Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Who wins?

Poll ended at 18 Jun 2025, 16:03

Norman - Decision
3
18%
Norman - T/KO
8
47%
DRAW
1
6%
Sasaki - T/KO
4
24%
Sasaki - Decision
1
6%
 
Total votes: 17

Ruthless-RKO
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Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Brian Norman Jnr-Jin Sasaki WBO title fight eyed for June 19 in Tokyo

Brian Norman Jnr not only welcomed the open challenge issued by Jin Sasaki; he is now prepared to travel to his rival’s hometown.

Boxing Scene has learned that plans are in place for Norman to defend his WBO welterweight title against the red-hot contender on June 19 at Ota-City General Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan. The proposed bout will be paired with the recently secured Christian Araneta-Thanongsok Simsri IBF junior flyweight title fight, once a deal is reached.

Norman, 27-0 (21 KOs) will make the second defense of his title, which will come less than three months after his last outing. The unbeaten 24-year-old from the greater Atlanta, Georgia area defeated Puerto Rico’s Derrieck Cuevas via third-round knockout on a March 29 ESPN show from BleauLive Theater at Fontainebleau Las Vegas.

Tokyo’s Sasaki, 19-1-1 (13 KOs), the mandatory challenger to Norman’s WBO title, was ringside for the occasion and made a point to meet up with Norman after the fight. The two enjoyed an amicable exchange, where Sasaki read aloud, in English, handwritten notes where he hoped to next face the unbeaten American.

Norman smiled politely and assured the streaking contender that he was open to the idea of the fight. True to his word, Norman is now taking the steps to secure his first pro fight outside of North America. All of his 28 pro fights (including one No-Contest) have taken place either in the U.S. or Mexico.

Sasaki is unbeaten in nine starts since an October 2021 eleventh-round stoppage to countryman Andy Hiraoka at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. News of his first title fight comes hours after Hiraoka, 24-0 (19 KOs) was confirmed to have entered negotiations with WBA junior welterweight titlist Gary Antuanne Russell, 18-1 (17 KOs).

Ironically, Sasaki will land his title fight before his lone conqueror. The all-action welterweight positioned himself for success on the strength of his 8-0-1 (7 KOs) current run.

His lone win to go to the scorecards during that period came in his last fight. Sasaki earned a twelve-round, unanimous decision over countryman Shoki Sakai on the January 24 Naoya Inoue-Ye Joon Kim undercard in Tokyo. The fight aired live on ESPN+, which would likely carry the June 19 doubleheader given Norman’s involvement.

Norman is signed with Top Rank, whose exclusive deal with ESPN and its platforms runs through the end of July.

The forthcoming proposed fight is a welcomed and lucrative alternative to unification bouts that, realistically, are not currently on the table.

As previously reported by BS, Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis, 34-0 (30 KOs), the unified WBA/IBF titlist is now pressed with not one but two WBA mandatory title defenses.

First up is an ordered bout with Uzbekistan’s Shakhram Giyasov, which must take place no later than August 12. Afterward, the winner will be required to face whoever prevails in the May 2 Ryan Garcia-Rolando Romero secondary WBA welterweight title fight.

Meanwhile, WBC titlist Mario Barrios, 29-2-1 (18 KOs) is rumored to next face Hall of Fame former eight-division titlist Manny Pacquiao, 62-8-2 (39 KOs). Details of the fight – should it move forward – won’t be revealed until after the election results of the 2025 Philippine Senate race. Pacquiao is a former Senator who seeks to reclaim a seat as a member of the Alyansa para sa Bagong Pilipinas alliance.

Simply put, Norman and his team have chosen to keep the line moving.

Norman claimed the interim version of the WBO welterweight title with a highlight reel tenth-round knockout of unbeaten Giovanni Santillan last May 18 in San Diego, California. An upgrade was received to full titlist after Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford vacated the throne following his WBA junior middleweight title win over Israil Madrimov last August.

However, it was a long wait for his first title defense. Norman was in talks for a hoped-for unification bout versus Ennis but the two sides remained apart on financial terms. Both proceeded with separate title defenses, but a hand injury which required surgery delayed Norman’s planned clash with Cuevas by nearly five months.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 13 Jun 2025, 10:42, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Brian Norman Jnr to defend against Jin Sasaki in Tokyo on June 19

Brian Norman Jnr will travel to Tokyo to take on Japan’s Jin Sasaki and defend his welterweight title on June 19, promoter Top Rank announced Thursday night.

Norman, 27-0 (21 KOs), of Atlanta, will make the nearly 7,000-mile trip to make the second defense of his title against Sasaki, 19-1-1 (17 KOs), at Ota City General Gymnasium in Sasaki’s hometown.

