Highly doubt he was in Japan
Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - May 2, 2026
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - May 2, 2026
Yh, they were most likely in UK studios.joshj909 wrote: ↑03 May 2026, 07:19Highly doubt he was in Japan
No wa he’d get back in time anyway.
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MightyWarrior
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - May 2, 2026
He was commentating from a cowshed in Slough.
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - May 2, 2026
Disgraceful that some knowledgeable posters are doubting Smith after Dazn went to the trouble of coning off Wolverhampton ring road so he could land right near the venue to get jnside to talk us through the first televised fight.
You could literally hear him eating sushi during the Shannon Ryan fight.
You could literally hear him eating sushi during the Shannon Ryan fight.
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Nakatani fractures left orbital bone in loss to Inoue
Junto Nakatani fractured his left orbital bone during his unanimous-decision defeat against undisputed junior featherweight champion Naoya Inoue on Saturday at Tokyo Dome, according to a report from Yahoo Japan.
Nakatani was cut near his left eyebrow in the 10th round after an accidental headbutt. Inoue amplified the pressure in the 11th to land a fight-high 24 punches and throw a fight-high 68 punches, many of which were right hands targeting Nakatani’s left eye.
The offensive onslaught left Nakatani (32-1, 27 KOs) wincing and on the defensive midway through the round, as Inoue (33-0, 27 KOs) piled on the pressure in the championship rounds to separate himself as the clear winner.
The captivating clash between pound-for-pound entrants was even on one scorecard heading into the 11th, and Naktani was down two points and four points on the others before Inoue closed the show in style to win via scores 115–113, 116–112 and 116–112.
"I have a few injuries, but I'll heal up properly and fight again," Nakatani said on social media shortly after the fight. "Thank you so much for all the support. It was so much fun."
Junto Nakatani fractured his left orbital bone during his unanimous-decision defeat against undisputed junior featherweight champion Naoya Inoue on Saturday at Tokyo Dome, according to a report from Yahoo Japan.
Nakatani was cut near his left eyebrow in the 10th round after an accidental headbutt. Inoue amplified the pressure in the 11th to land a fight-high 24 punches and throw a fight-high 68 punches, many of which were right hands targeting Nakatani’s left eye.
The offensive onslaught left Nakatani (32-1, 27 KOs) wincing and on the defensive midway through the round, as Inoue (33-0, 27 KOs) piled on the pressure in the championship rounds to separate himself as the clear winner.
The captivating clash between pound-for-pound entrants was even on one scorecard heading into the 11th, and Naktani was down two points and four points on the others before Inoue closed the show in style to win via scores 115–113, 116–112 and 116–112.
"I have a few injuries, but I'll heal up properly and fight again," Nakatani said on social media shortly after the fight. "Thank you so much for all the support. It was so much fun."
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
“I can’t disclose the exact numbers, but it became the top PPV-selling event across all boxing and combat sports promotions." - Promoter Hideyuki Ohashi
Via (@nikkansports)
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CaptainSpacerod
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Why can’t you disclose the exact numbers mate ?
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
It's not RKO saying that (he can't disclose the numbers), it's the promoter.
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Someone said the highest previous was 500k buys.
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani has become the 4th HIGHEST SELLING GATE IN BOXING HISTORY WITH 32M
Surpassing Canelo vs GGG at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas with 27.1 Million Gate in 2017
Inoue/Nakatani also had a reported 55K in attendance
Per: @jedigoodman
Surpassing Canelo vs GGG at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas with 27.1 Million Gate in 2017
Inoue/Nakatani also had a reported 55K in attendance
Per: @jedigoodman
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Naoya Inoue Vs Junto Nakatani Hits $30M Gate, 500K PPVs Early
500K+ Japan buys and record gate underline dominance, but 3 AM ET slot limits U.S. reach as featherweight move looms
Naoya Inoue’s May 2 Tokyo Dome win over Junto Nakatani generated more than $30 million at the gate and over 500,000 domestic buys, confirming his control of the Japanese market. The 3:00 AM ET broadcast limited U.S. reach, tightening pressure on a move to 126 lbs where new champions and bigger fights await.
