Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 12 Jul 2022, 19:30

Ioka - Decision
4
57%
Ioka - T/KO
3
43%
DRAW
0
No votes
Nietes - T/KO
0
No votes
NIetes - Decision
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 7

Ruthless-RKO
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Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Kazuto Ioka-Donnie Nietes Title Fight Rematch Ordered By WBO

Any hopes of a long awaited superfight between Kazuto Ioka and Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez are once again placed on hold.

Japan’s Ioka remains in the crosshairs of the WBO, who have ordered the four-division and reigning junior bantamweight titlist to next face mandatory challenger and former four-division titleholder Donnie Nietes. The fight was formally ordered on Friday, with the two sides given thirty days to reach a deal and avoid a purse bid hearing.

“Please be advised that the WBO World Championship Committee is hereby ordering the commencement of negotiations for the subject matter bout,” Luis Batista-Salas, chairman of the WBO Championship committee stated in a letter to the respective teams for both boxers. “The parties herein have thirty (30) days upon issuance of this letter to negotiate and reach an agreement accordingly.

“If an accord is not reached within the time frame set forth herein, purse bid proceedings will be called per WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests.”

Ioka represented by TLAROCK Entertainment, while Nietes now fights under the Probellum banner headed by promoter Richard Schaefer.

The ordered fight—should it materialize—will serve as a rematch to their New Year’s Eve 2018 vacant title fight, which Philippines’ Nietes won by split decision in Macao, China. The two collided in search of becoming a four-division titlist, with Nietes achieving the goal first before vacating the WBO title less than two months later in lieu of an ordered rematch with countryman Aston Palicte after the two fought to a draw in September 2018.

Ioka claimed the belt in a tenth-round knockout of Palicte in June 2019, becoming the only Japanese male boxer ever to win titles in four divisions. Four successful title defenses have followed, three of which have been ordered mandatory title fights. Ioka (28-2, 15KOs) turned away top-ranked contenders Jeyvier Cintron, Kosei Tanaka and Francisco ‘Chihuas’ Rodriguez Jr. in succession, all at the behest of the WBO.

The fight with Tanaka was forced upon Ioka, who sought to unify against either Juan Francisco Estrada (42-3, 28KOs) or Gonzalez (51-3, 41KOs). Tanaka—an unbeaten three-division titlist at the time—enforced his WBO “Super” champion status to have the mandatory title fight ordered. Ioka made his countryman pay, scoring an eighth-round knockout in arguably the crowning achievement of a career worthy of Hall of Fame enshrinement.

Following the win over Rodriguez, the 33-year-old Ioka was set for a title unification clash with then-IBF titleholder Jerwin Ancajas due to take place last New Year’s Eve in Tokyo. The fight was scrapped, however, once Japan closed its borders in late November to combat the spread of the Omicron variant. The development disallowed Ancajas to enter the country, leaving Ioka to settle for an optional title defense versus Ryoji Fukunaga whom he outpointed over twelve rounds.

Hopes of revisiting a title unification clash with Ancajas evaporated after the Filipino saw his five-plus year title reign come to an end following an upset decision loss to Argentina’s Fernando Martinez this past February.

Rumors have since swirled of a potential showdown with Gonzalez. The first suggestion of such a superfight came soon after the legendary Nicaraguan’s—a former four-division champ and one-time pound-for-pound-king—recent twelve-round win over WBC flyweight titlist Julio Cesar Martinez in a non-title fight at junior bantamweight this past March in San Diego.

Whatever talks (if any) took place between the two clearly were not enough official enough for the WBO to refrain from ordering Ioka to enter his fourth mandatory title defense in a span of five fights.

The move works to the benefit of Nietes, although his mandatory title status is questionable. The 39-year-old Filipino has fought just twice since his win over Ioka, having ended a 27-month hiatus in a ten-round decision win over Pablo Carrillo last April 3 in Dubai. The fight was his first after signing with D4G Promotions, an MTK-affiliated promotional outfit which has since transferred much of its roster—including Nietes—to Probellum, which housed Nietes’ last fight also in Dubai.

