The IBF has formally invited Cruz and unbeaten contender Albert Bell to negotiate a final eliminator to determine the next mandatory challenger for Raymond Muratalla’s lightweight belt. Bell accepted immediately. Cruz’s team has expressed interest, but the decision carries real risk because Bell’s physical profile threatens to recreate the exact type of fight Cruz failed to control in January.
Albert Bell’s size presents immediate problem for Cruz
Bell stands 6’0″, unusually tall for the 135-pound division, with the reach and frame to control distance against smaller opponents. Cruz struggled with that problem against Muratalla on January 24, when he lost a 12-round majority decision in his first title attempt. Cruz had clear success when he chose to engage, often landing the cleaner punches and disrupting Muratalla’s offense.
The problem was his reluctance to sustain that approach. He repeatedly gave ground, moved instead of holding position, and allowed Muratalla to advance without resistance. Judges tend to favor the fighter applying pressure, even when the punches miss, and Muratalla’s forward movement created the visual control needed to secure the decision.
Bell has the size to force Cruz into that same retreating pattern. Taller lightweights can dictate range and make opponents work harder just to enter punching distance. Cruz’s hesitation becomes more costly against opponents who can occupy space and keep him reacting rather than initiating. Bell does not need overwhelming power to create problems. His dimensions alone can limit Cruz’s offense if Cruz fails to change his approach.
Cruz, 30, entered the Muratalla fight as the mandatory challenger and left with the first loss of his professional career. The 2020 Olympic gold medalist remains one of the division’s most technically gifted fighters, but his performance revealed structural limits at lightweight. Promoter Eddie Hearn openly discussed the possibility of Cruz moving down to 130 pounds after the defeat, recognizing the size difference he faced. Muratalla, unbeaten in 24 fights with 17 knockouts, has remained at lightweight and is allowed to make a voluntary defense while the IBF finalizes its next mandatory challenger.
Bell, unbeaten in 28 fights with nine knockouts, spent years waiting for an opportunity at junior lightweight before moving up in search of better positioning. His immediate acceptance of the eliminator reflects his readiness to capitalize on the opening. The IBF’s letter gives both fighters until Thursday to move forward with negotiations.
The eliminator forces Cruz into a defining decision earlier than expected. Accepting keeps him on the title path but places him directly in front of another physically imposing opponent who can recreate the same tactical problems. Declining could signal a move to junior lightweight or a recalibration of his career direction.
Cruz’s skill has never been in question, but at lightweight, skill alone has not been enough to control bigger fighters who refuse to give ground. This eliminator will show whether he has learned from Muratalla or whether the division remains physically tilted against him.










