraction of the money he thinks he’s worth. By moving to 154 and calling out a giant like Fundora, he keeps his name in the headlines and buys himself time.
Fundora isn’t tall, focuses on volume-punching, and is tailored to destroy shorter, lunging power punchers like Rolly.
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