Russell is placed at #5, a position that becomes difficult to justify once the rest of the list is examined. Sitting above him at #2 is Richardson Hitchins, despite a long amateur history between the two that was entirely one-sided. Russell beat Hitchins four times, establishing clear control over distance, tempo, and physical exchanges, and those results remain relevant when projecting how those styles would meet again at the professional level.

Smith’s placement at #1 sharpens the contrast between projection and proof, as his rise is built almost entirely on a single win, while Russell’s case draws on broader evidence and on matchups that suggest sustained control rather than managed survival. Rankings are meant to reflect who is most likely to win fights at this weight, and that question points more naturally toward Russell than toward a fighter elevated on one defining night.

The stylistic picture reinforces that view. Russell applies pressure that forces decisions and sustained exchanges, an approach that tests the entire division rather than exploiting narrow openings. Against Smith, Hitchins, or others in the mix, Russell presents a problem that is difficult to slow or reshape.

The list becomes even harder to defend when considering who is missing entirely. Ernesto Mercado is unranked despite consistently facing tougher opposition than anyone listed and continuing to win without relying on containment tactics. His absence feels less like a close call and more like a blind spot.

At the top sits Teofimo Lopez, the champion and the constant reference point. Beneath him, however, the ordering feels inverted. If the rankings are meant to identify the most dangerous fighter in the division, Russell belongs near the front of the line, not parked at #5 behind fighters he has already proven he can beat.

Ring’s Light Welterweight Rankings

Champion: Teofimo Lopez

Dalton Smith
Richardson Hitchins
Alberto Puello
Arnold Barboza Jr.
Gary Antuanne Russell
Sandor Martin
Subriel Matias
Adam Zim
Lindolfo Delgado
Andy Hiraoka

The placement of Antuanne Russell at the #5 spot is another unpopular move by The Ring, as he’s already beaten #2 Hitchins four times in the amateurs. He showed that he had his number. He should be higher on the list.

Tom Reynolds is a boxing analyst covering major fights and career turning points, with a focus on performance, trajectory, and long-term implications.