“Yahoo Japan confirms our previous report: over 30 million dollars in box office for the Tokyo Dome event at the Naoya Inoue vs Junto Nakatani card,” said analyst JuliusJulianis on his X account.
“And from PPVs, they had already sold more than 500000 on Thursday at 40 USD each, so they would probably sell quite a bit more, 800k PPVs.”
In the U.S., the fight was tucked behind a standard subscription rather than a PPV, likely to mitigate the impact of the early morning start time. Early streaming data suggests a sharp spike and drop pattern, with viewership peaking only during the final four rounds when East Coast fans began waking up.
Without the marketing push of a primetime Las Vegas slot, the 122-pound undisputed clash remained a niche interest. Most casual fans were occupied with the David Benavidez vs. Gilberto Ramirez cruiserweight bout later that evening, which served as the primary focus for Western media.
The event was a financial triumph of $30M+ in gate and 500k+ domestic buys, but it didn’t move the needle in the U.S. For Inoue to truly conquer the West, he may need to stop being the A-side in the Tokyo Dome and start being the challenger at 126 lbs against the lions of the featherweight division.
500K+ Japan buys and record gate underline dominance, but 3 AM ET slot limits U.S. reach as featherweight move looms
Naoya Inoue’s May 2 Tokyo Dome win over Junto Nakatani generated more than $30 million at the gate and over 500,000 domestic buys, confirming his control of the Japanese market. The 3:00 AM ET broadcast limited U.S. reach, tightening pressure on a move to 126 lbs where new champions and bigger fights await.
“Yahoo Japan confirms our previous report: over 30 million dollars in box office for the Tokyo Dome event at the Naoya Inoue vs Junto Nakatani card,” said analyst JuliusJulianis on his X account.
“And from PPVs, they had already sold more than 500000 on Thursday at 40 USD each, so they would probably sell quite a bit more, 800k PPVs.”
In the U.S., the fight was tucked behind a standard subscription rather than a PPV, likely to mitigate the impact of the early morning start time. Early streaming data suggests a sharp spike and drop pattern, with viewership peaking only during the final four rounds when East Coast fans began waking up.
Without the marketing push of a primetime Las Vegas slot, the 122-pound undisputed clash remained a niche interest. Most casual fans were occupied with the David Benavidez vs. Gilberto Ramirez cruiserweight bout later that evening, which served as the primary focus for Western media.
The event was a financial triumph of $30M+ in gate and 500k+ domestic buys, but it didn’t move the needle in the U.S. For Inoue to truly conquer the West, he may need to stop being the A-side in the Tokyo Dome and start being the challenger at 126 lbs against the lions of the featherweight division.
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
That's a weird way of looking at it. Why would he need to 'conquer the West', he seems to be doing fine in Japan.
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
It's an outdated way of thinking that a guy has to make it big in America or he hasn't made it. If you're making Millions of Dollars every time you fight, selling out arenas with 10's of 1000's of paying customers who came to see YOUR fight. How have you not made it?
In America there's nobody Inoue's size that really is a particularly big draw. Even in his proposed upcoming fight with Bam, Inoue is most definitely the star, and they'd be wise to hold that fight in Japan as well because it would just sell better there.
Bam is the last guy at 122 who might have a chance of beating him.
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
How many names in the US that low of a weight are even a bigger name than him anywhere? It's typical US-centric thinking that something is only relevant or successful if it's in the US. Its delusional and a constant across all forms of art, sports, business and just about anything else.gilgamesh wrote: ↑05 May 2026, 12:54It's an outdated way of thinking that a guy has to make it big in America or he hasn't made it. If you're making Millions of Dollars every time you fight, selling out arenas with 10's of 1000's of paying customers who came to see YOUR fight. How have you not made it?
In America there's nobody Inoue's size that really is a particularly big draw. Even in his proposed upcoming fight with Bam, Inoue is most definitely the star, and they'd be wise to hold that fight in Japan as well because it would just sell better there.
