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Nayya Inoue avoids the disaster, stops Ramon Cardenas in a thriller

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Las Vegas – “The Monster” saved what was on Sunday evening disappointing the boxing weekend. But he had to do it to do it.

Nayya Inoue (30-0, 27 KO) had to break away from the canvas in the second round and set up a criminal offensive exhibition to stop the extremely challenging Ramon Cardenas (26-2) in defense of their unquestionable Super Bantam championships in T-Mobile Arena.

After some of the biggest names of boxing (Canelo Alvarez, Ryan Garcia and Devin Haney) did not impress on Friday and Saturday, the return of Nayy Inoue to the United States for the first time since 2021. He was interrupted by an thrilling clash, in which the Japanese super -star avoided a catastrophic result in an unforgettable performance, which ended a massive weekends in the unforgettable performance, which ended a massive weekend boxing.

On Sunday evening, Inoue turned out to be a strength in boxing since his professional debut in 2012. He went through four classes of weight, becoming one of three fighters who were unquestioned in two divisions in “Era Four Belt”. Known for his exceptional impact strength, Inoue was a destructive force, and 90% of his winnings are approaching knockout. But Cardenas did not decrease under the shadow of “Monster”. Instead, he came to fight and gave Inoue everything he could do.

When bulky Inoue began to develop the engine in the second round, he met it with the left hook of Cardenas, which sank with a “monster” on canvas. He was lucky that it was knocking down at the end of the round when he went to the corner on the catchy legs. But Inoue shook the cobwebs and methodically went to work, using a inflexible stab to set an assault on the body, which pulled a pair out of Cardenas’s blows.

“Watching today’s fight, everyone is well aware that I like a fight,” said Inoue. “I was very surprised [at the knockdown]But I took things calmly and gathered … In the first round I felt that I had a long distance. It was released in the second round. From then on, I made sure I didn’t do it again. “

But Cardenas did not lose and did not fight with a huge heart, pulling out of the clutches of failure, winging powerful blows, whenever it seemed that the end could be close. The balls of both fighters landed with an audible impact, which attracted a height of 8,474 fans in the arena. Although it was assumed that this was an ordinary attachment for the planned defense of the Inoue title in September against Murodjon “MJ” Akhmadaliev in Tokyo Dome, the fight against Cardenas can be considered a main course.

After the second round, Inoue was notified and took up a more measured approach in the middle rounds, setting his combinations for stab and avoiding a left hook. Inoue turned out to be too powerful for Cardenas and prepared the ground under an thrilling ending, sending his opponent a trio of right hands at the end of the seventh round and throwing himself at the wounded enemy at the beginning of 8. Game Cardenas tried to stay on his feet, but Inoue released a violent combination of seven punch, which forced the detention in the sign: 45.

Although Cardenas saw that his series of victory of the 14-winner stopped, he would leave Las Vegas with newly discovered fame thanks to the kindness of his bold performance against ESPN warrior No. 2 pounds for pounds.

“The fight was a challenging fight,” he said. “I said it all, I said it all. Every interview. He is a pound for a pound, one of the biggest fighters in the world and I just wanted to give fans to fight fans.”

Inoue moves forward along with the September fight against Akhmadaliev and was irritated by a potential movement to a featherweight, where he tried to become the undisputed champion in an unprecedented third grade.

In the co-or-main event, Rafael Espinosis (27-0, 23 KO) presented a dizzying offensive performance to preserve his WBO PIÓRO-Pióra title with the seventh round of Edward Vazquez (17-3).

Espinosis provided a brutal attack from the opening bell, throwing more blows in the first three rounds than Canelo, Devin Haney and Ryan Garcia threw their 12-round fights at the weekend. Despite the game, Vazquez was exceeded and absorbed a huge punishment before the fight was mercifully detained in point 1:47 after another brutal salvo of espinosis.

