Have to say undoubtably. For a brief minute there I thought Jermall was the topper of the two off Trout and demolishing Julian Willians in 2016 and Jermell went idle. And then he moved up and other than starching Centeno Jr he really has not blown the doors wide open. Even worse he's lost momentum. His 160 debut opponent should not have even been in the ring. He was hopping on one foot and had an obvious knee/leg injury and that was before the fight even started. Centeno was decent and nice ko. But Jermall looked very ordinary with Korobov next out and those scores don't reflect it to me. Had some stay busies and then finally went all in with Derevyanchenko in a pretty solid class step and outcome. Since then, over two years ago, he let Montiel stand in front of him and swap punches all night and has been doing nothing. Literally nothing since. If we count joking about a Bivol fight, then maybe he can count that as "being active".

Overall and long-term Jermell has imo faced the better tougher comp. He's had more scrutiny off tougher than thought early wins like D. Hopkins and Vanes or painting Rosado when Rosado wasn't a spent Rosado. And agreed to face Andrade in 2015 before Andrade 'opted out' saying he was worth more money . But after the year layoff he came back in 2017 and really has not looked back. He's passed Jermall as far as 'big' fight events and honestly has looked surprisingly disciplined (in the ring) last out. Sparked young hot Lubin, beat the same Trout, and took the L to Harrison in a fight I honestly had Charlo winning. But within the year he badly beat Harrison in rematch, then Rosario to unify, Brian Castano I war and again within the year showed real improvement in Castano rematch in what is one of the biggest fights that 2022 saw for full unification. And then agrees and signs to another would be undefeated clock cleaner in Tim Tszyu! I like both Charlo's through all the nonsense and chest thumping they do, but Jermall has been the much quieter when it comes to actual big fight time.