Bam is the last guy at 122 who might have a chance of beating him.
Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Yeah I can't think of any fighter 122 pounds or lighter that ever enjoyed the kind of success Inoue is currently having. Even Pacquiao didn't hit the levels of stardom that Inoue currently finds himself at until moving up to 126 and beyond.joshj909 wrote: ↑05 May 2026, 12:58How many names in the US that low of a weight are even a bigger name than him anywhere? It's typical US-centric thinking that something is only relevant or successful if it's in the US. Its delusional and a constant across all forms of art, sports, business and just about anything else.gilgamesh wrote: ↑05 May 2026, 12:54It's an outdated way of thinking that a guy has to make it big in America or he hasn't made it. If you're making Millions of Dollars every time you fight, selling out arenas with 10's of 1000's of paying customers who came to see YOUR fight. How have you not made it?
In America there's nobody Inoue's size that really is a particularly big draw. Even in his proposed upcoming fight with Bam, Inoue is most definitely the star, and they'd be wise to hold that fight in Japan as well because it would just sell better there.
Bam is the last guy at 122 who might have a chance of beating him.
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Re: Round-by-Round: Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani | DAZN - 2 May 2026
Nakatani's coach reveals mistake leading to Inoue loss
Upon returning home to Los Angeles, Junto Nakatani’s career-long coach Rudy Hernandez recounted his biggest regret by not instructing his charge to dial up the pressure much sooner during their unanimous decision loss to Naoya Inoue on Saturday in Japan.
They engaged in a high-level chess match for the first third of the fight, before Nakatani kicked the fight into second gear to make it an enthralling encounter as he challenged the undisputed junior featherweight king.
“I am very proud of Junto’s performance,” Hernandez told The Ring. “After putting thought into it, I believe that I probably failed Junto by holding him back in the first few rounds of the fight. It was my doing to have him start the way that he did.
“During the fight, I know that Junto listens to me and will do what’s asked of him, and he doesn’t question it. The reason [our initial plan] went longer than it should have was that I knew Inoue has very good IQ, speed and power — he’s the entire package. My whole thing was to try and stay one step behind so that we can catch him once Inoue got close using his speed. But during the fight, it turned out that Junto was just as fast as Inoue.
“It wasn't about fighting. It was about trying to be in control and working on timing to catch Inoue. That was the plan. We didn't want to lose any rounds. We made it a fight, but we started too late. You live and learn.”
Nakatani lost the first four rounds on the scorecards and eventually dropped the decision by scores of 115-113, 116-112 and 116-112.
Nakatani (32-1, 27 KOs) had tremendous success from Rounds 5-10 before getting his left orbital bone broken in the 11th from an uppercut.
“Every round was very competitive and probably could have gone either way,” Hernandez said. “Once Junto got going, you saw the momentum he built, and he was looking really solid. That was part of the plan as well.
“The headbutt in the 10th that caused a cut near his left eyebrow didn’t factor in the result of the fight, but the uppercut that broke Junto’s orbital bone early on in the 11th did change the outcome of the fight. You saw that Junto was hurt and went straight into defensive mode, but he didn’t tell me until after the fight that he had hurt his eye. Until the eye injury, Junto was on a roll, everything was working and his confidence was growing. He was taking it to Inoue.”
Hernandez said their strategy would be different in a much-desired sequel and lead to more favorable results.
“There's no secret to it — the rematch would be Round 13, and we wouldn’t be in a feeling-out process and showing the same respect that we had for this fight,” he said. “We know that we are extremely competitive now, that we can beat him — now more than ever. I have a lot of respect for Inoue. I consider him to be the best fighter in the world. Congratulations to him for winning the decision. The right guy won, but there is a but …
“It would be honorable if Inoue gave us a rematch. It would be no different than how he gave Nonito Donaire a rematch. Junto is worthy of a rematch.”
Immediately after the fight, conversation quickly shifted to a potential fight between Inoue and Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez, The Ring, WBA, WBC and WBO 115-pound champion who’s getting ready to make his 118-pound debut against Antonio Vargas on June 13.
