Crawford’s Incomparable Career Sealed With 42-0 Perfection

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Photo by MILLION DOLLAZ WORTH OF GAME, via wikimedia commons

Terence Crawford has confirmed the end of his incomparable boxing career, announcing retirement at age 38 with a perfect 42-0 professional record. The news came Tuesday through a social media video posted three months after his commanding September performance against Canelo Álvarez in Las Vegas.
The Álvarez victory sealed Crawford’s incomparable career, as he delivered a boxing masterclass to win the undisputed super middleweight championship by unanimous decision. The performance against such elite competition provided the ideal conclusion to a career that proved truly incomparable in modern boxing.
In announcing his retirement, Crawford emphasized the personal importance of making the decision himself. He discussed what made his career incomparable—proving critics wrong with every performance, supporting his family, representing Nebraska proudly, and achieving the ambitious dreams of his youth through unwavering dedication.
The southpaw made his professional debut in 2008 and captured his first world title in 2014 by defeating Ricky Burns for the WBO lightweight championship. His incomparable skills and tactical intelligence allowed him to systematically conquer five weight divisions, demonstrating versatility and excellence that few fighters in history have matched.
Crawford retires with extraordinary credentials: 42 victories without defeat, 31 by knockout, 18 world titles in five weight classes, never being knocked down, and holding three super middleweight belts (WBA, IBF, WBO). His perfect record includes the extraordinary achievement that every win came by stoppage or unanimous decision, with no judge ever scoring against him in any fight throughout his entire professional career—an incomparable legacy.

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