Jack Catterall sitting as the WBO’s No. 1  and the reaction tells you plenty. Not outrage. More a slow head tilt from people who watch rounds, not spreadsheets. This didn’t come off a statement performance. It came off movement above him.

The WBO’s December 22 update recognises results through mid-December and quietly bumps Catterall from No. 2 to the top of the queue. No eliminator. No statement round where the division snapped into focus. Just a clean promotion on paper.

The wins count, but they don’t settle it

He’s 2–0 since moving up. The Harlem Eubank fight never found a steady rhythm. Lots of measuring. Too much resetting. The Essuman stoppage came late, after rounds of control and safe work. Good discipline. Decent ring IQ. But also long spells where he stayed on the outside, touching, not committing.

Welterweight punishes that. You can’t half-jab and slide forever. Guys lean on you. They take your legs. They force exchanges when your feet slow. If your punch rate dips, judges notice. If your back hits the ropes, they smell it.

Why the lane opened

The slot cleared when Devin Haney beat Brian Norman Jnr for the WBO title and exited the contender list. Once the belt moved, the queue reshuffled. Catterall was next man up. That’s how sanctioning bodies work.

According to Ringmagazine, that’s the reasoning behind the update. Straight mechanics.

Here’s the problem. If Catterall gets the title fight and spends rounds circling without asserting the jab or holding centre ring, the division will walk him down. And at welterweight, once you give ground, you don’t always get it back.

Thomas Hull is a boxing writer covering news, gossip and results  since 2014.

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Boxing News 24 » Jack Catterall Moves to No. 1 in Latest WBO Welterweight Rankings

Last Updated on 12/22/2025