Masterful Crawford Retires With Impeccable 42-0 Boxing Record

by admin477351

Boxing bids farewell to one of its finest practitioners as Terence Crawford announces retirement at age 38 with a perfect 42-0 professional record. The announcement arrived Tuesday via social media video, three months after his September triumph over Canelo Álvarez in Las Vegas.
Crawford’s final fight against Álvarez showcased the full extent of his abilities, as he controlled every aspect of the bout to win the undisputed super middleweight championship by unanimous decision. The victory over one of boxing’s biggest names provided the perfect bookend to a career defined by technical mastery and consistent excellence.
In announcing his retirement, Crawford stressed the importance of leaving by choice rather than necessity, describing it as winning a different kind of battle. He reflected on a career driven by the need to prove skeptics wrong with each performance, while fighting for his family, his Nebraska roots, and the dreams of his childhood self.
The southpaw made his professional debut in 2008 and captured his first world title six years later by defeating Ricky Burns for the WBO lightweight championship. His technical prowess and tactical intelligence allowed him to dominate five different weight divisions, demonstrating versatility that few fighters in history have matched.
Crawford retires with exceptional statistics: 42 consecutive victories, 31 knockouts, 18 world titles in five weight classes, never being knocked down, and holding three super middleweight championships (WBA, IBF, WBO). His perfect record includes the remarkable fact that every victory came by stoppage or unanimous decision, with no judge ever scoring against him in any round of any fight throughout his entire career—an unmatched achievement.

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