Hernandez said that if Rodriguez wants to get his feet wet at 122 pounds, he should fight Nakatani first to earn the right to fight Inoue (33-0, 27 KOs). He added that Rodriguez wouldn’t reach a fight against Inoue because Nakatani would blast him inside eight rounds, doubling down on a similar statement he made last year.
“I believe that by Inoue giving us the rematch, he'd make more money, and it'd be a bigger event in Japan than with him fighting Rodriguez,” said Hernandez. “I hope it happens. I also believe that the rematch is more feasible — let’s do it in December, and let the better man win.”
Upon returning home to Los Angeles, Junto Nakatani’s career-long coach Rudy Hernandez recounted his biggest regret by not instructing his charge to dial up the pressure much sooner during their unanimous decision loss to Naoya Inoue on Saturday in Japan.
They engaged in a high-level chess match for the first third of the fight, before Nakatani kicked the fight into second gear to make it an enthralling encounter as he challenged the undisputed junior featherweight king.
“I am very proud of Junto’s performance,” Hernandez told The Ring. “After putting thought into it, I believe that I probably failed Junto by holding him back in the first few rounds of the fight. It was my doing to have him start the way that he did.
“During the fight, I know that Junto listens to me and will do what’s asked of him, and he doesn’t question it. The reason [our initial plan] went longer than it should have was that I knew Inoue has very good IQ, speed and power — he’s the entire package. My whole thing was to try and stay one step behind so that we can catch him once Inoue got close using his speed. But during the fight, it turned out that Junto was just as fast as Inoue.
“It wasn't about fighting. It was about trying to be in control and working on timing to catch Inoue. That was the plan. We didn't want to lose any rounds. We made it a fight, but we started too late. You live and learn.”
Nakatani lost the first four rounds on the scorecards and eventually dropped the decision by scores of 115-113, 116-112 and 116-112.
Nakatani (32-1, 27 KOs) had tremendous success from Rounds 5-10 before getting his left orbital bone broken in the 11th from an uppercut.
“Every round was very competitive and probably could have gone either way,” Hernandez said. “Once Junto got going, you saw the momentum he built, and he was looking really solid. That was part of the plan as well.
“The headbutt in the 10th that caused a cut near his left eyebrow didn’t factor in the result of the fight, but the uppercut that broke Junto’s orbital bone early on in the 11th did change the outcome of the fight. You saw that Junto was hurt and went straight into defensive mode, but he didn’t tell me until after the fight that he had hurt his eye. Until the eye injury, Junto was on a roll, everything was working and his confidence was growing. He was taking it to Inoue.”
Hernandez said their strategy would be different in a much-desired sequel and lead to more favorable results.
“There's no secret to it — the rematch would be Round 13, and we wouldn’t be in a feeling-out process and showing the same respect that we had for this fight,” he said. “We know that we are extremely competitive now, that we can beat him — now more than ever. I have a lot of respect for Inoue. I consider him to be the best fighter in the world. Congratulations to him for winning the decision. The right guy won, but there is a but …
“It would be honorable if Inoue gave us a rematch. It would be no different than how he gave Nonito Donaire a rematch. Junto is worthy of a rematch.”
Immediately after the fight, conversation quickly shifted to a potential fight between Inoue and Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez, The Ring, WBA, WBC and WBO 115-pound champion who’s getting ready to make his 118-pound debut against Antonio Vargas on June 13.
Hernandez said that if Rodriguez wants to get his feet wet at 122 pounds, he should fight Nakatani first to earn the right to fight Inoue (33-0, 27 KOs). He added that Rodriguez wouldn’t reach a fight against Inoue because Nakatani would blast him inside eight rounds, doubling down on a similar statement he made last year.
“I believe that by Inoue giving us the rematch, he'd make more money, and it'd be a bigger event in Japan than with him fighting Rodriguez,” said Hernandez. “I hope it happens. I also believe that the rematch is more feasible — let’s do it in December, and let the better man win.”
