Zuffa Boxing is proceeding with plans to crown its own cruiserweight champion despite federal legislation that has yet to become law.
On Tuesday, Dana White confirmed that Jai Opetaia will face Brandon Glanton on March 8 in Las Vegas, with the winner to be crowned the inaugural Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight champion. There was no reference to pending legislation and no indication that recognition depended on anything beyond the bout itself.
A Champion Declared Early
The announcement arrives while the Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act is still moving through Congress. The bill has cleared the committee but has not reached a full House vote, has not gone to the Senate, and has not been signed. None of that slowed Zuffa’s rollout or altered how the championship was presented.
Under the existing Ali Act framework, promoters have traditionally operated within sanctioning body systems rather than declaring standalone world titles. The pending legislation would explicitly allow unified boxing organizations to establish their own belts and rankings. That framework is not yet in place, yet Zuffa is proceeding as though its arrival is assumed.
Promotional belts have historically struggled for acceptance without alignment from established bodies.
White has dealt with regulation before. In the early UFC years, regulation was something the company pursued in order to survive. In boxing, Zuffa is moving ahead of regulation from a position of strength, announcing structure first and showing little concern about when permission formally arrives.
Opetaia’s presence makes that strategy easier to execute. He enters unbeaten, widely regarded as the leading cruiserweight in the sport, and already recognized elsewhere as a champion. Zuffa is not attempting to build credibility from the ground up. It is importing it, using an established figure to give immediate credibility to its first belt.
Why Opetaia Fits the Plan
What stands out is the absence of caution from anyone involved. There has been no hedging language from the promotion, no suggestion of delay, and no visible hesitation from outlets treating the championship as official. That industry acceptance points to an organization acting as though acceptance will follow once the belt is awarded.
Congress will eventually complete its work. In the meantime, Zuffa has already shown how it intends to operate, behaving like a league that believes the regulatory decision is already leaning in its direction.

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Last Updated on 2026/02/11 at 7:31 AM