Whether it “works” depends on who is watching. In the short term, it creates a “fake it till you make it” momentum that serves a few purposes. It essentially creates a marketing shortcut. If you say it loudly and often enough on DAZN, a casual fan might actually believe Ennis cleaned out 147 and is now doing a victory lap at 154.
“WOW WOW WOW what a f*cking fight!!!! June 27 in New York it’s Puerto Rico v Philly for the Unified World Championship. Jaron Ennis… 2 time, 2 weight, Twice Undisputed incoming!”
Promotionally, Hearn is trying to pin a Medal of Honor on a guy who hasn’t even finished basic training for that specific rank yet. In the boxing world, those “battle ribbons” represent the grueling process of mandatory defenses, step-aside fees, and multi-network negotiations that actually lead to an undisputed crown.
By skipping all that and just declaring the “Twice Undisputed” era has arrived, Hearn is basically handing Ennis a field promotion that hasn’t been earned on the front lines. You don’t jump from Lieutenant (holding a single belt) to Colonel (Undisputed) overnight. Ennis did great work at 147, but he never actually “cleared the map” there.
For the hardcore fans who know the IBF elevated Ennis via email at welterweight, this branding feels like an insult. It devalues the actual blood and sweat guys like Crawford or Usyk put in to collect every belt.
If Ennis doesn’t absolutely dominate Xander Zayas on June 27, the “superstar” narrative collapses. When you promote someone as a multi-time undisputed legend, a close decision win or a struggle looks like a failure.




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