Jaron Ennis: Is He Too Scared To Move Up?


Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis posted on social media that 2025 will be a “tremendous” year for him. The 27-year-old is targeting the welterweight titles to become an undisputed champion.

Some believe Boots lacks the ambition, courage, and sense of adventure to move up to 154 and 160 for bigger-money fights.

(Photo credit: Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing)

Ennis (33-0, 29 KOs) still hopes to unify the 147 welterweight division, having turned down the opportunity to move up to 154 for bigger challenges against WBC interim Junior middleweight champion Vergil Ortiz Jr.

147: A Dead End?

Some boxing fans believe Boots lacks the courage and ambition to do more with his career. He’d rather play it safe, tirelessly working to accomplish his goal of becoming undisputed champion in a dead division at welterweight.

It’s got to be frustrating for promoter Eddie Hearn because there are so many big names at 154, 160, and 168, and he could match Boots Ennis with him if he were willing to take risks with his career. Staying at 147 is a dead end for Boots, 27, and Hearn more than anyone has got to know that.

Hearn might be able to accommodate Boots in 2025 by setting him up with one unification fight at welterweight, but not more.

Unless Hearn is willing to pay the other 147-lb champions a King’s ransom, they won’t fight Ennis because their chances of winning are slim. They’re better off holding onto their belts and milking them.

Boots’ recent dismal performance against Karen Chukhadzhian on November 9th may have destroyed what little ambition he still had left in his body, leaving the risk-averse fighter we’re seeing now.

Hearn’s Wasted Efforts

Karen schooled Ennis for 12 rounds, outboxing, slugging, and outthinking him in front of his fans. Afterward, I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall to hear what Hearn said privately about his thoughts on Boot’s performance. I seriously doubt Hearn will re-sign Boots when his contract with Matchroom is up because he’s not going anywhere.

There are so many big fights Hearn could match Boots with if he were brave and wanted to challenge himself by going up to 154, 160, 168, and 175. He’s got the frame to compete in all those divisions, but he won’t do it. Something is holding him back.

I’d say the best Hearn can hope for with Ennis in 2025 is a measly unification fight against WBA welterweight champion Eimantas Stanionis. That’s about it. Throw him back in with Karen for a trilogy after that match.




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