On one side, there’s Christian Mbilli. That would be a hard fight. No air. No breaks. The kind of opponent who drags you into a miserable night and makes every round feel longer than it should. You beat him, people nod. You lose, you’re in trouble. There’s no upside beyond proving toughness. Mbilli is like an ultra version of Carlos Adames.
On the other side, there’s Diego Pacheco. Big name. Big promoter [Eddie Hearn]. Big platform. A fight that comes with noise, money, and attention. A fight that fits neatly into the Riyadh Season machine that’s been circling Sheeraz for weeks now. That’s not a coincidence.
The WBO order gives Sheeraz and Frank Warren a clean excuse to take the Pacheco fight. They have twenty days to negotiate before a purse bid. Sheeraz can’t do both. He has to choose which headache he wants.
Mbilli is the tougher fight. Everyone knows it. Pacheco is the smarter fight. Everyone knows that, too.
This isn’t ducking. It’s career management. Fighters don’t get credit for choosing pain when there’s a belt, a payday, and a global stage sitting right in front of them.
Nothing is signed yet. No dates. No contracts. But the direction is obvious. The money is pointing one way toward Pacheco. The sanctioning body is pointing the same way. And when that happens in boxing, the rest usually falls into line.
Sheeraz just has to decide how much he cares about doing things the hard way.