Claire Hafner Vs Geovana Peres: Crowning a New Women's Lineal World Heavyweight Champion

By Suzy Smith.

Geovana Peres (left), and Claire Hafner

Geovana Peres (left), and Claire Hafner

On October 4th, in Auckland, New Zealand, the world's premier female Heavyweights will collide in a bout that LBC (LinealBoxingChampion.com) will recognise as for the vacant Lineal Heavyweight World Championship.

As per tradition in boxing, vacant World Championships should be decided by contests between the two leading contenders in a division. Canada's Claire Hafner, 4-1, is our #1 rated Heavyweight, and New Zealand based Brazilian, Geovana Peres, 7-1, is #2, and as such, their upcoming contest is worthy of crowning a new champion.

Women's professional boxing is increasing in popularity. Admittedly, it still lacks depth, particularly in the heavier divisions, but talented stars can and do exist, even in small pools. It's also important to remember that the current fighters are pioneers, paving the way for future generations, and helping the sport grow.

Any weight above 168lbs on LinealBoxingChampion.com is considered to be "Heavyweight" in women's boxing. Currently BoxRec lists no female boxers at Light Heavyweight or Cruiserweight, yet Hafner/Peres will be fought at an agreed upon weight limit of 175lbs (for the WBO Light Heavyweight strap). As professionals, Hafner has weighed between 181 - 191lbs, while Peres has tipped the scales no higher than 175.5lbs.

Our current Heavyweight top 5 is below. The lightest they have been in their professional careers is stated in brackets.

1. Hafner (181lbs)
2. Peres (171lbs)
3. Jimenez (167lbs)
4. Fox (182lbs)
5. Rivas (138lbs)

The above boxers, all under 6 feet tall, could likely all make 175lbs. Arguably the biggest framed woman of the five, 5'11" Jimenez (our former #1 Heavyweight), slimmed down in 2018/19, and had her last fight at Super Middleweight, weighing 167lbs.

The Light Heavyweight division in men's boxing was created in the early 1900s, at a time when Super Middleweight and Cruiserweight didn't exist, to bridge the size disparity between the Middleweights and the growing number of enormous  Heavyweights, such as the powerfully built, muscular 6'2", 220lbs Jim Jeffries.

There is nobody in women's boxing who fights at a muscular 200lbs. In fact, Middleweight Christina Hammer (at 5'11" with a 71" reach), would have significant height, reach and size advantages over almost everyone in the division.

A Light Heavyweight division would simply split up and dilute, what is already a small pool of fighters above 168lbs. It is unnecessary. Cynics may suggest that the ABC companies (just the WBO at present) are once again exploiting a gap in the market, to create yet more belts and collect more sanctioning fees. Regardless, Hafner and Peres are the top 2 above 168lbs. It is a shame Hafner is having to drop down to 175lbs to make the fight happen, but weight shedding seems to be common place in women's boxing. Shields has plummeted from Super Middleweight to Junior Middleweight, and Jimenez has gone from 230lbs to Super Middleweight in recent years.

Rivas and Jimenez could more than likely make 175lbs in order to face the winner of Peres/Hafner, if that was specified in the contract. If a bigger, larger competitor emerged, who couldn't make 175lbs, in boxing, money talks - it is highly likely that such a fight would be negotiated, and at a weight that suited both participants.

Catch-weights and empty divisions are not what the sport needs. Before long, the ABC organisations may have created 8 "world titles" above 168lbs, crammed into to just two small divisions.

Only one division is needed: Heavyweight.

Only one World Champion is needed.

Forget what the sanctioning bodies say. On October 4th there will be a new Lineal Champion, and that woman will best the best fighter upwards of 168lbs.

The winner of Hafner/Peres will crown our inaugural Heavyweight World Champion, and will be one of only 3 Lineal Champions currently in women's professional boxing.

Men's Ratings/Champions: September 20th 2019

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P4P #1:Vasyl Lomachenko (Ring, TBRB, BN, ESPN)Heavyweight: Current LineageWladimir Klitschko defeated Ruslan Chagaev via TKO9, June 20, 2009 - Klitschko and Chagaev were the #1 and #3 Heavyweights in The Ring Magazine rankings at the time of this bo…

P4P #1:

Vasyl Lomachenko (Ring, TBRB, BN, ESPN)

Heavyweight: Current Lineage

Wladimir Klitschko defeated Ruslan Chagaev via TKO9, June 20, 2009 - Klitschko and Chagaev were the #1 and #3 Heavyweights in The Ring Magazine rankings at the time of this bout. Wladimir had stated that he would never fight the #2 contender, which was his brother, Vitali Klitschko. Tyson Fury defeated Wladimir Klitschko via UD12, November 28, 2015.

Cruiserweight: Current Lineage

Oleksandr Usyk defeated Murat Gassiev via UD12, July 21, 2018 - Usyk and Gassiev were the top two Cruiserweights in the TBRB rankings at the time of this bout.

Light Heavyweight: Current Lineage

Jean Pascal defeated Chad Dawson via 11th round technical decision, August 14, 2010 - Pascal and Dawson were the top two Light Heavyweights in The Ring rankings at the time of this bout. Pascal - Bernard Hopkins - Chad Dawson - Stevenson. Oleksandr Gvozdyk defeated Adonis Stevenson via 11th round KO, December 1, 2018.

Super Middleweight: Vacant

*LinealBoxingChampion.com did not recognise George Groves Vs Callum Smith as for the vacant Lineal Championship at it was not a true #1 Vs #2 or #1 Vs #3 match-up. At the time of the bout, Boxing News, The Ring, TBRB, BoxRec and Boxing Monthly all had Groves and Gilberto Ramirez rated at #1 and #2 respectively. In August 2018, Callum Smith was rated at #4 by BoxRec, #3 by Boxing Monthly, #8 by the TBRB, #3 by The Ring, and #6 by Boxing News.

Middleweight: Current Lineage

Bernard Hopkins defeated Felix Trinidad via 12th round TKO, September 29, 2001 - Hopkins and Trinidad were the top two Middleweights in The Ring rankings at the time of this bout. Hopkins - Jermain Taylor - Kelly Pavlik - Sergio Martinez - Miguel Cotto. Saul Alvarez defeated Cotto via UD12, November 21, 2015.

Junior Welterweight: Vacant

*At the time of Mikey Garcia Vs Sergey Lipinets, March 10, 2018, Garcia and Lipinets were ranked as the top two Junior Welterweights by the TBRB. However, Lipinets was only rated at #8 by BoxRec and #7 by The Ring - therefore LinealBoxingChampion.com does not recognise Garica/Lipinets as a bout that was for the Lineal Championship.

Junior Featherweight: Current Lineage

Nonito Donaire defeated Toshiaki Nishioka via 9th round TKO, October 13, 2012 - Donaire and Nishioka were the top two Junior Featherweights in the TBRB rankings at the time of this bout. Rigondeaux defeated Donaire via UD12, April 13, 2013.

Junior Bantamweight: Current Lineage

Srisaket Sor Rungvisai defeated Juan Francisco Estrada via UD12, February 24, 2018 - Rungvisai and Estrada were the top two Junior Bantamweights in the TBRB rankings at the time of this bout. Estrada defeated Rungvisai via UD12, April 26, 2019.