“Brian Norman Jr. is a motivated and talented champion who didn’t hesitate when offered this opportunity,” Top Rank Chairman Bob Arum said. “Jin Sasaki has power and punches in volume, and their styles will make for a dramatic, action-packed world title showdown.”

Also on the bill will be Cristian Araneta, 25-2 (20 KOs), facing Thanongsak Simsri, 38-1 (34 KOs), for a vacant junior flyweight world title in the co-main event; and welterweight Sora Tanaka, 3-0 (3 KOs), squaring off against Takeru Kobata, 14-7-1 (6 KOs) in an all-Japanese welterweight bout.


BEHIND ENEMY LINES 👑@OfficialBNorman is set to defend his Welterweight crown in Tokyo against Japanese contender @JinSasaki0728 on Thursday, June 19. pic.twitter.com/Mrn7unyd6a

— Top Rank Boxing (@trboxing) April 25, 2025
Norman, 24, isn’t new to fighting abroad. After making his pro debut in the States in 2018, he took his next 12 fights in Mexico – nine of them before he had turned 18 years old. Norman knocked out then-undefeated Giovani Santillan in the latter’s hometown of San Diego last May to earn an interim belt. Elevated to full titleholder status upon Terence Crawford’s move out of the division, Norman followed hand surgery by making his first defense in March, stopping Cuba’s Derrieck Cuevas inside three rounds in Las Vegas.

“The king from the South comes to take over the world – I like how that sounds,” Norman said of the Sasaki matchup in Tokyo. “On June 19, I’m ready to put on a stellar performance and write another triumphant chapter of ‘The Norman Experience.’”

Sasaki, 23, hasn’t lost in nine fights since moving up to welterweight in 2021. Most recently, he went 12 rounds for the first time to win a unanimous decision over Shoki Sakai last January.

The Norman-Sasaki headliner and the top two supporting bouts will stream live on ESPN+ in the United States.

Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 17 May 2025, 09:38, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Image

Press Release

Atlanta’s rising star is ready to defend his championship in the Land of the Rising Sun. Brian Norman Jr. will make the second defense of his WBO welterweight world title against Japanese contender Jin Sasaki on Thursday, June 19, at Ota City General Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan.

It’s a nearly 7,000-mile trip for the 24-year-old Norman — boxing’s youngest male world champion — who hasn’t fought on foreign soil since 2019. The 23-year-old Sasaki, one of boxing’s emerging knockout artists, has fought all but one of his 21 pro fights in Japan.

In the co-feature, Cristian Araneta (25-2, 20 KOs) and Thanongsak Simsri (38-1, 34 KOs) will vie for the vacant IBF junior flyweight world title.

And, in a 12-round welterweight tilt, Japanese wunderkind Sora Tanaka (3-0, 3 KOs) will fight southpaw veteran Takeru Kobata (14-7-1, 6 KOs) for the vacant OPBF title.

Norman-Sasaki, Araneta-Simsri, and Tanaka-Kobata will stream live and exclusively on ESPN+ in the U.S.

“Brian Norman Jr. is a motivated and talented champion who didn’t hesitate when offered this opportunity,” said Top Rank Chairman Bob Arum. “Jin Sasaki has power and punches in volume, and their styles will make for a dramatic, action-packed world title showdown.”

“The king from the south comes to take over the world. I like how that sounds,” Norman said. “On June 19, I’m ready to put on a stellar performance and write another triumphant chapter of ‘The Norman Experience.’”

Norman (27-0, 21 KOs) fought 13 times in Mexico early in his career, including nine times before his 18th birthday. Those experiences set him on a path to contention, as “The Assassin” notched a string of highlight-reel knockouts before making his Top Rank debut in early 2023. After four fights without a knockout, Norman authored a massive upset last May, stopping hometown hero Giovani Santillan in 10 dramatic rounds in San Diego. The Santillan win earned Norman the WBO interim title, and he was elevated to full champion after Terence Crawford moved up to junior middleweight. Following successful hand surgery, Norman defended his strap on March 29 with a third-round TKO over Puerto Rico’s Derrieck Cuevas.

Sasaki (19-1-1, 17 KOs) is unbeaten in nine fights since moving up to welterweight. He captured the WBO Asia Pacific title in January 2023 with a first-round stoppage of Ryota Toyoshima and has made five defenses of that belt. During a six-fight knockout streak from 2022 to 2024, Sasaki knocked out long-reigning Japanese champion Keita Obara and Filipino spoiler Joe Noynay, among others, as he ascended the WBO rankings. In January, he went the 12-round distance for the first time, winning a unanimous decision over Shoki Sakai on the Naoya Inoue-Ye Joon Kim undercard.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 17 May 2025, 18:07, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by JxhDel. »

Explosive bout, Norman can bust Jin up by exploiting his lack of defense and continous attacks
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by londonwar »

This could be a great scrap
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Later this Month :box:
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Brian Norman Jnr: ‘If I move up, it’s only because I ran out of bodies’

While rumors swirl of his high-profile divisional rival set to move on, Brian Norman Jnr has no plans to jump around in weight.

