Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - May 2, 2026

Who wins?

Poll ended at 02 May 2026, 08:05

Inoue - Decision
14
33%
Inoue - T/KO
20
48%
DRAW
1
2%
Nakatani - T/KO
6
14%
Nakatani - Decision
1
2%
 
Total votes: 42

Ruthless-RKO
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Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - May 2, 2026

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Image
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Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani lined up for May 2026 at Tokyo Dome

The fight that is atop of many hardcore fans' wish-lists, Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani, is in the works for May 2026 at the Tokyo Dome according to WBC president, Mauricio Sulaiman.

Inoue and Nakatani will appear on the same bill before that, in separate contests that both are expected to win, on December 27 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Inoue, 31-0 (27 KOs), takes on David Picasso in a defense of his WBC, WBA, IBF and WBO junior featherweight titles that the 32-year-old is heavily favored to win. Nakatani, 31-0 (24 KOs), will step up to the 122lbs clash after ruling at bantamweight when he takes on the unbeaten Sebastian Hernandez Reyes.

Inoue has already recorded three victories this year, beating Ye Joon Kim (KO 4) in January, Ramon Cardenas (TKO 8) in May and he was taken the full 12 rounds by Murodjon Akhmadaliev in September.

Nakatani, 27, has been just as impressive in 2025. In February the southpaw knocked out David Cuellar Contreras in three rounds before halting Ryosuke Nishida in the sixth round of their bantamweight unification clash in June.

Presuming all goes to plan in December, which of course is victories for Inoue and Nakatani, it will be all systems go for one of the best fights to make in the sport.
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 10 Apr 2026, 16:14, edited 2 times in total.
lookingaround87
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by lookingaround87 »

It'd be a fantastic fight. Pack 70,000 into Japan's biggest stadium, it'd sell out easy. As long as they both get through their next fights, it's the biggest fight in boxing to be made. Inoue looks to be slowing down, so I'm leaning towards Nakatani.
joshj909
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by joshj909 »

One of the best fights to make in world boxing that 90% will never hear of. I'd still take Inoue by KO because he is inevitable. Unless it's particularly close, once Inoue wins this he can either face Rodriguez or start looking up a weight.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by gilgamesh »

This will probably be the biggest Boxing match in Japanese Boxing history. Won't make a big splash in the Western Hemisphere, but over there it's huge, and the event will be a spectacle that any Boxing fan would want to see no doubt.

A Battle between 2 unbeaten Superstars. Both generally considered to be Top 10 Pound For Pound talents. It's gonna be great.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Sendo Takeshi »

It's definitely the biggest japanese fight in history and one of the biggest fights you can make in boxing today.

Let's hope there won't be any upsets in December. I can't see an upset happening with Naoya, but Nakatanis opponent is a tough one.
gregregegg
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by gregregegg »

Should get bam to fight innoues brother for the 118 title on the undercard. If bam wins annd looks good and inoue wins but looks shakey you could go strait into a mega fight.

Sets up a little beef. I like it.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by joshj909 »

gregregegg wrote: 03 Dec 2025, 21:14 Should get bam to fight innoues brother for the 118 title on the undercard. If bam wins annd looks good and inoue wins but looks shakey you could go strait into a mega fight.

Sets up a little beef. I like it.
That would be good promo
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Sendo Takeshi »

gregregegg wrote: 03 Dec 2025, 21:14 Should get bam to fight innoues brother for the 118 title on the undercard. If bam wins annd looks good and inoue wins but looks shakey you could go strait into a mega fight.

Sets up a little beef. I like it.
Bam would definitely win though, so they would basically sacrifice Takuma for Naoyas payday :D
gregregegg
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by gregregegg »

Sendo Takeshi wrote: 04 Dec 2025, 05:51
gregregegg wrote: 03 Dec 2025, 21:14 Should get bam to fight innoues brother for the 118 title on the undercard. If bam wins annd looks good and inoue wins but looks shakey you could go strait into a mega fight.

