Rather than talking about mandatories or the mechanics of a first defence, Mbilli focused on opponent value. He named Saul Alvarez, Jaime Munguia, Caleb Plant, and Edgar Berlanga as targets. The message was simple. His next fight needs to lift his profile, not just add another defence to his record.
That admission says more about Mbilli’s position than the title upgrade itself. After years near the top of the rankings, he has reached champion status without becoming a draw. The WBC belt confirms his place in the division. It does not force the division to respond to him.
In practical terms, the elevation may have cost him leverage. As interim champion, Mbilli was attached to an obligation. As a full champion, he enters a voluntary window and waits for an opponent who gains something by facing him. The fighters he mentioned do not need him in the same way he needs them.
The one fight that would settle questions remains on hold. A rematch with Lester Martinez, who fought Mbilli to a draw, has been pushed back in favour of a bigger name. Mbilli acknowledged the bout is likely to happen later, but not now.
That choice reflects the bind he is in. A Martinez rematch brings risk without adding profile, while the names he is chasing bring profile without obligation.
Mbilli did not try to soften that reality. He said it plainly. He holds a world title and still has to sell himself.
The belt is real, but recognition has not followed. Until that changes, Mbilli’s title reign begins from a waiting posture rather than one of control.
