Crawford explained that after beating Alvarez, he looked at the possibility of dropping down in weight again to pursue further titles. “Now we beat Canelo. Now what?” Crawford said. “At first, I was like, well, go down to 160 and do it again. Six weight champion and four division undisputed.”
He pointed to the situation at middleweight at the time as a key factor in his thinking. “But Janibek popped,” Crawford said. “Whoever would have won that fight against Erislandy Lara, they would’ve had three of the titles.”
Crawford said the idea was short-lived but serious. “It just was a thought. You can do it again, go down to 160, dare to be great and fight for something that’s meaningful,” he said.
He also addressed the challenge posed by Alimkhanuly despite a lack of mainstream attention. “Even though their names wasn’t the biggest, Janibek is a dangerous challenge,” Crawford said. “That’s what we do it for.”
Crawford described how a potential undisputed fight at middleweight would have added to the appeal. “If he had somehow beat Carlos Adames and became undisputed, then you undisputed vs undisputed,” he said. “People would’ve been tuning in to that type of fight.”
The situation changed following Alimkhanuly’s failed test, which disrupted the path to a unified title fight at 160. “It didn’t happen,” Crawford said. “So I was like this is God telling me you ain’t got nothing left to prove.”
Crawford later confirmed his retirement, ending any plans to pursue further titles at middleweight.

Read the full article here













