World Boxing Federation
Professional boxing organization
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The World Boxing Federation (WBF) is an organization which sanctions professional boxing bouts. It was created in 1988.[1]
| Abbreviation | WBF |
|---|---|
| Formation | 1988 |
| Type | Non-profit institution |
| Purpose | Boxing sanctioning organization |
| Headquarters | Luxembourg |
Region served | Worldwide |
President | Howard Goldberg |
| Website | www |
Information
The World Boxing Federation was originally established in 1988 by Larry Carrier, who was part owner of Bristol Motor Speedway in northeastern Tennessee.[2][3][4][5] It was an expanded version of the American Pro Boxing Association.[6] The original concept for the WBF was written on the back of a napkin as an alternative for boxing as Carrier felt there was a lack of vision in boxing.[6][7][8] The WBF wanted to give overlooked fighters a chance and wanted to be a more affordable sanctioning body for aspiring promoters by only charging a $5,000 sanctioning fee.[9][7] The WBF also sought to promote itself in an honest manner and help the sport.[7] The promotion signed their first title fight in November 1990, when they organized a cruiserweight bout between Rickey Patkey and Joe Louis for December 7, 1990.[10][8]
The WBF's titles were not initially recognized by the British Boxing Board of Control and had to wait until 1995 to achieve recognition.[11] The company had 17 field offices outside of the US by 1995[12] and the company moved its headquarters to Las Vegas prior to 1998.[13] Larry Carrier sold the WBF to Ron Scalf in June 1998.[14][15] The organization closed in 2004 after losing a lawsuit[16] and was revived in 2009.[1][11][17] In 2022, the promotion announced that they would no longer sanction title fights with boxers with negative records in an effort to raise standards.[18]
The organization has sanctioned matches on 6 of the 7 continents.[19] The organization has three levels of champions including World champions, Intercontinental champions and International champions. The organization also sanctions women's boxing matches.[19] The promotion also monitors its judges closely and feels integrity is its greatest asset.[20]
The promotion also had their own magazine called, "Inside Boxing with the WBF".[4]
Current WBF World Champions
As of 14 March 2026 (men):
| Weight class: | Champion: | Reign began: |
|---|---|---|
| Minimumweight | vacant | |
| Light flyweight | vacant | |
| Flyweight | vacant | |
| Super flyweight | vacant | |
| Bantamweight | vacant | |
| Super bantamweight | vacant | |
| Featherweight | vacant | |
| Super featherweight | vacant | |
| Lightweight | vacant | |
| Super lightweight | vacant | |
| Welterweight | vacant | |
| Super welterweight | November 24, 2023 | |
| Middleweight | May 3, 2025 | |
| Super middleweight | May 1, 2025 | |
| Light heavyweight | vacant | |
| Cruiserweight | September 27, 2025 | |
| Bridgerweight | February 7, 2026 | |
| Heavyweight | May 17, 2025 | |
Notable Past WBF champions
- Evander Holyfield, former Heavyweight champion
- Francois Botha, former Heavyweight champion
- Jimmy Thunder, former Heavyweight champion
- Johnny Nelson, former Heavyweight champion
- Adílson Rodrigues, former Heavyweight champion[21]
- Bert Cooper, former Heavyweight champion
- Mike Bernardo, former Heavyweight champion
- Joe Bugner, former Heavyweight champion
- Roy Jones Jr., former Light Heavyweight champion[22]
- Robin Reid, former Super Middleweight champion
- Carl Daniels, former Middlweight champion
- Juan Lazcano, former Lightweight champion
- Dimitry Salita, former Super Light champion
- Samson Dutch Boy Gym, former Junior Bantamweight champion
- Jesús Chong, former Junior Flyweight champion