Khan: I’m going to own the welterweight division

By Rob Smith - 03/26/2014 - Comments

Amir Khan (28-3, 19 KO’s) hasn’t even fought at welterweight yet, and he’s already seeing himself ruling the division with an iron fist. Khan, 27, is moving up to the 147lb division to face the Golden Boy promoted fighter Luis Collazo (35-5, 18 KO’s) on May 3rd on Showtime pay-per-view on the Floyd Mayweather Jr. fight card.

The fight is supposed to be a competitive one, but Khan is still considered the favorite to win it. It’s not a situation where you can truly say it’s a 50-50 fight.

“I really believe that I belong in the welterweight division,” Khan said at Wednesday’s conference call. “I’m going to own the welterweight division. I really believe that this fight between me and Luis could be the one that could steal the show.”

That would be interesting if Khan ended up owning the welterweight division, but I have a hard time seeing that as a possibility. For Khan to “own the welterweight division,” he’ll need to beat Collazo convincingly and then defeat Mayweather later on this year. Knowing Khan, he would proclaim himself the ruler of the welterweight division without even fighting a rematch against Mayweather or face Maidana in a rematch or the other guys like Keith Thurman, Devon Alexander, Kell Brook, Shawn Porter, Tim Bradley and Many Pacquiao, if those fights were possible.

I personally see Khan sitting right back where he started from if he gets past Collazo on May 3rd. That fight is a lateral move from Khan’s last bout against Julio Diaz. Collazo and Diaz are pretty much the same fighters in terms of talent. The difference between them as far as I can tell is that Collazo is a little younger at 32 compared to the 34-year-old Diaz, and Collazo is a southpaw with a little bit more power.

Other than those things, there’s no real difference in the talent department. As such, Khan, if he beats Collazo, he’ll be beating another Julio Diaz. All Golden Boy did was inflate Collazo’s worth to fans by matching him against Victor Ortiz last January and let him finish off a fighter who was pretty much shell-shocked and finished after back to back losses to Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Josesito Lopez.

I suspect Khan will star crowing if and when he beats Collazo on May 3rd, as if he accomplished something special in beating him. But like I said, a win over Collazo is basically a win over Julio Diaz. There’s nothing to get excited about at all. It’s just a hand-picked opponent that Golden Boy set Khan up with to make sure that he doesn’t get beaten before he faces Mayweather in a big money fight later in 2014.