Sets up a little beef. I like it.
Bam would definitely win though, so they would basically sacrifice Takuma for Naoyas payday :D
Well I’m sure takumas career has been boosted by being brother of nayo… and I imagine he would get paid very well vs bam… and then get his brother very well paid down the track… seems like a worthy sacrifice.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Sendo Takeshi »

gregregegg wrote: 05 Dec 2025, 16:43 Well I’m sure takumas career has been boosted by being brother of nayo… and I imagine he would get paid very well vs bam… and then get his brother very well paid down the track… seems like a worthy sacrifice.
For people who are after money, like you and me, sure. But some of these fighters care about pointless things like “legacy” and proving themselves and all that nonsense :D
gregregegg
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by gregregegg »

Sendo Takeshi wrote: 06 Dec 2025, 05:53
gregregegg wrote: 05 Dec 2025, 16:43 Well I’m sure takumas career has been boosted by being brother of nayo… and I imagine he would get paid very well vs bam… and then get his brother very well paid down the track… seems like a worthy sacrifice.
For people who are after money, like you and me, sure. But some of these fighters care about pointless things like “legacy” and proving themselves and all that nonsense :D
I think this is the best legacey option for all involved.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

NAOYA INOUE, JUNTO NAKATANI SPEARHEAD BOXING'S GROWTH IN FAR EAST

Japanese boxing has drawn global attention more than ever before.

Boxing fans in every corner of the world may talk about how great Naoya Inoue, The Ring's super bantamweight champion, is, or may debate about who will win his anticipated match with younger star Junto Nakatani.

The biggest all-Japanese fight in history is already set at Tokyo Dome in May 2026.

First, Inoue (31-0, 27 KOs) must defend all of his belts against WBC’s top-rated challenger David Picasso of Mexico, and Nakatani (31-0, 24 KOs) has to overcome another Mexican world-rated fighter in Sebastian Hernandez at “The Ring V: Night of the Samurai” scheduled at Mohammed Abdo Arena in Saudi Arabia on December 27.

Twenty years ago, no one in Japan probably could imagine that such an era would come in boxing.

Two undefeated boxers from the Far East island country are near the top of The Ring’s pound-for-pound rankings, where Inoue, who has become undisputed champion across two weight divisions, has long been in the top-three discussions.

He became the first Japanese fighter in The Ring's history to be No. 1 on the list, and the first Asian since Manny Pacquiao, following a superb KO win over a legend Nonito Donaire in June 2022.

Nakatani, who won world titles in three divisions including the WBO/IBF unified bantamweight championship, has been climbing the ranks since he was installed at No. 10 after he snatched the WBC belt, his third weight divisions for world titles, from Mexico's Alejandro Santiago in February 2024. Nakatani is now seventh.

It may be widely known that a hard-working and tough-minded culture has bred boxing talent in Japan, but it's not by chance that great genius in Inoue and Nakatani has emerged onto a world stage.

How did it happen?

Not a coincidence

Inoue and Nakatani share one common origin: Both came up through an annual kids’ competition, the U-15 National Championship, that Japan Pro Boxing Association started organizing alongside JBC Japan Boxing Commission.

At 15, Inoue was the MVP in the inaugural tournament in 2008. Nakatani became two-time champion five years later. Brothers Naoya and Takuma, Yudai and Ginjiro Shigeoka and Hayato and Reito Tsutsumi, ambassadors for The Ring today, also stood out in that kids’ program.

Not like in the other countries such as America or Mexico, boxing had not been recognized in general as a sport for young children in Japan. The majority of past professional boxers participated as a second or third sport after school age.

Choosing boxing was the best chance to be a professional athlete. Amateur experience wasn't mandatory, and a strong will — coupled with membership to a boxing stable registered with JPBA — was the only requirement to start. People love the incredible story of “Man on Fire” Koichi Wajima, multiple-time Ring junior middleweight champion in 1970s who made his debut at 25 after running into a boxing gym in Tokyo when he was just a workman away from his rural home in Hokkaido.

There has never been a ban on children, and there were superb world champions in previous century such as Shozo Saijo, Hideyuki Ohashi (manager of Naoya Inoue), Joichiro Tatsuyoshi, Hiroshi Kawasima, Keitaro Hoshino, Hozumi Hasegawa and more who found their ways in boxing before their teenage years. In reality, you might have seen young kids training in local boxing gyms. Yet, there was no competition to motivate them to showcase their progress.

Around 2000, some unofficial sparring meetings in gyms in Osaka, Yokohama and other locations started voluntarily, which led to the JPBA and JBC organize a national tournament categorized by age and weight seven years later, for ages 10-15. They had to wait to be ranked until joining high school teams to compete. Before, it was common to start amateur boxing in high school and with college teams.

The inaugural National U-15 Tournament was held at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo in August 2008 and it showed high quality of competitors from regional qualifiers. Inoue was one of them, but he already had been well-known as a phenom in unofficial local sparring meetings.

Nakatani won in the tournament in 2011 and ‘12 before setting off to work with Rudy Hernandez in Los Angeles in 2013.

