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    • Ten men

      • Only ten men have held all four versions of the belts at the same time, three of whom have been the only male boxers to have done so in two divisions.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undisputed_championship_(boxing)
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  2. Adrien Broner. Adrien ‘The Problem’ Broner of Cincinnati, Ohio is one of the latest boxers to win world titles in four weight divisions as he achieved the feat in 2015. Broner became the second-youngest boxer to do it at age 25, behind Oscar De La Hoya who was 24.

  3. In boxing, a triple champion is a boxer who has won world titles in three weight classes. For most of the 20th century it was a remarkable and rare achievement accomplished by only a handful of fighters.

    No.
    Name
    Titles
    Date
    1
    World Middleweight
    Jan 14, 1891
    1
    World Heavyweight
    Mar 17, 1897
    1
    Nov 25, 1903
    2
    NYSAC Featherweight
    Oct 24, 1927
  4. Only ten men have held all four versions of the belts at the same time, three of whom have been the only male boxers to have done so in two divisions. Bernard Hopkins unified all four middleweight titles in September 2004. Jermain Taylor won all four middleweight titles from Hopkins in July 2005.

  5. Map of countries, number of beaten opponents in world heavyweight boxing championship fights reached by country citizen - undisputed champion (July 2, 1921-present), lineal champion (August 29, 1885–July 2, 1921), The Ring champion; as of December 2022. Note: secondary championships are not included.

  6. Listing of World Heavyweight Champions by number of title fight wins in the Heavyweight division under the Marquess of Queensberry Rules. The maximum weight for this division is unlimited (200+ lbs, 90.9+ kg, 14 stone 4 lbs+).

  7. Dec 17, 2020 · As far as individual world titles go, Pacquiao won twelve. For comparison, De La Hoya achieved 11, while Mayweather Jr. won 15.

  8. 01 January 0001. Three boxers have regained the heavyweight championship twice: Muhammad Ali (USA), Evander Holyfield (USA) and Lennox Lewis (UK). Ali first won the title on 25 February 1964, defeating Sonny Liston (USA).

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