Ryan Garcia took a swing at Terence Crawford’s record by arguing that his biggest wins came against fighters who were no longer in their prime rather than younger names still trying to break through. Garcia pointed to Errol Spence and Canelo Alvarez as examples, saying both were already older by the time Crawford fought them, then asked for a single “young lion” on Crawford’s record.
Garcia is playing a clever game here by shifting the argument from skill to legacy. It is much harder for Crawford to defend his “greatness” when the attack is about who he didn’t fight rather than how he fought them. By naming guys like Boots Ennis and Vergil Ortiz Jr., Garcia is tapping into the one criticism that actually sticks to Crawford: the idea that his resume is a bit top-heavy with names past their absolute physical peak.
Garcia kept coming back to the same point. He said Crawford never fought Jaron “Boots” Ennis, Vergil Ortiz Jr., Devin Haney or him, and claimed that is why his record does not hit the way people say it does. In Ryan’s view, Crawford beat fighters who did not bring the same hunger he had.
It is a classic promotional move. Ryan is calling him a gatekeeper who skipped the toughest gates. He is casting Crawford’s career as a series of calculated business decisions instead of a warrior’s journey, which is the ultimate insult to a guy who prides himself on being the “Boogeyman.”
Here is why this narrative works for Ryan: If Crawford ignores him, Garcia claims he’s ducking a “young lion.” If Crawford fights him, Garcia gets the massive payday he wants.
Hardcore boxing fans have been begging for Crawford vs. Ennis or Ortiz for years. Ryan is just saying out loud what the forums have been whispering. It devalues the Spence win: By suggesting Spence was a “damaged” older fighter, he tries to strip away Crawford’s career-defining moment.
Whether it’s true or not doesn’t really matter to Ryan. He’s successfully injected doubt into the “Pound for Pound” conversation, and in boxing, doubt is what sells tickets.
The remarks fit with Garcia’s recent public push for a Crawford fight, as he has openly questioned Crawford’s standing and tried to tempt him into one more payday. Crawford, meanwhile, has been described as retired after his win over Canelo Alvarez, though Garcia is still trying to pull him back into the spotlight.
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Categories Ryan Garcia, Terence Crawford
Boxing News 24 » Ryan Garcia » Ryan Garcia Says Terence Crawford Avoided Boxing’s Young Talent
Last Updated on 2026/03/28 at 5:07 AM























