Who is the best pound-for-pound boxer in the world? Naoya Inoue, Oleksandr Usyk and Terence Crawford feature in talkSPORT top 10 rankings list

Boxing’s pound-for-pound list is always hotly contested. There are at least three boxing icons that can lay claim to the top spot right now in their own right. GETTYOleksandr Usyk beat Tyson Fury twice in 2024 to establish himself as the best heavyweight around[/caption] Naoya Inoue finished 2023 on top of the pile after beating Marlon Tapales to join Terence Crawford on an illustrious list of two-weight undisputed champions. Oleksandr Usyk then shot to the top of the rankings in May 2024 by beating Tyson Fury in a war of attrition to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era before then beating the Gypsy King again in December. Three months after Usyk’s first win, Crawford made a case for himself to be re-crowned as pound-for-pound king when he defeated Israil Madrimov to become a four-weight world champion. The pound-for-pound argument is probably one of the most contentious in the sport and every supporter seems to have a unique opinion on it. Some rank the best fighters in the world based purely on the manner of their performances – how they look. Some rank them based purely on their résumés and weigh up who has the best-recorded wins. Some take other factors such as activity and official results into account, too, meaning the whole thing becomes confusing. Therefore, talkSPORT.com is going to lay out its criteria (based roughly on Ring Magazine’s pound-for-pound criteria) for this list right now: CRITERIA Result – The official result always stands and ultimately trumps the other factors. The other three are all equally important. Performance – The manner in which a fighter wins or loses. Resume – The opponents beaten/titles won. Activity – How often a fighter is fighting against top level opposition #10 – Junto Nakatani Age: 27 Record: 29-0 (22KOs) Nakatani is one of boxing’s fastest-rising stars. At 26 years old he is already a three-weight world champion, having won world titles from flyweight to bantamweight. His crowning win came against Andrew Maloney. Nakatani is a three-weight world championMikey Williams/Top Rank #9 – Teofimo Lopez Age: 27 Record: 21-1 (13 KOs) Lopez stunned the boxing world by jumping straight in with Vasyl Lomachenko in his first fight after winning a world title and beating him at age 23. He was then stunned himself by George Kambosos but has since bounced back with a dominant win over Josh Taylor to claim the WBO crown at super-lightweight followed by a couple of routine victories over Jamaine Ortiz and Steve Claggett. Teofimo Lopez is the WBO super-lightweight world championGetty #8 – Gervonta Davis Age: 30 Record: 30-0 (28 KOs) Davis burst onto the scene winning the IBF super-featherweight world title aged just 21. He has since become a major star, knocking out respected opponents also at lightweight and super-lightweight. His win over Ryan Garcia last year was his biggest to date. Since then, he has been very inactive with only one win over Frank Martin. Davis has the lesser-recognised WBA ‘regular’ lightweight belt, but is expected to shortly be upgraded to become the legitimate WBA world championRyan Hafey/PBC #7 – Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez Age: 25 Record: 21-0 (14 KOs) Rodriguez became WBC super-flyweight world champion at the age of just 22, and impressively stopped Srisaket Sor Rungvisai in his first defence. He then moved down to flyweight to become the unified IBF and WBO world titles by stopping Sunny Edwards before moving back up again to score a statement KO over divisional great Juan Francisco Estrada. Rodriguez is the IBF and WBO flyweight world championEd Mulholland/Matchroom #6 – Canelo Alvarez Age: 34 Record: 62-2-2 (39 KOs) Canelo is a four-weight world champion from super-welterweight to light-heavyweight. His astonishing record includes wins over Miguel Cotto, Amir Khan, Liam Smith, Gennady Golovkin, Daniel Jacobs, Sergey Kovalev, Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders, Caleb Plant and Jermell Charlo. Canelo is the undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO super-middleweight world championAmanda Westcott/Showtime #5 – Dmitry Bivol Age: 34 Record: 23-1 (12 KOs) Bivol first became WBA light-heavyweight world champion in 2017 and has made several defences since the most notable being his victory over Canelo Alvarez in 2022. This made him only the second fighter ever to beat the great Mexican after Floyd Mayweather did it in 2013. In October, he narrowly missed out on becoming undisputed light heavyweight champion in a nip-and-tuck affair with Artur Beterbiev, but he has a chance to win the belts again when they meet once more. Bivol was the WBA light-heavyweight world championMark Robinson/Matchroom #4 Artur Beterbiev Age: 40 Record: 21-0 (20KOs) Beterbiev collected all four major world titles one by one over the course of seven years, leaving several former champions in his wak