An advertised WBO junior bantamweight title eliminator with Norbelto Jimenez last December 11 ended in a ten-round draw marred in controversy. Dominican Republic’s Jimenez entered the ring of the belief that the fight was scheduled for twelve rounds, as was introduced by the ring announcer. The former title challenger was furious when the fight ended after ten rounds, having to settle for a draw which seemed to work out for Nietes who is now poised for a shot at a second junior bantamweight title reign.

If the thirty-day period elapses without a deal in place, the WBO will call for a purse bid hearing to be conducted from its headquarters in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Either side can also call for a purse bid at any point during the negotiation period. The minimum acceptable bid for the fight will be $100,000 if it gets to that point.

Ioka and Nietes have both claimed titles at strawweight, junior flyweight, flyweight and junior bantamweight.

Ioka ended a brief retirement upon his ring return in 2018, winning in his U.S. debut as part of an HBO ‘Superfly’ card in California before falling short versus Nietes three months later. The balance of his career has taken place in his native Japan, including his past four fights held at the famed Ota City Gymnasium in Tokyo. The same card that housed Ioka’s U.S. debut also featured Nietes-Palicte.

Nietes is well-traveled over the course of his 19-year career, though has surprisingly never fought in Ioka’s native Japan. His last fight on home soil came in an April 2017 twelve-round points win over Thailand’s Komgrich Nantapech to win the IBF flyweight title in Cebu, Philippines.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 13 Jul 2022, 10:20, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Kazuto Ioka-Donnie Nietes Rematch Set For July 13 In Japan, Avoid WBO Purse Bid

Kazuto Ioka and Donnie Nietes are ready to run it back.

Boxing Scene has learned that a deal has been reached for a rematch between Japan’s Ioka and Philippines’ Nietes, coming just before the deadline for their WBO-ordered junior bantamweight title fight. The sequel is tentatively scheduled for July 13 in Japan, with more definitive details not available other than the two sides agreeing to terms to the point of avoiding a WBO purse bid hearing.

The bout was initially ordered April 1, with their respective camps— Ioka represented by TLAROCK Entertainment, while Nietes now fights under the Probellum banner headed by promoter Richard Schaefer—ordered to come to terms. All involved parties complied with the order just before the deadline for a fight that will take place more than 42 months after their New Year’s Eve 2018 clash in Macau, China. Nietes (43-1-6, 23KOs) claimed a split decision to win the vacant title. Both boxers were aiming to become four-division titlists, with Nietes doing so by the slimmest of margins.

The hope by the Filipino icon at the time was to parlay the belt into a lucrative showdown with the division’s elite stars—then-lineal/WBC champ Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, Juan Estrada (now the current lineal/WBA champ) and former four-division champ Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez. Instead, came the mandate for a rematch with countryman Aston Palicte, with whom Nietes fought to a draw in September 2018 and saw little value in proceeding with a second fight.

Ioka was willing to fill the void left behind by Nietes, scoring a tenth-round knockout of Palicte in their June 2019 vacant WBO junior bantamweight title fight. With the feat, Ioka became Japan’s only-ever male boxer to win major titles in four weight divisions and just the second overall, joining legendary female boxer Naoko Fujioka who has won belts at five different weights.

Four successful title defenses have followed, three of which have been ordered mandatory title fights. Ioka (28-2, 15KOs) turned away top-ranked contenders Jeyvier Cintron, Kosei Tanaka and Francisco ‘Chihuas’ Rodriguez Jr. in succession, all ordered by the WBO in lieu of legacy-defining fights that carry life-changing paydays.

The fight with Tanaka was forced upon Ioka, who sought to unify against either Juan Francisco Estrada (42-3, 28KOs) or Gonzalez (51-3, 41KOs). Tanaka—an unbeaten three-division titlist at the time—enforced his WBO “Super” champion status to have the mandatory title fight ordered. Ioka made his countryman pay, scoring an eighth-round knockout in arguably the crowning achievement of a career worthy of Hall of Fame enshrinement.