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Boxing results: “Sugar” Nunez Tops Rikiishi for IBF Super Feather Title

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Image: Boxing Results: 'Sugar' Nunez Tops Rikiishi for IBF Super Feather Title

Edgar “Sugar” Nunez (28-1, 27 Kos) easily defeated the Japanese champion Super Super Feather at WBC Masoni Rikiishi (16-2, 11 Kos) by a 12-round unanimous decision to get the Free IBF 130-Funt championships on Wednesday evening at Yokoham Renai, in Yokoham.

In the first two rounds, Nunez was an aggressor and won both rounds. In the last seconds of the third round, Rikiishi found a good combination for the chin Nunez. In the fourth round, Nunez caught up with Rikiishi and told him to end the whole round.

Outland Rikiishi continued from the fifth to seventh round. In the ninth round, Nunez had Rikiishi against the lines for most of the round.

In the eleventh round, Nunez had Rikiishi’s forehead with a few lumps. In the twelfth and last round, Nunez had his way. When Rikiishi stopped running, he counted well. Although it looked like a closure, the judges were generous for the pretender.

The results are 116-112, 117-111 and 115-113. Ricky Gonzalez was a judge.

In the WBO World Bantam coefficient Southpaw Yoshiki Takei (11-0, 9 KO) stopped Yuttapong Tongdee (15-1, 9 KO) at 2:07 The first round of planned 12 rounds.

In the first round, after twenty seconds, the left hook from Takei on the chin and down the tongdee went to 8-hlagunki from judge Chris Juvenile. Once again, he dropped Tongdee on the chin to the next 8-story. When Tongee went to the lower ropes on the left, he should be stopped. The judge released it until he had tongdee defenseless against lines.

Super feather WWWEIGHT TSUBASA NAWAI (16-2, 11 KO) knocked out Yuna Hara (14-4-2, 8 KO) at 1:55 Eighth round planned 10 rounds.

There were few action in the first round, in which he raised heavily on the chin of Hari. In the last seconds of the second round, he raised his first solid blow, on the chin Hari. In the fourth round, he nailed Hara right on the chin in the last minute, taking the second round.

In the sixth round Hara landed the upper right in the whole round. In the seventh round Hara had his best round.

In the eighth round, in the best fight, he dropped Hara with the right to the 8th Hold from judge Totsuya Lida. Shortly afterwards, a lot of blows from Narai meant that Judge Lida dismissed.

The lightweight Flyight Southpaw Ryu Isogane (6-1-1, 5 KO) knocked out Tomoy Yamamoto (9-4, 1 KO) at 1:00 Sixth round of the planned eight rounds.

In the sixth round, Isogane had Yamamoto on his feet when Judge Koji Tanaka called the stop.

Super Flyweight Ryuto Yamada (4-4-2, 2 KO) knocked out Suriya Kraimanee (5-5-2, 3 KO) at 1:10 of the first round of the planned six rounds.

In the first round Yamada, after a minute, landed on the chin of Kraimanee, and in the down he went to the count from judge Shuhei Tereyama.

The airy flying scale Kazuma Aratake (1-0, 1 KO) stopped Kitiwech Hirunsuk (16-8, 10 KO) at 2:18 of the second round of the planned six rounds.

In the second round, Aratake wounded Hirusuk, forcing judge Katsuhiko Hirunsuz to stop.

Last updated 28/28/2025

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Ryan Garcia is recovering after a successful manual surgery

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Ryan Garcia Returns

By: Sean Crose

Ryan Garcia is experiencing a successful surgery. “I went and got an operation by the hand”, he published on Tuesday in social media, “And what I had to do, I never used it as an excuse for my fight. The media intend to report the surgery. I was simply blessed. A popular warrior will not work for the next one and a half months.

Garcia was fascinating for a year and a half. After getting involved in eccentric behavior, he was overweight to fight Devin Haney, and then won the fight – only to find a forbidden substance in his system. The victory was then scratched from the Garcia record, and the warrior was suspended to sport for a year. He was supposed to reculture Hanera after the first breakthrough next to Rolando Romero after his suspension. However, it did not work in this way. Romero, perceived almost as an entering melody, finished really nervously nervous of a figurative apple pram.