Feb 19, 2025 - 18:04
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Who is the best pound-for-pound boxer in the world? Naoya Inoue, Oleksandr Usyk and Terence Crawford feature in talkSPORT top 10 rankings list

Boxing’s pound-for-pound list is always hotly contested.

There are at least three boxing icons that can lay claim to the top spot right now in their own right.

Oleksandr Usyk punches Tyson Fury in a boxing match.GETTY
Oleksandr Usyk beat Tyson Fury twice in 2024 to establish himself as the best heavyweight around[/caption]

Naoya Inoue finished 2023 on top of the pile after beating Marlon Tapales to join Terence Crawford on an illustrious list of two-weight undisputed champions.

Oleksandr Usyk then shot to the top of the rankings in May 2024 by beating Tyson Fury in a war of attrition to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era before then beating the Gypsy King again in December.

Three months after Usyk’s first win, Crawford made a case for himself to be re-crowned as pound-for-pound king when he defeated Israil Madrimov to become a four-weight world champion.

The pound-for-pound argument is probably one of the most contentious in the sport and every supporter seems to have a unique opinion on it.

Some rank the best fighters in the world based purely on the manner of their performances – how they look.

Some rank them based purely on their résumés and weigh up who has the best-recorded wins.

Some take other factors such as activity and official results into account, too, meaning the whole thing becomes confusing.

Therefore, talkSPORT.com is going to lay out its criteria (based roughly on Ring Magazine’s pound-for-pound criteria) for this list right now:

CRITERIA

  1. Result – The official result always stands and ultimately trumps the other factors. The other three are all equally important.
  2. Performance – The manner in which a fighter wins or loses.
  3. Resume – The opponents beaten/titles won.
  4. Activity – How often a fighter is fighting against top level opposition

#10 – Junto Nakatani

Age: 27

Record: 29-0 (22KOs)

Nakatani is one of boxing’s fastest-rising stars. At 26 years old he is already a three-weight world champion, having won world titles from flyweight to bantamweight. His crowning win came against Andrew Maloney.

Nakatani, WBC bantamweight world champion, holding his championship belt.
Nakatani is a three-weight world champion
Mikey Williams/Top Rank

#9 – Teofimo Lopez

Age: 27

Record: 21-1 (13 KOs)

Lopez stunned the boxing world by jumping straight in with Vasyl Lomachenko in his first fight after winning a world title and beating him at age 23. He was then stunned himself by George Kambosos but has since bounced back with a dominant win over Josh Taylor to claim the WBO crown at super-lightweight followed by a couple of routine victories over Jamaine Ortiz and Steve Claggett.

Teofimo Lopez, WBO super-lightweight world champion, holding his championship belts.
Teofimo Lopez is the WBO super-lightweight world champion
Getty

#8 – Gervonta Davis

Age: 30

Record: 30-0 (28 KOs)

Davis burst onto the scene winning the IBF super-featherweight world title aged just 21. He has since become a major star, knocking out respected opponents also at lightweight and super-lightweight. His win over Ryan Garcia last year was his biggest to date. Since then, he has been very inactive with only one win over Frank Martin.