Following the win over Rodriguez, the 33-year-old Ioka was set for a title unification clash with then-IBF titleholder Jerwin Ancajas due to take place last New Year’s Eve in Tokyo. The fight was canceled due to Japan’s restrictions on foreign travelers crossing its borders beginning last November to combat the spread of the Omicron variant. The development disallowed Ancajas to enter the country, leaving Ioka to settle for an optional title defense versus countryman Ryoji Fukunaga whom he outpointed over twelve rounds.

Any chance of a rescheduled unification bout dissolved once Philippines’ Ancajas saw his five-plus year title reign come to an end following an upset decision loss to Argentina’s Fernando Martinez this past February.

The move benefitted Nietes, even if his mandatory status is based more on his past title status than on merit.

The 39-year-old Filipino has fought just twice since his win over Ioka, ending a 27-month hiatus in a ten-round decision win over Pablo Carrillo last April 3 in Dubai. The fight was his first after signing with D4G Promotions which has since transferred much of its roster—including Nietes—to Probellum, which housed Nietes’ last fight also in Dubai.

An advertised WBO junior bantamweight title eliminator with Norbelto Jimenez last December 11 ended in a ten-round draw and mass confusion. Dominican Republic’s Jimenez was told that the fight was scheduled for twelve rounds, as was introduced by the ring announcer. The former title challenger was furious when the fight ended after ten rounds, having to settle for a draw which seemed to work out for Nietes who is now poised for a shot at a second junior bantamweight title reign.

Ioka and Nietes have both claimed titles at strawweight, junior flyweight, flyweight and junior bantamweight.

Ioka ended a brief retirement upon his ring return in 2018, winning in his U.S. debut as part of an HBO ‘Superfly’ card in California before falling short versus Nietes three months later. The balance of his career has taken place in his native Japan, including his past four fights held at the famed Ota City Gymnasium in Tokyo. The same card that housed Ioka’s U.S. debut also featured Nietes-Palicte.

The rematch with Ioka will surprisingly mark the first pro fight in Japan for Nietes, who has fought in six other countries over the course of his 19-year career.
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Press Release

Donnie Nietes will add another chapter to his remarkable boxing story if he reclaims the WBO world junior bantamweight title next month.

The former four-weight world champion challenges Kazuto Ioka, in Tokyo, on July 13 for the belt he won in 2018, when defeating the Japanese star.

Nietes would relinquish the crown soon after the fight, allowing Ioka the chance to win the vacant title and almost four years on, the pair renew their rivalry at the Ota-City General Gymnasium in a fascinating clash of 115lbs greats.

The fight will be promoted by SANKYO presents LIFETIME BOXING FIGHTS 9.

Donnie Nietes, said: “This was the fight I wanted the most and I am incredibly eager to win back my world title.

“I have been in training since February for this fight but I really stepped up my levels when I knew it was confirmed.

“This rematch makes me excited and when I vacated the title in 2018 it was always in my mind that I would, one day, win it back. On July 13, that dream will become a reality.”

Nietes, 40, has won world titles at minimumweight, light flyweight, flyweight and up at 115lbs, where he takes on Ioka for a second time.

Richard Schaefer, President of Probellum, said: “Donnie is a boxing legend and a sure-fire Hall of Fame inductee in the future.

“But his career is far from over, there is plenty left in the tank and when he travels to Japan and rips the world title from Kazuto Ioka on July 13, it will rank as the greatest victory of his remarkable career.

“What a story it would be for Nietes to recapture the title he first won almost four years ago, and to achieve that in a great champion’s backyard, would make it even more special.”
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by giacomino »

Excellent fight. Will be interesting to see what Nietes has left. I never thought Ioka or Nietes would have beaten Gonzales but I wished they’d all have fought at flyweight because they would have been great fights. Estrada too. Would have been a legendary card to have them square off with the winners fighting each other. Even now it would be awesome for the winner of this one to fight either Gonzales or Estrada
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Surprised the ORGS are not doing anything about DK involvements.

