TRAINER Jamie Moore has thrown his support behind a potential showdown between his super-lightweight contender Jack Catterall and IBF champion Richardson Hitchins. However, heโs less enthusiastic about the belt itself.
Catterall, 31, suffered his second career defeat last November, dropping a decision to Arnold Barboza Jr. in a WBO interim title fight that doubled as a final eliminator. Despite the setback, he remains a top-10 contender at 140 lbs and in the mix for a world title shot, especially with promoter Eddie Hearn steering both Catterall, 30-2 (13 KOs), and Hitchins, 19-0 (7 KOs).
The unbeaten New Yorker is slated for his first IBF title defence this summer. George Kambosos Jr. is the frontrunner after outpointing Jake Wyllie on March 22 in his super-lightweight debut. Kambosos, 22-3 (10 KOs), called out Hitchins post-fight, and Hearn, who also promotes the Aussie, is keen to make it happenโbut a deep cut to Kambososโ eye could delay those plans.
If Hitchins vs. Kambosos falls through, Catterallโunranked by the IBFโcould step in as a viable alternative.
โIโd be happy for Jack to jump in with anyone at world level, including Hitchins,โ Moore told Boxing News. โStylistically, Iโm not sure itโs a great blend for them both, but if itโs for a world title, weโd certainly be up for it.โ
Mooreโs hesitation stems from the IBFโs occasional 10-pound rehydration clause, which caps fightersโ weight gain between the official weigh-in and a fight-day check-weigh-in.
โIโm not too keen on the IBF title,โ he admitted. โI donโt like the 10-pound limit. Once youโve officially weighed in, it shouldnโt be anyoneโs business what you weigh afterโwhether itโs five pounds heavier, 10 pounds, or 15 pounds.
“Itโs a hindrance you donโt need. Iโm sure thereโve been talks with the IBF over the years because no other sanctioning body has that rule. Itโs a bit silly, but weโd still be up for the fight if it comes up.โ