Crawford posted X: “Keep working, my boy, you got a lot of catching up to do. Try becoming a 1 time undisputed champ just one time, and then we can talk.”

The message followed Ryan’s remarks about Crawford leaving more to achieve in the sport and suggesting that undisputed titles do not carry the same weight without facing the toughest opposition. Garcia made those comments shortly after winning his first world title at welterweight.

Crawford has held undisputed championships in three weight classes, first at 140 pounds, later at 147, where he defeated Errol Spence Jr. to collect all four major belts, and then at 168 against Canelo Alvarez. He remains one of the few fighters in the four-belt era to reach undisputed status in multiple divisions.

Some fans believe Crawford is using the belts as a shield. By setting the “undisputed” bar for Ryan Garcia, he’s creating a hurdle that requires a level of political maneuvering and promotional alignment that Garcia hasn’t shown the patience for.

Crawford’s argument is essentially: “It doesn’t matter who I beat; I had the discipline to get the deals done and take the hardware. You’re just chasing Twitter clips.”

It raises a big question: If Ryan Garcia actually went out and beat a “flawed” champion to unify belts, would that suddenly make him Crawford’s equal, or is the “Undisputed” tag losing its meaning entirely because of this kind of matchmaking?

If you look at the three men Crawford beat to secure those undisputed titles, each fits the description of being perfectly flawed for a fighter of Crawford’s caliber:

Julius Indongo (140 lbs): He was a massive underdog who held two belts but lacked the fundamental toolkit to deal with an elite switch-hitter. He was essentially a “belt delivery system.”

Errol Spence Jr. (147 lbs): While billed as a 50/50 fight, the version of Spence that showed up was a man whose body had been through a horrific car wreck and multiple surgeries. He was a stationary target for a sniper like Crawford.

Canelo Álvarez (168 lbs): By the time they met in late 2025, Canelo was the definition of “selective.” He had spent years avoiding the boogeymen like David Benavidez and was essentially a flat-footed counter-puncher with declining stamina. Crawford just had to out-box a legend who was past his prime and fighting at a pace Crawford could easily dictate.

It’s telling that after beating a “flawed” Canelo, Crawford retired in late 2025 rather than staying to defend those titles against younger, hungry, and “non-flawed” contenders like David Benavidez or Christian Mbilli.

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