First of all, a square place in the fresh air has become a bit shocking that night. In addition, Haney’s return was the previous fight on the card … and it was fatal. Haney moved effectively enough, but she didn’t quit too much, making a nap festival. However, it was just the beginning, because – after early hitting the mat – Garcia seemed completely tame by Romero, who eventually shocked the world thanks to the impressive win in the decision. Garcia claimed that his right hand was wounded before fighting Romero, although he refuses to exploit an injury as an excuse.

At the moment Garcia seems to be at a crossroads. There are those who say that without the support of a banned substance is not a tank he was known. It may, but it doesn’t have to be true. It is true, however, that the 26 -year -old Garcia won only one of his last four fights (remember that Haney’s victory was removed after he was jumped for the forbidden substance). In miniature, Garcia must prove that he is a man he was once assumed. Perhaps this will do that.

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Fire and ice: Epic competition between Chris Eubank Sr. and Nigel Bennem

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Image: Fire and Ice: The Epic Rivalry Between Chris Eubank Sr. And Nigel Benn

By And Henderson: In the golden age of British boxing at the turn of the 1980s and 1990s, no competition captured the imagination of fans more than the cruel dispute between Chris Eubank Sr. and Nigel Bennem. It was a collision of not only fists, but personality, ideologies and fighting styles – an unstable cocktail that created the two most electrifying nights in British sports history.

Contrasts the character

Nigel Benn, called the “shadowy destroyer”, was personified harsh aggression. A former soldier in the British army, Benn brought relentless power, air trumpet and street mentality to the ring. His style was vaginal and criminal, often overwhelming opponents with ordinary.

On the other hand, Chris Eubank Sr. He was an example of performing a calculated certainty. Known for his theatrical manners, an aristocratic tone and laser defense, Eubank was a devastated showman, enigmatic and frustratingly arduous to hit. He was arrogant for many. For others, tactical genius.

They could not be more different, which made their competition even more convincing.

First fight – November 18, 1990

Their first clash took place at NEC in Birmingham. Benn was the prevailing Master of WBO medium scales, and Eubank was an undefeated pretender. The accumulation was electric, dripping with real hostility. They refused to shake their hands. Insults flying. It was more than a fight – it was personal.

The fight lived to noise. There was a brutal war and return, and both men landed massive arrows. Eubank, absorbing a huge penalty, was tardy and stopped Benn in the ninth round, demanding the title and causing only Benn’s second career loss. Benn’s painting fell on ropes, protesting over space, while Eubank celebrated, he was engraved in British boxing folklore.

The Rematch – October 9, 1993

Three years later, the stage was set again – this time on Elderly Trafford before 42,000 fans. Both fighters were now world champions: Benn had the title of WBC Super-Middle Wweight, Eubank The WBO Belt. The rates were higher, hatred to not recognize.

Unlike the first meeting, the second fight was more tactical. Still intense, still personal – but both men were older, smarter and more calculated. After 12 tense rounds, the judges said that this was a divided draw. No man was ecstatic. None was the audience. It was a dramatic deadlock that left the competition without resolution.

Heritage of competition

Although they have never fought for the third time, the Eubank-Lin competition remains one of the most tough boxing sagas. It was more than lanes or rankings – it was about pride, identity and redemption. Their hostility was true, but in time there was also their mutual respect.

Since then, both men talked about the emotional and physical harvest of their battles. Currently, there is even a strange kinship between them, born of a common war. Their sons-Chris Eubank Jr. And Conor Benn-Flirts with a continuation of feud, a potential contemporary echo of the epic competition of their fathers.

But no matter what will happen next, the original competition Benn vs. Eubank is a high moment in British sport – a reminder that sometimes the best fights are those that cross boxing and become part of cultural fabric.

Last updated 28/28/2025

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