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Former heavyweight champion Oliver McCall still appears in the United States heavyweight rankings at the age of 60, an unusual entry that immediately raises questions about how those rankings are calculated.
BoxRec currently lists McCall #51 among U.S. heavyweights and inside the top 250 worldwide, a position that places the “Atomic Bull” ahead of several active fighters.
Among those ranked below McCall are DeAndre Savage (#54), Josh Popper (#59), Curtis Harper (#61), Ed Latimore (#70), and Tyrrell Herndon (#83).
The placements stand out because many of those fighters have been considerably more active in recent years, while McCall’s appearances have been limited. Several of them have also faced noticeably stronger opposition.
Oliver McCall’s Ranking Anomaly
McCall, whose professional career began in 1985, owns a record of 61-14-1 with 40 knockouts and remains one of the most recognizable heavyweight champions of the 1990s.
The Chicago native famously defeated Lennox Lewis to win the WBC title before building one of boxing’s longest-running careers.
Despite turning 60, McCall has continued to fight sporadically under the Country Box banner. His most recent outings have come in Nashville, Tennessee, where he has recorded wins over Gary Cobia and Stacy Frazier and fought Carlos Reyes to a split draw.
McCall has fought just three times in six years, drawing once. His level of opposition is not even registered on any meaningful scale compared to some of the fighters listed around him, especially Tyrrell Herndon, who could reasonably be rated higher simply for lasting seven rounds with Deontay Wilder in defeat.
The anomaly raises a broader question. Is this simply a quirk of the rankings system, or something that requires further explanation?
BoxRec is known to use a points-based formula, but it remains unclear whether the calculations are now fully automated or whether any human oversight still plays a role in determining the order.
Mike Tyson’s Rating
For context, Mike Tyson’s comeback against Jake Paul — when Tyson was two years younger than McCall is now — placed the former undisputed champion 74th in the United States and 338th in the world.
That ranking sat roughly one hundred places below McCall’s current global position, despite Tyson’s return attracting far more attention and coming against a significantly higher-profile opponent.
McCall turned professional at 19, meaning the former heavyweight champion still appears in the rankings more than four decades after his debut.
On that basis, the idea of a simple nostalgia factor can likely be ruled out.
Instead, the situation points to how algorithm-based rankings can sometimes produce outcomes that do not reflect activity or opposition.
Whether the listing reflects the system working exactly as designed or an anomaly that deserves closer examination is a fair question.
About the Author
Phil Jay is a veteran boxing journalist with over 15 years of experience covering the global fight scene. As Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News since 2010, Jay has interviewed dozens of world champions and reported ringside on boxing’s biggest nights. View all articles by Phil Jay.


