“I got bad news for the other welterweights: I’m very comfortable in this division,” Norman told BS. “I’m gonna be here for a good time. If I move up from 147, it’s only because I ran out of bodies.”

For now, the unbeaten WBO welterweight titlist is fully focused on his next challenger.

Norman, 27-0 (21 KOs), will attempt the second defense of his title against free-swinging Jin Sasaki, 19-1-1 (17 KOs). Their scheduled 12-round title fight will headline a June 19 ESPN+ stream from Ota-City General Gymnasium in Sasaki’s hometown of Tokyo, Japan.

The bout comes as there exists the strong possibility of a void at the top of the division.

Jaron “Boots" Ennis, 34-0 (30 KOs), is the current lineal, WBA and IBF welterweight champion. Eddie Hearn, Ennis’ promoter, recently told promoters that his charge plans to move up to junior middleweight, though Ennis, a 27-year-old Philadelphian, has yet to confirm.

Norman was once linked to a potential showdown with Ennis, but their planned unification bout died at the negotiating table.

Such a fight remains the most appealing in the division. However, it’s not at all a focal point at the moment for the 24-year-old knockout artist from the greater Atlanta area.

Whatever fights are in Norman’s future will come when the time is right. The immediate goal is to tear through Sasaki, whose fighting style figures to mesh well with the visiting titlist.

“Jin is perfect for exciting fights,” noted Norman. “That boy do not like going the distance. He’s about action and entertainment. You see why the Japanese fans love him.

“With me, you see what happened when I won the title – we went to war. I’m willing to go to war again. May the best win.”

Norman’s current title run began with a highlight-reel knockout win over Giovani Santillan for the interim belt. Their battle of unbeaten welterweights took place last May and ended with Santillan down and out, while Norman made a point to literally strike a pose for the cameras.

His interim WBO title reign received an upgrade once Terence “Bud” Crawford completely abandoned the division last summer. Norman’s first defense was delayed, however, when a hand injury forced him off a November 8 date with Puerto Rico’s Derrieck Cuevas, 27-2-1 (19 KOs).

Their bout made its way back to the schedule earlier this year. Norman wiped out the Boricua puncher inside of three rounds on March 29 in Las Vegas.

Sasaki was ringside for the occasion and respectfully challenged Norman after the fight. The timing was perfect, as Ennis was already scheduled for an April 14 unification bout with then-unbeaten WBA titlist Eimantas Stanionis, whom he stopped after six rounds.

Norman casually expressed interest at the time in facing the winner, but Ennis shut down any talk of revisiting talks until his fight was done. The matter was never revisited until a few weeks ago, when Norman was already set to face Sasaki while Ennis was without a next set fight and Hearn sought to remedy that problem for his boxer.

“I found it very disrespectful,” Norman said. “That said, this is a business, and business is a cold game. From that side of it, he was trying to do the best for his side of the street. He painted the narrative of the other champions – me and [WBC titlist Mario] Barrios – as ducks, that we don’t want the fight. That allows him to claim that he got the boogeyman.

“The people may eat it up, but I don’t. Some people see right through it. Why do you get to say that I have to sign right now when I’m focused on this fight? If I’m not mistaken, Boots was just saying that he was only focused on Stanionis, which is what fighters are supposed to do. Why are you focused on three miles down the road when you ain’t even finished mile one?”

Having just turned 24 and as someone who truly leads the life of a hungry boxer, Norman is content to handle all challenges in the order in which they are received. After all, he’s not the one going anywhere.

“I’m focused on my fight June 19,” Norman pointed out. “By June 20, we can get talking. Right now, I’m focused on my mission.”
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Press Release

Brian “The Assassin” Norman Jr. will defend his WBO welterweight title against Japan's Jin Sasaki on Thursday, June 19th, at Ota City General Gymnasium in Tokyo. In the first fight on the ESPN+ stream, Filipino southpaw Cristian Araneta (25-2, 20 KOs) and Thailand’s Thanongsak Simsri (38-1, 34 KOs) collide for the vacant IBF junior flyweight world title. Araneta enters the bout riding a six-fight win streak, while Simsri looks to build on 14 straight victories since his lone defeat in 2022.In the co-feature, Sora Tanaka (3-0, 3 KOs) steps up to twelve rounds in just his fourth pro fight against veteran Takeru Kobata (14-7-1, 6 KOs) for the vacant OPBF welterweight title. Norman-Sasaki, Tanaka-Kobata, and undercard bouts will stream live and exclusively on ESPN+ in the U.S. beginning at 4 a.m. ET/1 a.m. PT, with the main event starting at approximately 7:15 a.m. ET/4:15 a.m. PT. Norman (27-0, 21 KOs) is a 24 year-old Atlanta native who began honing his craft as a paid professional at 17, racking up more than a dozen early wins in Mexico. He kept building with a string of stateside victories, including five stoppages in his home state, before signing with Top Rank in early 2023. A year later, he faced Giovani Santillan for the vacant interim title and silenced the San Diego faithful with a statement-making 10th-round knockout. Three months later, he was elevated to full champion and returned in March to dispatch Puerto Rico's Derrieck Cuevas in three rounds.