They’re all corrupt anyway.
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Daigo Higa (remember him) returns on this card vs. Froilan Saludar in a banatmweight bout.
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Week!! :box:
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by handsofstone »

Just watched the first fight, decent and highly competitive, never scored but I reckon I'd have edged towards Ioka
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

It’s mid week.

Wonder if we can get a legit stream
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Weights

Ioka weighed 114.86 pounds (52.1 kg)

Nietes weighed in at 114.5 pounds (51.9 kg)
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Gran Hermano »

Time can we expect the ringwalk?
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Kazuto Ioka gets revenge over Donnie Nietes, retains WBO 115-pound title

The score is now even.

Japanese star Kazuto Ioka successfully defended his WBO junior bantamweight title, and gained revenge for a previous points loss, by posting a 12-round unanimous decision over fellow four-weight world champion Donnie Nietes at the Ota-City General Gymnasium in Tokyo. The official scores were 120-108, 118-110 and 117-111.

As the numbers indicate, Ioka, who is rated No. 2 by The Ring at 115 pounds, had things mostly his own way against the Filipino veteran, who scored a 12-round split decision over him in December 2018.

There was quality action from the opening bell. Ioka claimed ring center and was busier and more versatile with his assaults. However, Nietes was sharp and slotted home some accurate counter punching, particularly with the right hand over the jab.

Both men used the jab to good effect, and the fight was predominantly contested at long range. But it was Ioka who made the tactical decision to target the body and that paid dividends as the bout progressed.

By the midway point, Nietes was moving more and punching less. Having completed the 12-round distance on 11 previous occasions, Ioka sensed the older man’s predicament and began turning the screw.

Not to be outdone, Nietes responded with a beautiful right uppercut in the ninth, which was met by a nod of approval from his opponent. The home fighter wasn’t shaken, but it was a significant warning shot.

Nietes kept looking for the uppercut in the 10th, but Ioka was wise to it now and bounced back with some excellent combination punching. The challenger was also badly cut over the left eye in this session from what looked like a solid right hook.

Ioka (29-2,15 KOs) closed out well in the championship rounds to secure a one-sided victory.

The 33-year-old technician has been largely dominant since the Nietes setback. His victims include Aston Palicte (TKO 10), Jeyvier Cintron (UD 12), Kosei Tanaka (TKO 8), Francisco Rodriguez Jr. (UD 12) and Ryuji Fukunaga (UD 12).

His goal now is to secure unification matchups against Juan Francisco Estrada (Ring, WBA), Jesse Rodriguez (WBC) or Fernando Martinez (IBF).

Nietes, 40, drops to 43-2-6 (23 KOs).
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Nietes looked really old and slow
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by giacomino »

Thanks for the update. I forgot about this one
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by handsofstone »

Had it 117-111 Ioka as well, decent enough fight, Nietes didn't get exactly beat up there but he was comprehensively outworked by the younger fresher man, Ioka boxed well behind the jab, used it effectively to the body, put some nice shots together, landed right then the left time and again, Nietes couldn't match the volume, he did fare better in the latter rounds, obviously knew he was trailing and didn't have to worry about gassing by then but still Ioka seen it out comfortably
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Re: Kazuto Ioka vs. Donnie Nietes II | Probellum - July 13, 2022

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Nietes: I can still fight for world titles again

40-year-old former four-weight world champion Donnie “Ahas” Nietes says he still has plenty left in the tank and plans to work his back into title contention after his world title defeat to WBO junior bantamweight champion Kazuto Ioka Wednesday night in Tokyo.

“I lost the fight on points, and I felt that Ioka did not want to try and deliver a knockout win for his fans and was just happy to win the fight on the scorecards,” Nietes told Probellum.com. “I was not able to put as much pressure on Ioka as I would have liked. I was waiting for Ioka to move in and throw his shots, so that I could hit him with my big counters, but it didn’t happen often enough.

“I was defeated but, without question, I can still fight for world titles again.”

“There is no doubt in my mind that I can challenge once again, and I see myself probably having one or two more fights at world level before I hang up my gloves inside the ring,”
Nietes added.
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