Sebastian Fundora pulled off a huge upset when he defeated Tim Tszyu for the WBC and WBO junior middleweight titles last March. That victory started a queue of fighters lining up for a shot at the now-unified 154-pound champion. Fundora has options on the table, with Tszyu seeking a rematch and Terence Crawford and Errol Spence Jr. calling for a shot at the title.

One man Fundora didn’t expect to mention his name was junior welterweight Ryan Garcia, after the latter’s spectacular win over WBC 140-pound titleholder Devin Haney. Garcia, who weighed in more than three pounds over the agreed limit, pulled off the upset when he dropped Haney three times on his way to a majority decision last month.

“He’s not in my weight class,” Fundora told Fight Hub TV. “He’s coming up from 140; it’s like when Kell Brook fought GGG. It’s a different fight, of course, but you know that’s two weight classes down. We will see if he really does come up to 154. If he doesn’t, it’s all good, I don’t care.”

Garcia sent shock waves through boxing a second time when he tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs, in two tests administered before his win over Haney. Garcia maintains his innocence, taking to social media to play down claims and to demand that his B sample be tested.

Fundora, like many, hopes that the allegations aren’t true after a career-best win for Garcia: “I hope it’s not true,” Fundora said. “Because that was a good win for him. But if it is, that’s very disappointing. He proved a lot of people wrong, so to hear something like that – it’s not good.”