On paper, the winner becomes the mandatory challenger for Oleksandr Usyk. In reality, that label carries limited force.
Usyk controls the division. He also controls the clock. He has already shown a willingness to vacate belts rather than accept obligations that do not align with his plans. With retirement approaching, he is expected to be selective about his remaining fights. A mandatory defence against a developing contender is unlikely to be a priority. That makes this eliminator less about forcing the champion and more about positioning for what comes after.
For Richard Torrez Jr., that distinction matters. The 26 year old is 14 and 0 with 12 stoppages. He stopped Tomáš Šálek in one round in November. He has stayed active. He has been moved steadily. This fight would represent a sharp jump in difficulty.
Sanchez is experienced, technical, and difficult to look good against. That is why he has been widely avoided. Efe Ajagba. Moses Itauma. Filip Hrgović. Daniel Dubois. All were linked to IBF eliminators with Sanchez that never materialised, with Dubois even withdrawing on the morning of a scheduled purse bid. The pattern has been consistent. High risk. Low reward.
There is also a business layer. Torrez is promoted by Top Rank, which is navigating a period without a long-term domestic broadcast deal in place. That makes a purse bid scenario against a low-margin opponent like Sanchez a real financial gamble, not just a sporting one. Agreeing on terms matters.
Sanchez did score a tune up win in February last year, stopping a journeyman in Tijuana, but he has remained largely inactive at the top level. The danger has never been in question. The incentive has.
That same equation faces Torrez now. If he wins, an immediate title fight is unlikely. The more realistic outcome is waiting. Waiting for Usyk to vacate. Waiting for the belt to become available. Waiting for the division to reset.
That does not make the fight empty. It defines it.Torrez is not chasing Usyk. He is trying to be there when Usyk is gone.That is the state of play.




