The annual championship staged at the famous Korakuen Hall has been the goal of boys and girls. The new gateway to future world champions kept growing under a new name, “Junior Champions League,” adding an international version, “Naoya Inoue Cup,” recently.

The new generation that looks up to Inoue and Nakatani is steadily growing up in that system.

All eyes on Inoue

The structural reform is feeding the health of the boxing scene, though the industry is still struggling to secure its future. The numbers of licensed professional boxers and fights decreased in the past 20 years, according to JBC. The declining birth rate in general is likely one factor, but the drop of boxing population is particularly noticeable here.

In 2006, there were 3,220 pro licensed boxers, including eight world champions and 303 shows nationwide. Both numbers kept shrinking to 2,068 boxers and 177 shows in 2019. In 2020, it was an anomaly because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Numbers were down to 1,417 boxers (no licensing of foreign boxers) and 92 shows.

Some promoters say matchmaking is still not easy, especially for four-rounders, but the numbers have recovered to 2,106 boxers and 195 shows to surpass 2019.

And there is a glimmer of hope for the boxing world.

Inoue has been named one of the most liked sports stars, according to the biennial survey since 1992 on sports popularity targeting 3,000 people ages 18 and under, according to the Sasakawa Sports Foundation, a public interest foundation. Inoue ranked fourth in 2022, marking his first top-10 ranking of all athletes no matter of nationality, active or retired, in the survey.

And he climbed to No. 3 in the 2024 survey, following Major League Baseball MVP Shohei Ohtani, who won a record 41% of vote, and No. 2 Yuki Ishikawa, a professional volleyball player who is a member of Sir Safety Perugia competing in Italian Serie A, and above Ichiro at No. 4 who would be a first MLB Hall of Famer from Japan next year.

In another annual research on popular athletes by Central Research Agency since 1994, Inoue, the only boxer, has been ranked seventh three years in a row since 2023. The boxing world has to be proud to have a national sport hero to keep the recognition in Japan as a sport.

If “Night of the Samurai” in Saudi Arabia, the first Ring event featuring Japanese top boxers, is successful, 2026 should give us an all-Japanese dream match, Inoue vs Nakatani.

It will be the biggest showdown in Japanese boxing history at Tokyo Dome, the nation’s mecca of entertainment.

People talk about it. Young people talk about it at schools, too.

It can be a game-changer for the sport here.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Junto Nakatani: I’ll be ready for Inoue, I don’t feel any pressure

There is no need for Junto Nakatani to send a message.

The unbeaten former three-division champ has perfectly positioned himself within one fight of a dream matchup with countryman Naoya Inoue. Japan’s top two fighters share this stage in separate bouts this Saturday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Nakatani, 31-0 (24 KOs) will face Mexico’s Sebastian Hernandez, 20-0 (18 KOs) in his 122lbs debut. The 27-year-old southpaw moved up in weight after he unified the WBC and IBF titles at 118lbs – the 4lbs leap made to pursue a showdown with Inoue, 31-0 (27 KOs), who defends his undisputed junior featherweight championship against Alan David Picasso, 32-0-1 (17 KOs)

Wins by both will lead to an expected super fight next May at the famed Tokyo Dome.

“This fight is very important,” Nakatani told DAZN’s Corey Erdman during Tuesday’s grand arrival ceremony in at Boulevard Theater in Riyadh. “I want to show in this fight, that with victory I will be ready for the big one with Naoya Inoue.

“I don’t feel any pressure. I always enter every fight prepared to give it my all and be at my best.”

Nakatani is in the Fighter of the Year conversation, with knockout wins over David Cuellar and Ryosuke Nishida. The latter marked just the fourth-ever unification bout between reigning titleholders from Japan, which saw Nakatani prevail via technical knockout after six rounds.

It was known at the time that the fight would be his last at the weight, his 5ft, 8ins frame having rapidly outgrown bantamweight after blitzing through flyweight and junior bantamweight.

The six months between fights is his longest gap in nearly three years, having grown accustomed to fighting every 3-5 months even during his time as a major titleholder. The additional time, however, provided his team – headed by renowned cornerman Rudy Hernandez – with the opportunity to properly grow into a junior featherweight.

“I feel very good at this weight,” insisted Nakatani, though the real proof will come on Saturday. “I want to grow properly into this weight.”

Nakatani has stopped each of his last five opponents, all of which came in a perfect run at bantamweight. He’s gone the distance just twice in his past 14 fights, and was even instructed in his fight with Nishida to apply pressure from the opening bell and build towards the knockout.

Given the style, there is a chance of a similar strategy employed this weekend.