Gervonta Davis, WBA lightweight world champion, at a boxing match.
Davis has the lesser-recognised WBA ‘regular’ lightweight belt, but is expected to shortly be upgraded to become the legitimate WBA world champion
Ryan Hafey/PBC

#7 – Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez

Age: 25

Record: 21-0 (14 KOs)

Rodriguez became WBC super-flyweight world champion at the age of just 22, and impressively stopped Srisaket Sor Rungvisai in his first defence. He then moved down to flyweight to become the unified IBF and WBO world titles by stopping Sunny Edwards before moving back up again to score a statement KO over divisional great Juan Francisco Estrada.

Jesse Bam Rodriguez, IBF and WBO flyweight world champion, holding his championship belts.
Rodriguez is the IBF and WBO flyweight world champion
Ed Mulholland/Matchroom

#6 – Canelo Alvarez

Age: 34

Record: 62-2-2 (39 KOs)

Canelo is a four-weight world champion from super-welterweight to light-heavyweight. His astonishing record includes wins over Miguel Cotto, Amir Khan, Liam Smith, Gennady Golovkin, Daniel Jacobs, Sergey Kovalev, Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders, Caleb Plant and Jermell Charlo.

Canelo Alvarez holding boxing championship belts.
Canelo is the undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO super-middleweight world champion
Amanda Westcott/Showtime

#5 – Dmitry Bivol

Age: 34

Record: 23-1 (12 KOs)

Bivol first became WBA light-heavyweight world champion in 2017 and has made several defences since the most notable being his victory over Canelo Alvarez in 2022. This made him only the second fighter ever to beat the great Mexican after Floyd Mayweather did it in 2013. In October, he narrowly missed out on becoming undisputed light heavyweight champion in a nip-and-tuck affair with Artur Beterbiev, but he has a chance to win the belts again when they meet once more.

Dmitry Bivol, WBA light-heavyweight world champion, holding his championship belt.
Bivol was the WBA light-heavyweight world champion
Mark Robinson/Matchroom

#4 Artur Beterbiev

Age: 40

Record: 21-0 (20KOs)

Beterbiev collected all four major world titles one by one over the course of seven years, leaving several former champions in his wake. In October, he beat Bivol in a long-awaited all-Russian clash to be crowned the first undisputed light heavyweight champion of the four-belt era. But he will be challenged once more when he faces Bivol for a second time.

Artur Beterbiev, undisputed light heavyweight world champion, holding his championship belts.
Beterbiev is the undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO light-heavyweight world champion
Mark Robinson/Matchroom

#3 – Terence Crawford

Age: 37

Record: 40-0 (31 KOs)

Crawford is a three-weight world champion and a two-weight undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO king. His dominant win over Errol Spence to become the welterweight top dog had him in pole position of many 2023 lists while a follow-up victory over Israil Madrimov helped his case further.

Terence Crawford, undisputed welterweight world champion, holding his championship belts.
Crawford is the WBA, WBC and WBO welterweight world champion
Getty

#2 – Naoya Inoue

Age: 31

Record: 29-0 (26 KOs)

Inoue became WBC light-flyweight world champion at 6-0 aged just 20. In the ten years since, he’s beaten several top opponents in multiple divisions and stands today as a four-weight world champion and two-weight undisputed champion having stopped Marlon Tapales last year. In 2024, he beat Luis Nery and TJ Doheny before starting 2025 by dispatching Ye Joon Kim.

Naoya Inoue, undisputed super-bantamweight world champion, holding his championship belts.
Inoue is the undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO super-bantamweight world champion
Naoki Fukuda/Top Rank

#1 – Oleksandr Usyk

Age: 38

Record: 23-0 (14 KOs)

Usyk became undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO cruiserweight world champion in just 16 fights, beating Mairis Briedis, Murat Gassiev and Tony Bellew all in their home countries. He’s since repeated the feat at heavyweight by clearing out the division and beating lineal champion Fury. He then fought Fury in a rematch, beating him again, and he isn’t done there because he is looking to become the undisputed champion again by facing the winner of Daniel Dubois versus Joseph Parker.

Oleksandr Usyk celebrates his World Heavyweight Championship victory with his belts.
Usyk is the WBA, WBC and WBO heavyweight world champion
Getty

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