Less than a year removed from directing his home-grown champion Terence Crawford to a fifth division title and mythical claim as best fighter of the past generation, trainer Brian “BoMac” McIntyre is shifting his stable into higher gears.

Beyond taking Guatemala’s Lester Martinez to the WBC interim 168lbs belt, McIntyre now has two 2021 U.S. Olympians on his team, ranked heavyweight Richard Torrez Jnr and ranked welterweight Delante “Tiger” Johnson.

McIntyre is currently in Egypt with Torrez, 14-0 (12 KOs), preparing for a May 23 showdown versus Cuban veteran Frank Sanchez that will likely make the winner the new IBF top-ranked contender to three-belt champion and the main-event fighter at the Pyramids of Giza, Oleksandr Usyk.

In Egypt, McIntyre is also cornering New Jersey cruiserweight Jamar Talley, 6-0 (5 KOs), a Zuffa Boxing product.

McIntyre was mum on his alliance with the 27-year-old Johnson, 17-0 (8 KOs), who returns to action for promoter Top Rank July 4 in his hometown of Cleveland versus Christopher Guerrero, 16-0 (9 KOs).

“Everybody’s wanting to come,” McIntyre told BoxingScene, speaking generally about his fighters.

In Crawford, McIntyre developed a two-handed power fighter known as a crushing finisher whose nasty side shined at the most opportune times in the ring.

Johnson stayed busy during Top Rank’s July-through-May major broadcaster absence by stopping ProBox’s Nicklaus Flaz in the fourth round in November.

Working diligently with Johnson in Las Vegas has provided McIntyre an alternative from training his fighters at his gym in Nebraska or in Colorado Springs, where he will train the unbeaten Martinez for his title defense in late August in California.

With Johnson in Las Vegas, McIntyre offers one of the most disciplined training camps in the fight city.

Torrez also trained there, and McIntyre is supremely confident in how he will fare against the 33-year-old Sanchez, who has only lost to WBC top contender Agit Kabayel.

“I’ve got so many good stories out there… Torrez taking on that dangerous fight with a new trainer… it’s great stuff,” McIntyre said.