“If I feel it in the ring right away, I will fight as aggressively as I am instructed by my coach,” vowed Nakatani.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Junto had his first fight at super bant..

Is he ready for Inoue
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by goose 5 »

I like Inoue to beat Nakatani on a decision. Nakatani is ready but just not good enough to win, imo.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »



Looks like the fight will take place in Japan
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by gilgamesh »

Ruthless-RKO wrote: 27 Dec 2025, 09:07 Junto had his first fight at super bant..

Is he ready for Inoue
He's as ready as he's gonna get, but honestly after this Superbout I think he should return to Bantamweight.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Sendo Takeshi »

I think he'll be fine at that weight. Reyes is a tough dude with a lot of power. I believe even Inoue would've had a hard time with him.

The fight has to happen next though. They are 27/28 and 32/33, that's almost too late (at least for Inoue).
I still give Nakatani ~25-30% chance to win.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by gilgamesh »

This last bout was Nakatani's first ever bout at 122 so maybe he will have better adjusted to the weight for his bout with Inoue. He certainly had to survive a tough one to get that fight that's for damn sure. The Nakatani bout even though he struggled a bit, was a great bout. I don't think it will hurt business any for the Inoue fight.
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

TOP RANK’S MORETTI STILL SEES INOUE-NAKATANI AS A VERY COMPETITIVE FIGHT

Naoya Inoue and Junto Nakatani won their respective fights against Alan Picasso and Sebastian Hernandez to clear the final hurdle to ensure their highly anticipated Japanese showdown in May.

However, the manner of each man’s 12-round unanimous-decision win was decidedly different Saturday at Mohammed Abdo Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Carl Moretti – vice president of boxing operations for Top Rank, which co-promotes Inoue and Nakatani – felt Nakatani edged Hernandez in a closely contested bout.

“It was an extremely competitive fight,” Moretti told The Ring. “Scoring from home I had it 7-5 [for Nakatani]. Scoring in person is always different. I didn’t think [Nakatani] won the 12th round. So, you’ve got to look at scorecards that were all over the place, but it’s not like we haven’t seen this type of thing before, either. Maybe more credit should be given to Sebastian. I think going in people looked at it as the best fight on the card and it certainly was.”

Judges Mike Hayel and Gary Kitanoski both scored the 12th round for Nakatani (32-0, 24 KOs), who won his junior featherweight debut 115-113 on each of their cards. Judge Nawaf Almohaimeed credited Nakatani, No. 6 on The Ring’s pound-for-pound list, for a much wider win, 118-110.

After the dust had settled, Inoue won without having any real issues.

“It was 12-0,” Moretti said. “You never thought the other guy was a threat. It was competitive early, but not really. I think guys at that level, they get to it, they know they got the guy beat, and they just coast.”

Inoue (32-0, 27 KOs), second pound-for-pound according to The Ring, retained his Ring, IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO 122-pound titles.

Moretti believes that when both men are on home ground next year that will ramp things up and both will be sharper and more clinical.

“I think the environment doesn't lead to stepping on the gas pedal," Moretti explained regarding fighting in Riyadh. “[Las] Vegas, New York, Japan, mentally the guys are more into it because of the atmosphere. Maybe [Inoue] saw or felt that like Canelo did [against William Scull] and just sort of glided through.”

In Moretti’s opinion, Inoue is at his best when he feels threatened, which never happened against Mexico’s Picasso (32-1-1, 17 KOs).

“When he fought [Ramon] Cardenas in the [United] States, Cardenas can punch with either hand, it was in Vegas, he was up for that, Cardenas dropped him,” Moretti said. “So, you had this fast-paced war that’s up for ‘Fight of The Year.’

“People underestimated Cardenas because they didn’t know his name. You knew Cardenas going into the Inoue fight had a great left hook. I don’t know if you could say that Picasso had any great weapons to give Inoue any problems and it played out that way.”

Inoue got up from a second-round knockdown en route to stopping Cardenas in the eighth round May 4 at T-Mobile Arena.

While Mexico’s Hernandez (20-1, 18 KOs) put Inoue-Nakatani in doubt for a period of time, it’s still there and will take place in Tokyo in May.

“That’s what's planned for now,” Moretti confirmed. “That's what’s on tap next. I think, despite what Nakatani looked like, it’s a very competitive fight. The fact you’re in front of a sold-out Tokyo Dome, Nakatani would have to raise his level, if that's possible, and he's going to have to, and I think Inoue gets up for it.

