For Cruz, now 30 with a full amateur career behind him, the decision reflects urgency rather than comfort.
A rebuild phase filled with safer opposition would remove him from the sanctioning body pipeline and waste valuable time during his competitive prime. Instead, he remains one win away from returning to the front of the division.
Bell enters unbeaten through 28 professional fights and brings physical dimensions that Cruz must solve. At 6 feet tall, Bell has height for the division and knows how to use it. He stands upright and relies on his reach, but he lacks the amateur foundation, defensive instincts, and punch selection that Cruz developed over years of elite international competition.
The matchup favors Cruz technically, but only if he makes the adjustments he failed to implement in his loss to Raymond Muratalla on January 24.
That night exposed the central flaw in Cruz’s professional transition. He moved constantly and gave away rounds that were there to be taken. When he stopped retreating and stood his ground, he had clear success. His counters landed clean, and his accuracy marked up Muratalla’s face, blackening both eyes by the later rounds. The damage was visible, but Cruz never committed fully enough to seize control of the fight.
His hesitation cost him more than his unbeaten record. It raised questions about his tactical confidence under pressure and whether his professional style has become too cautious.
Trainer Derek Ennis remains one of the sport’s respected coaches, but the partnership did not produce the right tactical balance in Cruz’s biggest fight. Cruz fought with discipline but lacked the controlled aggression needed to impose his superior technical ability. Whether that reflects a strategic miscalculation or a deeper disconnect between fighter and trainer remains uncertain.
Bell presents a different type of test. He is older at 33 and does not possess Muratalla’s combination of pressure and finishing ability, but his size and unbeaten record make him a credible obstacle. Cruz cannot afford to repeat the same passive approach. His skill advantage only translates into victory if he uses it assertively rather than defensively.
The IBF eliminator gives Cruz a direct path back to contention, but it also removes excuses. He is no longer being developed. He is being evaluated.
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