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By Norm Frauenheim

On a couple of scales, David Benavidez has been hard at work. He’s turned up the volume. And he made weight. Both have kept him in the mix, if not the hunt, for the one fight he desperately wants.

If you haven’t heard, he’s pursuing Canelo Alvarez. He has turned the internet into a virtual bully pulpit, jumping from platform to platform, stating and restating his ultimate goal of a fight with Canelo.

No telling whether Canelo is listening, although it would be hard not to. But Canelo has other tasks already on his schedule, including a super-middleweight title date with Billy Joe Saunders on May 8. Then, there are plans for Caleb Plant in a bid to unify the acronyms. Canelo, already known for his stubborn focus on the business at hand, is busy and probably will be for a while.

For Benavidez, that means more of the same. Stay relevant, both on the internet and in the ring. The signs are good that he will. His 11th-round stoppage of Ronald Ellis last Saturday was somewhat lost amid news of Marvin Hagler’s death.

Then, there was attention on Juan Francisco Estrada’s split-decision over Roman Gonzalez. It was a Super Fly classic, worthy of a Curtis Mayfield replay.

Nonetheless, Benavidez was impressive, more perhaps for the victory he scored on the scale than his predictable win over Ellis. He made the mandatory, coming in three-quarters of a pound under 168. Then, he went 10-plus rounds with no sign of the kind of fatigue brought on by an exhausting battle to shed pounds. There was plenty of talk in the wake of a scale fail last August against Roamer Alexis Angulo that he wouldn’t. That he couldn’t. But he would and could.

Light-heavyweight will have to wait.

Yet, it’s problematic how long a wait it’ll be before Benavidez will have to make the jump. He’s 24. He’s listed at 6-feet-and-1/2 inch and looks bigger. Light-heavy is inevitable and he knows it. The question is whether the Phoenix fighter can forestall that inevitability long enough to keep himself in line for Canelo in what would figure to be a mandatory shot at one of the Mexican’s titles. Benavidez lost the WBC version in August when he came three pounds heavier than the limit.

For now, it’s clear that Canelo has no interest in fighting anybody without a title or the right to a mandatory challenge. He talks about history, which means his priority is winning and keeping all of the relevant belts. That means Saunders, who has the WBO version. Then, there’s Plant, who holds the IBF title.  Canelo already has the WBA and WBC pieces to the puzzle, both of which he claimed in a one-sided decision over Callum Smith.

The other question is whether Canelo will even bother with a risky title defense. The aggressive Benavidez looms as risky a challenge as anybody in the division.  Canelo has been known to make risky challengers wait. To wit: Gennadiy Golovkin. GGG is still waiting for a third fight after a controversial draw followed by a debatable loss by majority decision.

Canelo is letting Golovkin grow old. GGG turns 39 on April 8. He might let Benavidez grow out of the division. It’s not clear whether Canelo will move up for a second bid at a 175-pound belt. He stopped Sergey Kovalev for a light-heavyweight title in 2019. Then, he relinquished it. For now, Canelo trainer/manager Eddy Reynoso says he doesn’t want him to fight against a naturally bigger man.

But, weight, like age, changes. Canelo, himself, still might grow into a natural 175-pounder. The real question might be Artur Beterbiev. How good is he? He looked unbeatable in a 10th-round stoppage of Oleksandr Gvozdyk in a light-heavy unification bout in October 2019.

Beterbiev (15-0, 15 KOs) is back Saturday (ESPN/ET 3 pm) in Moscow against Adam Deines (19-1-1, 10 KOs). According to Sports Betting Dime, Beterbiev is a minus-5000 favorite, meaning his chances at winning are at 98.4 percent.

Translation: Beterbiev is all but a lock to look sensational, impressive enough to keep Canelo at super-middleweight for now or forever. Benavidez doesn’t have that option. But he does have fans, enough of them to keep him busy with at least one possibility. Jermall Charlo, an unbeaten middleweight champ, called him out his week.

“Yeah, let’s make that fight happen,” Charlo said on The Last Stand Podcast with Brian Custer.

Charlo called him a “punk.” He promised to knock him out. All music to Benavidez, who has never been afraid of trash talk.

“I give him four rounds, five rounds,’’ Charlo said. “I knock him out in about five rounds, six rounds—no more. He get hit too much. I’m powerful. I’ll explode on him.”

Charlo, like Benavidez, has been chasing Canelo. The idea is that a fight with Benavidez would put the winner in position to finally fulfil that ambition. Both are looking for opportunity. For Benavidez, Charlo is a much better one than a rematch with Anthony Dirrell. Been there, done that.  It also looks to be an easy enough fight to make. Both are linked to PBC (Premier Boxing Champions).

On any scale, it would be one way to stay in line and a better way to move on if Canelo says no.

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