“Everybody is going to lean towards Inoue because of this fight, but when was the last time Inoue fought a tall, rangy southpaw, who could punch? Inoue takes chances like you wouldn’t believe. It’s not like nobody wants to see the fight because of the fight Nakatani had. [It’s] intriguing as hell, still.”
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Evander »

Inoue is superb, one of our best :bow:

In the North American market we want him to fight one of our threats
He's based out of Japan for the most part and doesn't fight boxers most of the casuals would recognize anyway
Inoue maintains in Asia, it's a job crossing him over to be recognized
Or someone big from here needs to go over there
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Re: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani - May 2026?

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Naoya Inoue-Junto Nakatani super-fight targeted for May 2 at Tokyo Dome

It appears that the long-awaited Naoya Inoue-Junto Nakatani super-fight is closer than ever to gracing the boxing calendar after spending all year on a collision course.

Boxing Scene has confirmed that the titanic clash between Japan’s two best boxers is targeted to take place on May 2 at the famed Tokyo Dome. Inoue will risk his undisputed 122lbs championship, while Nakatani aims to join his countryman among the short list of the nation’s four-division titlists.

Additionally, Boxing Scene has learned that the event could carry at least three major title fights.

The matchup has remained the worst-kept secret in the sport, even though industry reporting on when it will actually take place has been sloppy, at best.

Multiple outlets reported that the fight would take place on May 5, running with the literal quote from WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman’s “Cinco de Mayo” timeline for the event. The phrase was meant as the clash taking place on the weekend surrounding the holiday.

Tokyo Dome is booked up from May 3-6. The 55,000-seat venue is hosting a three-day Nippon Professional Baseball (NBP) series from May 4-6 between the storied Yomuiri Giants and the Tokyo Yakult Swallows. May 3 is reserved for the opening game of Japan’s X-League gridiron football season.

That said, the sport as a whole has waited with anticipation ever since the pair of undefeated pound-for-pound entrants spoke it into existence last year. Inoue, 32-0 (27 KOs), and Nakatani, 32-0 (24 KOs), were both double award winners during the 2024 Japanese Boxing Commission (JBC) awards. Upon meeting on stage, Inoue had a message for his southpaw rival.

“It turned out to be a special year. I want to make this year even better,” said Inoue at the time. “I want to do the best I can this year for the big domestic match that lots of fans and people around the sport have been talking about.

“Mr. Nakatani, a year later at Tokyo Dome, let's lift the mood around Japanese boxing together.”

As the fight was one long sought by Nakatani, the callout was music to his ears.

“Sure, let’s do it,” Nakatani immediately replied.

Inoue certainly held up his end in an active 2025 campaign. He made four successful championship defenses during the year. His 12-month run was the busiest of any male lineal champion since Brian Mitchell’s 1987 campaign, when four of his five fights on the year came with the lineal and WBA 130lbs crown on the line.

Nakatani’s 2025 campaign jumped out to a strong enough start where he was the mid-year leader for BS’s Fighter of the Year race. He earned stoppage wins over David Cuellar and unbeaten countryman Ryosuke Nishida, the latter of which saw Nakatani unify the WBC and IBF 118lbs titles in just the fourth-ever unification bout between reigning titlists from Japan.

The win over Nishida was also Nakatani’s final fight at bantamweight, where he won the WBC belt in February 2024 and scored knockout wins in each of his five fights at the weight.

Shortly thereafter, Nakatani took the most significant step towards making the Inoue fight a reality, when he declared that he was set to campaign in the 122lbs division.

There wasn’t a happier recipient of the news than Inoue.

“Welcome to the super bantamweight division,” Inoue exclaimed immediately after Nakatani’s win over Nishida and subsequent announcement.

Inoue has fought twice since then, scoring lopsided decision victories over former unified titlist Murodjon Akhmadaliev and unbeaten contender Alan David Picasso.

The win over Picasso took place as part of Riyadh Season in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Inoue has been sponsored by the series since late 2024 and headlined a December 27 show loaded with Japanese talent – including Nakatani, though his 122lbs debut wasn’t exactly smooth.

Nakatani overcame a spirited and physical challenge from unbeaten Sebastian Hernandez to prevail via unanimous – though publicly disputed – decision.

Matching scores of 115-113 were within the general view, among those who agreed with the verdict). However, the 118-110 card turned in by Saudi Arabia’s Nawaf Almohaimeed is now the subject of an investigation as reported on site by Ring Magazine’s Mike Coppinger.

In addition to the major scare, Nakatani’s right eye was swollen shut during their non-title fight.

Nevertheless, both he and Inoue left with their unbeaten records still intact and with a superfight very much in tow.
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