Faded former longtime pound-for-pound king Roy Jones Jr., playing out the string of his career at age 46, has his eyes on another world title shot even as he plans two more fights in the next month.

Jones, a former four-division titleholder, struggled to a sixth-round knockout of club fighter Eric Watkins on Aug. 16 in a cruiserweight bout at the Foxwoods Resort Casino in Connecticut, and is due back in the ring for fights scheduled for Saturday and Sept. 12 in an unusually busy stretch.

But even with those fights on the books, Jones, the untouchable pound-for-pound king from 1994 to 2004 who has won world titles at middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight, is calling out newly crowned cruiserweight world titleholder Krzysztof Glowacki.

Jones (62-8, 45 KOs) had hoped for a much-discussed title shot against Marco Huck but was ringside on Aug. 14 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey -- just two nights before his own bout -- to watch as Glowacki scored a major upset by knocking out Huck in the 11th round of a fight of the year candidate, killing Jones' possible fight with Huck.

So Jones instead has turned his attention to a fight with Glowacki (25-0, 16 KOs), 29, of Poland.

"Glowacki already got the phone call that he got what I want," Jones said. "He already got the call. I made the call immediately that night. You beat [Huck]. I want that. That's mine. You took it from him -- now I got to get it from you."

First Jones, who won two fights against low-level opponents 22 days apart in March, is scheduled to fight journeyman Danny Santiago (33-7-1, 19 KOs), 42, of Ocala, Florida, on Aug. 29 in a Dutch island in the Caribbean.

Then Jones, of Pensacola, Florida, is slated to face 42-year-old Tony Moran (15-6, 5 KOs) on Sept. 12 at the Aintree Equestrian Centre in Liverpool, England, Moran's hometown.

"This is a great opportunity for me to better my life," Moran said. "My life for the past three years has been a bit of a nightmare, and I'm trying to make a better life for myself. I'm a good man who has been in a bad situation and I see this as my Cinderella story, as a way to get me back up on my feet and for me to be able to do the best I can for the people around me.

"I know I'm the opponent and the attraction is Roy Jones Jr., but one thing's for sure: I won't take this lying down. I'll go out there and give it everything I've got."

Jones, however, is clearly looking past his upcoming bouts with an eye on Glowacki, even if there's no guarantee he will get the fight -- one many would view as very dangerous for Jones given how faded he is.

"I got another fight against Danny Santiago. He got to get it. Then I'm going to England to Liverpool two weeks after that. [Moran] got to get it," Jones said. "Then I'm looking for whoever else. They got to get it. Somebody got to give me a title shot at 46 years old."