The split follows a stretch where Mercado was rarely mentioned by Eddie Hearn, while attention shifted toward Dalton Smith and Richardson Hitchins. Both were pushed into visible slots, while Mercado, despite his record, was invisible.
That absence became harder to explain over time. Mercado holds an 18-0 record with 17 knockouts, the type of profile that usually forces its way into contention. Instead, he drifted out of the matchmaking cycle, with no clear path to a significant fight and no public push from his promoter to change that.
He confirmed the break himself on Instagram, saying, “Today I would like to share an important decision that marks a new chapter in my professional journey. I have decided to part ways with Matchroom Boxing,” before adding that he wants “to make the biggest fights possible and become a world champion.”
“Anybody can get it. All you so-called top 140lbers don’t run from the smoke now,” Mercado said, making clear he sees free agency as a way to force his way into those conversations rather than wait for them.
Compared to other light welterweights, like Hitchins and Emiliano Vargas, Mercado lacks a strong presence on social media. Being a silent assassin with a 94% knockout rate isn’t enough if you aren’t also a “content creator.”
A high knockout rate on its own no longer carries a fighter into the conversation if nobody is hearing from him between fights.
Tito Mercado seems to have been operating on an older frequency. He shows up, he knocks people out, and he goes home. In a crowded stable like Matchroom, that makes you easy to overlook.
By leaving, Mercado is betting that he can find a promoter who values the silent killer archetype or he’s realized he needs to start being a bit louder himself. His recent “anybody can get it” posts suggest he’s finally leaning into the call-out culture.
A move to Zuffa Boxing would offer a reset, especially for a company still building its roster and looking for offensive-minded fighters. Mercado fits that description, but the key question is whether that kind of platform can deliver the fights he was missing before.
Coming off that December sixth round KO of Antonio Moran, he should have been the first name on a card in February or March 2026. Instead, he’s been sitting on the sidelines again.
In boxing, inactivity usually means one of two things: either your promoter doesn’t have a plan for you, or the money they are offering for the “available” dates isn’t worth the risk. For Mercado, it was clearly the former.
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