But boxing doesn’t operate on individual preference. The structure is already in place.
Sanctioning bodies charge fees. Champions pay them. That’s the trade-off for holding the belt, whether fighters like it or not. If you want to challenge that, it usually happens before you step into the system, not after you’ve already taken what comes with it.
Crawford didn’t do that with the WBC. He negotiated with three sanctioning bodies and paid them. The WBC refused to adjust its terms, and he chose not to meet them. At the same time, he fought for the belt, posed with it, and added it to his undisputed status before vacating.
If he truly viewed the fees as “extortion” in principle, the consistent move would have been to refuse the belt before the fight even happened. By taking the title first and then calling the fees unfair later, it creates the impression that the “principle” only became a priority when it was time to actually part with the cash.
Crawford admittedly planned to vacate the titles regardless of the fee structure. He used the WBC belt to solidify his historical standing as a two-weight undisputed champion. He’s now presenting his pre-planned exit as a heroic stand against a system he voluntarily utilized for his own legacy.
The most glaring part of this situation is the timing. Crawford didn’t just “accidentally” end up with the WBC belt. He pursued it specifically to reach undisputed status at 168 pounds.
By winning that belt against Canelo in September 2025, he became the first three-division undisputed champion in the four-belt era. That is a massive, permanent addition to his legacy that the WBC helped facilitate.
The WBC actually lowered his fee from the standard 3% down to 0.6% for that fight. Given his reported $50 million purse, that was a $300,000 bill.
When he calls that “extortion” now, it feels less like a stand on principle and more like a post-dated rejection. He used the WBC’s platform to make history, but when the invoice arrived for the service he’d already used, he suddenly found the system “corrupt.”
“Plus, in my mind I’m like, man, I’m already going to vacate them,” said Crawford to Weighing In with Travis Hartman.
His plan to vacate is the “smoking gun.” If he already knew he was leaving the division and retiring shortly after, the belts were essentially rentals.
That puts the disagreement in a different light. The terms didn’t change. His decision was already made.
He didn’t lose his titles because of a surprise rule change or a sudden shift in policy. Calling it a “stand” implies he was fighting for a change in the rules, but his actions suggest he was just finished with that chapter and didn’t feel like paying the tab on his way out the door.
What stands out now is that he’s still talking about it months later. The fight is over. The belts are gone. He walked away from all four titles and from a position that would have led straight into a rematch with Canelo. Yet the same point keeps coming up, with the same edge to it. That’s the part that doesn’t quite fit.
If the belt was already marked for vacancy and the outcome was known in advance, the dispute didn’t come as a surprise. He chose to go through with it anyway. So why the frustration now?
Crawford will see it as standing his ground. But from the outside, it can look like he entered a system, accepted it where it worked for him, rejected it where it didn’t, and is still coming back to the one piece that didn’t go his way.











