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Boxing divisional rankings: Benavidez enters top 5 in a second weight class

David Benevidez beat Gilberto "Zurdo" Ramirez by sixth-round TKO to claim the WBO and WBA cruiserweight titles. Photo by Cris Esqueda/Golden Boy/Getty Images

There was plenty of movement across multiple weight classes after a weekend where three of ESPN's top 10 pound-for-pound fighters were in action.

David Benavidez passed his first cruiserweight test with flying colors, viciously beating Gilberto "Zurdo" Ramirez in a divisional debut that earned him the WBA and WBO titles in Las Vegas. Benavidez dominated Ramirez from the opening bell and finished him with a sixth-round KO. Still a titleholder at 175 pounds, Benavidez also claims the No. 2 spot in the cruiserweight rankings.

In Tokyo, Naoya Inoue got off to a fast start and held his ground during a late surge to outpoint Junto Nakatani in defense of his undisputed junior featherweight titles. The highly anticipated Japanese showdown was a tactical battle, but Inoue used his speed and ring IQ to pile up points early. Nakatani cranked up the aggression in the middle rounds to claw back into the fight, highlighted by an impressive Round 10. But Inoue seized control in the end to keep his unbeaten record intact with scores of 116-112, 116-112 and 115-113.

Inoue holds firm as the No. 1 junior featherweight while Nakatani's performance moves him up one spot to No. 2.

Inoue's younger brother, Takuma, moves up one spot to No. 4 in the bantamweight rankings with a decision win over Kazuto Ioka to retain the WBC title. He replaces Yoshiki Takei, who debuted at No. 8 in the junior featherweight rankings with a majority decision win over DeKang Wang.

Jamie Munguia resurfaces in the super middleweight rankings at No. 5 after thoroughly outclassing Jose Armando Resendiz for the WBA title. Resendiz falls to No. 9 following the lopsided loss.

Rolando "Rolly" Romero falls out of the welterweight rankings due to inactivity.

ESPN's divisional boxing rankings highlight the best in the sport in every weight class. Rankings will change based on recent results and performances. Fighters who have announced they are moving to a different weight class will be ranked in that new division, if warranted, only once they fight in that weight class. Fighters who currently own titles in two divisions can be ranked in both.

Fighters who haven't competed in the past 12 months -- and don't have a fight scheduled -- will be dropped from the rankings until they fight again. Any fighter who tests positive for a performance-enhancing substance will also be removed. That boxer will be eligible to reenter the rankings after his next bout.

For a list of the current champions in all weight classes, click here. For ESPN women's divisional rankings, click here.

Jump to weight classes with changes: Cruiserweight, super middleweight, welterweight, junior featherweight and bantamweight


HEAVYWEIGHT (UNLIMITED)


CRUISERWEIGHT (UP TO 200 POUNDS)


LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT (UP TO 175 POUNDS)


SUPER MIDDLEWEIGHT (UP TO 168 POUNDS)


MIDDLEWEIGHT (UP TO 160 POUNDS)


JUNIOR MIDDLEWEIGHT (UP TO 154 POUNDS)


WELTERWEIGHT (UP TO 147 POUNDS)


JUNIOR WELTERWEIGHT (UP TO 140 POUNDS)


LIGHTWEIGHT (UP TO 135 POUNDS)


JUNIOR LIGHTWEIGHT (UP TO 130 POUNDS)


FEATHERWEIGHT (UP TO 126 POUNDS)


JUNIOR FEATHERWEIGHT (UP TO 122 POUNDS)


BANTAMWEIGHT (UP TO 118 POUNDS)


JUNIOR BANTAMWEIGHT (UP TO 115 POUNDS)


FLYWEIGHT (UP TO 112 POUNDS)


JUNIOR FLYWEIGHT (UP TO 108 POUNDS)


STRAWWEIGHT (UP TO 105 POUNDS)