Chris Algieri is in the early stages of planning a comeback to the professional boxing ring, according to ESPN, as the 34-year-old fighter has signed with manager Keith Connolly and will be back with promoter Joe DeGuardia.

Right now, the plan is reportedly for Algieri (21-3, 8 KO) to take a pair of tune-up bouts at 140 pounds, moving back down from 147 to the division where he won a world title, and then look for something bigger.

Algieri built up his record at the Paramount Theatre in Huntington, New York, his hometown, under the guidance of DeGuardia’s Star Boxing, before taking a bout on HBO with Ruslan Provodnikov in June 2014. Provodnikov, a rugged brawler, was the heavy favorite, but Algieri came out of it with a stunning split decision win and the WBO title.

That victory gave him the chance to meet Manny Pacquiao in a catchweight bout five months later. Rather predictably, Pacquiao thrashed Algieri, a fight that became infamous for Algieri’s trainer saying late in the bout that he was about to “let him out the cage,” right before Algieri was knocked down, one of the six times he hit the canvas in the fight.

He returned at welterweight in May 2015, losing a competitive enough fight to Amir Khan, then beat Erick Bone in December 2015. He was then fed to hot prospect Errol Spence Jr in April 2016. Spence stopped Algieri in five, and he hasn’t fought since.