Sasaki (19-1-1, 17 KOs) is undefeated as a welterweight, having picked up nine wins and seven knockouts since the only defeat on his resume. In January 2023, he registered a one-round destruction of Ryota Toyoshima. He also racked wins via the fast route over Joe Noynay and Qamil Balla in 2024. In January, he went twelve rounds for the first time, decisioning Shoki Sakai on the Naoya Inoue-Ye Joon Kim undercard.

In additional undercard action, local rivals Yuki Onu (8-0-2, 5 KOs) and former world title challenger Reiya Abe (26-4-2, 10 KOs) will vie for the vacant Japanese featherweight title. Both look to rebound from draws, with Onu going eight rounds with Kyohei Tonomoto last November and Abe battling Satoshi Shimizu over 10 rounds in March.
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Week!! :box:
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Brian Norman Jr (146.8 lbs) vs. Jin Sasaki (146.8 lbs)
Sora Tanaka (146.8 lbs) vs. Takeru Kobata (146.8 lbs)
Yuya Oku (125.4 lbs) vs. Reiya Abe (125.7 lbs)
Cristian Araneta (107.6 lbs) vs. Thanongsak Simsri (107.4 lbs)
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Sendo Takeshi »

Definitely gonna watch it tomorrow.
I hope for an upset, but it's very unlikely.
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Looking at their records, the IBF flyweight title fight Looks like it’s going to be bombs away… from 9 am UK time I guess
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Date: Thursday June 19, 2025
Location: Ota City General Gymnasium - Tokyo, Japan
TV/Stream: ESPN+

Start Times
ESPN+: 4 am ET | 1 am PT | 9 am BST | 5 pm (local) (Main Card)

Promoted by: Top Rank Inc.

Fight Card

WBO Welterweight Championship
Brian Norman Jr vs. Jin Sasaki

OPBF Welterweight Championship
Sora Tanaka vs. Takeru Kobata

Vacant IBF Super Strawweight Championship
Christian Araneta vs. Thanongsak Simsri

Vacant Japanese Featherweight Championship
Yuya Oku vs. Reiya Abe

8 Round Featherweight Bout
Ren Ohashi vs. Guangheng Luan

8 Round Super Middleweight Bout
Yuito Moriwaki vs. Ha So Baek

4 Round Lightweight Bout
Seiya Yamaguchi vs. Ryosuke KiuchI
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Commentators sound like they actually know what they’re talking about, Sasaki a huge puncher they say
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

The 2 ESPN commentators have clearly seen the two light flyweights fight before……you can guarantee none of our UK commentators would’ve seen these guys. “My word, it’s like……….BARRERA MORALES!!!”
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Boom boom it’s heating up

Starting like Willy pep, they've both been hit and it’s turning into Rocky III
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Bombs away
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

These two bad asses are not messing around
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Araneta has got a TNT left-hand. It looks like he’s got the right tactics to maybe end this, but the other guy is toough as hell and punches hard with both hands I’d say. Both been stunned. Simsri cut and dropped in 3rd

Round 6 both dangerous
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Everything on the line for these two desperados, they’re both cautious because they know one big shot and it’s either ecstasy or agony
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Rare combination of big hitters with good chins, here

Round nine. I’ve got no idea who’s winning ..maybe the Filipino, I forgot should be scoring it because it was looking like lights out early doors


Excellent comms think maybe the Thai lad is slightly ahead.

These two comm guys are clearly highly knowledgeable boxing nerds… my God What a nice change from the boneheaded cheerleaders we get.
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Good chins allowed them to survive big shots from the other fellow, good enough to realise they can’t afford to get caught flush again, so cautious here and round 12 coming up
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Re: Brian Norman Jr. vs. Jin Sasaki | ESPN - June 19, 2025

Post by MightyWarrior »

Slow burn to start with …went off in the third and fourth, both hurt, back to slow burn all the way to the final bell. Caution canceled each other out. Interesting, but disappointing

Winner is ……split decision…..

SIMSRI

Quite lucky, but he’s a dangerous champion
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