ONTARIO, California – Jermell Charlo didn’t mention Julian Williams by name.

Now that he has regained the WBC super welterweight championship from Tony Harrison, however, a 154-pound title unification fight with Williams makes perfect sense for some point in 2020. If the heavily favored Williams beats Jeison Rosario on January 18 in Philadelphia, Charlo and Williams will have fought less than a month apart and clearly could remain on the same schedule.

Houston’s Charlo (33-1, 17 KOs) and Philadelphia’s Williams (27-1-1, 16 KOs, 1 NC), who holds the IBF, IBO and WBA titles, also are advised by Al Haymon. That should make a championship unification match between them even easier to put together.

“It’s a great possibility,” Charlo said during a post-fight press conference when asked about a unification fight next year. “And I am a promoter, I can say that. But I got people, advisors and people ahead of me that control some of those things. The 154-pound division, I’m steering the wheel.”

Boxing’s other recognized 154-pound champion, Patrick Teixeira, is represented by Golden Boy Promotions. The contentious history between Haymon and Golden Boy founder Oscar De La Hoya makes Charlo-Teixeira and Williams-Teixeira unrealistic alternatives to Charlo-Williams for 2020.

Brazil’s Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) dropped and out-pointed the Dominican Republic’s Carlos Adames (18-1, 14 KOs) in their 12-rounder November 30 in Las Vegas to win the then-vacant WBO junior middleweight title.

Charlo, meanwhile, feels good about redeeming himself after losing a unanimous decision to Harrison a year ago at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

The 29-year-old, two-time WBC super welterweight champion also realizes he has plenty left to accomplish within his division.

He appeared headed toward a title unification fight against Jarrett Hurd (23-1, 16 KOs) before Charlo lost to Harrison. Williams then upset Hurd by unanimous decision May 11 in Fairfax, Virginia.

“I got a lot off my shoulders,” Charlo said of avenging his lone loss to Harrison. “You know what I’m saying? It wasn’t necessarily closure. I got a lot more to handle and business to take care of in the weight division.”

FOX, which aired Charlo’s 11th-round stoppage of Harrison (28-3, 21 KOs) from Toyota Arena, also will televise Williams’ title defense against the Dominican Republic’s Rosario (19-1-1, 13 KOs). Their 12-round, 154-pound title fight will headline FOX’s three-bout broadcast three weeks from Saturday night at Temple University’s Liacouras Center.

Keith Idec is a senior writer/columnist for BoxingScene.com. He can be reached on Twitter @Idecboxing.