Manny Pacquiao turned 40 years old last month. That’s normally the age when boxers start to rethink how long they want to continue to their careers, if they’re still fighting at all.

Pacquiao, recognized as the sport’s only world champion in eight different divisions, is out to prove he is still as good as ever when he faces Adrien Broner on Jan. 19 in Las Vegas. Pacquiao (60-7-2, 39 KOs) will defend his WBA welterweight championship against Broner (33-3-1, 24 KOs) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena and on Showtime pay-per-view.

“My journey in this sport is still continuing,” Pacquiao said recently. “I’ve accomplished everything I’ve wanted to do. But I also want to continue to keep my name at the top. Even at 40 years old, I can still show the best of Manny Pacquiao. I’m going to give the fans the speed and power that they’re used to seeing.”

A Senator in the Philippines, Pacquiao is looking to stay relevant as boxing enters a new era in 2019, when promotional companies are taking their top fighters and signing exclusive deals with competing distribution platforms.

Pacquiao-Broner is being presented by Premier Boxing Champions, which has network deals with Fox and Showtime. Top Rank aligned with ESPN in 2017 to present boxing on its various platforms, while Golden Boy Promotions and UK-based Matchroom Boxing signed a multi-year agreement with DAZN, a live streaming service.

Pacquiao-Broner was made possible after Pacquiao joined Al Haymon’s PBC with an eye on earning a rematch with Floyd Mayweather. But potential matchups with other top welterweights could be hampered by the politics of negotiating matchups with boxers on competing platforms.

For example, WBA heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder is with PBC, while unified heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua is with Matchroom and DAZN. A much-anticipated welterweight showdown between Terence Crawford and Errol Spence Jr., figures to be difficult to make because Crawford is with Top Rank and ESPN while Spence is with PBC.

Promoters insist they’re open to working with rival promoters to make the right fights regardless of network affiliations, but that remains to be seen. No one is sure how all this is going to work out, especially with the departure of HBO, which has decided not to broadcast live boxing for the first time in 45 years.

Meanwhile, there is plenty of money being floated around. Saul “Canelo” Alvarez just signed a $365 million deal with DAZN that has every fighter looking to score his own deal, including Pacquiao, who won his latest title last July, when he stopped Lucas Matthysse in the seventh round.

“This fight means lot,” Pacquiao said. “It’s my first fight at the age of 40, so I’m excited to give my best and show the world what I can still do. Boxing is my passion and public service is my mission. I love to bring honor to my country.”

Boxing is enjoying a global resurgence even amid the uncertainty of how it’s all going to work out as fans transition from paying $75 for a pay-per-view event to $9.99 to watch it on an app.

The welterweight division is as loaded as it was back when Sugar Ray Leonard was fighting. Crawford, Spence, Shawn Porter and Mikey Garcia are all world-class talent. The heavyweight division features Joshua, Wilder and Tyson Fury forming the kind of rivalries we haven’t seen since the era of Evander Holyfield, Lennox Lewis and Mike Tyson.

Meanwhile, women’s boxing is making a presence on major telecasts thanks to fighters such as Claressa Shields, Katie Taylor, Cecilia Braekhus, Amanda and Cindy Serrano and Heather Hardy.

There’s more boxing being show on live television than there has been in 30 years. But will it be quality as well as quantity.