Nayya Inoue successfully defended his unquestioned Super Bantameight titles with a clear unanimous decision to win on Sunday at Murodjon Akhmadaliev in Nagoi, Japan.
Two judges won the fight 118-110, and one had 117-111, all in favor of Inoue.
After the victory, 32-year-old Inoue confirmed that he would fight again in December in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Inoue is expected to face the invincible Mexican David Picasso on December 27.
In the fifth defense of his WBC, WBA, WBO, IBF and Ring, Inoue (31-0, 27 KO) titles created another clinical performance, systematically interrupting Akhmadaliev (14-2, 11 KO) down.
Akhmadaliev has long called for fighting No. 2 ESPN boxer, but he was well miniature against “The Monster”.
Inoue lined up with his forceful, speedy left stab, limiting Akhmadaliev’s attack and taking control of the fight against opening exchanges.
While Akhmadaliev was successful, Inoue reacted into a ride and had his last voice in his exchanges more often than not.
When he settled in the rhythm of the fight, Inoue’s leg work appeared in the foreground, dancing around Akhmadaliev and sprinkling him with a stab between them. Inoue aimed at the head and body equally, gradually causing injuries and wearing an opponent.
Akhmadaliev tried to release his gigantic right hand during the competition, and during several times he landed, Inoue usually found a way to avoid Uzbek’s power.
In the 8th round, Akhmadaliev frustrated that he was not able to force his power to his opponent.
Inoue moved quickly, would land with a malicious combination and move again in the blink of an eye. His speed and precision were simply too much.
Coading around Akhmadaliev’s face also became observable in later rounds, while Inoue seemed largely unrelated. Sometimes he even called the opponent, asking him for his commitment.
Akhmadaliev landed with a neat right hand at the final stages of round 12, but his best shot came much too little, too behind schedule when the invincible Inoue record ease.
On the basis of the Christian Medina card, he knocked out Yoshiki Takei to win the title of WBO Bantamweight champion.
Medina (26-4, 19 KO) had a great start, Takei floor (11-1, 9 KO) with a gigantic right hand in round 1. Mexico’s trust only grew and since then it dominated.
The fight ended in round 4 after Medina supported Takei to the corner and landed a series of wild upper mountains, forcing judge Ramon Pen to intervene and stop fighting.