Jai Opetaia Dominates Brandon Glanton to Become First Zuffa Boxing Cruiserweight Champion

Sports news » Jai Opetaia Dominates Brandon Glanton to Become First Zuffa Boxing Cruiserweight Champion

Jai Opetaia secured another impressive victory on Sunday in Las Vegas, dominating Brandon Glanton over 12 rounds to become the first Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight champion and solidifying his position as the division’s best.

The fight was the main event of Zuffa Boxing 4 at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas on March 8, 2026, with Opetaia entering as The Ring magazine champion and widely regarded as the number one cruiserweight. The bout had initially been advertised with the IBF belt on the line, but the sanctioning body withdrew its recognition during fight week. This happened after objecting to the Zuffa strap being treated as more than a “trophy or token of recognition,” resulting in Opetaia being stripped of his IBF title on the eve of the event.

Jai Opetaia vs. Brandon Glanton: Results and Highlights

That decision set an unusual stage: Opetaia risked his standing in the division without the chance to leave with his full set of belts, while Glanton was handed a shot at the sport’s premier cruiserweight on a platform backed by the UFC machine.

Once the bell rang, the contest was far more straightforward than the politics around it. Opetaia secured a dominant unanimous decision victory, with all three judges returning identical scores of 119–106 after 12 rounds that saw Glanton deducted two points and Opetaia one.

The Australian southpaw’s superior footwork allowed him to control the ring early on, consistently countering Glanton’s advances whenever the American tried to march forward behind a high guard. As the fight progressed, Opetaia became more assertive, holding his ground to land effective uppercuts and body shots against the shorter Glanton, while wisely avoiding reckless exchanges that might give the puncher the openings he sought.

Glanton, a top-10 contender with an impressive 80-plus percent knockout rate, never stopped pressing and experienced brief periods of success when he backed Opetaia to the ropes. However, he found it difficult to land impactful combinations. Glanton’s frustration became evident as the bout wore on: referee Allen Huggins deducted a point from Glanton in round six for holding and another in the eighth for low blows. Opetaia also lost a point in the eleventh for holding in close. Even with the deductions, the judges’ cards accurately reflected a one-sided fight where Glanton’s resilience kept him in the contest but never genuinely threatened to change the outcome.

On paper, the stakes involved not just titles but also future bargaining power. Opetaia walked away as the inaugural Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight champion and retained The Ring title, securing a new belt within a burgeoning market Zuffa aims to expand. While the IBF controversy means he currently lacks a major organizational belt, his impressive performance in a high-profile event will undoubtedly strengthen his position for future unification bouts or a path to reclaim the IBF title.

For Glanton, the loss drops him to four defeats and hinders his progress towards a conventional world title opportunity. Nevertheless, going 12 rounds with Opetaia on a UFC-backed broadcast maintains his status as a resilient contender capable of challenging top fighters at 200 pounds.

In that sense, Sunday night was both a demonstration of skill and a redefinition of the landscape: Opetaia proved his position at the pinnacle of the division inside the ropes, while the politics outside guaranteed continued activity and intrigue in the cruiserweight title picture throughout 2026.

Hadley Winterbourne

Hadley Winterbourne, 41, calls Manchester his home while traveling extensively to cover NHL and football matches. His journey in sports journalism began as a local football commentator in 2008, eventually expanding his expertise to multiple sports.

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