Ryan Garcia fumes at omission from Ring Magazine's new pound-for-pound rankings after Devin Haney win

Ryan Garcia -Credit:Getty Images
Ryan Garcia -Credit:Getty Images


Ryan Garcia has vented his frustration with Ring Magazine's new boxing pound-for-pound list after he was left out of the rankings in the wake of his shock upset win over Devin Haney last Saturday.

The 25-year-old went into the bout as a huge underdog against fellow American star Haney, who came into the ring as the seventh best pound-for-pound fighter on the planet, having previously captured the undisputed lightweight world champion title with high-profile victories against Vasyl Lomachenko and Regis Prograis to become a two-weight world champion.

But in a surprising contest, Garcia knocked down Haney three times en route to a majority decision points win. This led to Haney being removed from Ring Magazine's new pound-for-pound top ten, but Garcia did not take his place. Instead, the three boxers below Haney moved up a position and Japan's Junto Nakatani entered in tenth spot. Nakatani recently became a three-weight world champion, reigning at flyweight, super-flyweight and now bantamweight.

Undisputed welterweight champion Terence Crawford currently tops the list, with fellow superstars Naoya Inoue, Canelo Alvarez, Oleksandr Usyk and Dimitry Bivol also amongst the top 10 in the pound-for-pound rankings. Garcia has yet to win a world title as he missed weight for the Haney fight, making him ineligible to claim the crown despite his impressive triumph.

Speaking on a Twitter space he hosted on Wednesday, after the new rankings were announced, the Californian puncher could not hide his feelings on the snub. Garcia said: "I beat Haney and he was pound-for-pound, therefore I should be pound-for-pound. But they won't put me on that list because they're haters."

Garcia scored three knockdowns against Haney last weekend -Credit:Getty Images
Garcia scored three knockdowns against Haney last weekend -Credit:Getty Images

Garcia's recent victory has put him on the cusp of a spot in the top ten, but Ring Magazine typically hesitates to rank a fighter based on a single win. The boxing world will be keeping a close eye on the 25 year old's next move before deciding if he deserves a place among the world's elite boxers.