Nayya Inoue produced the performance of the first deceit before his loved fans, and all this “monster” needed against the behind schedule replacement of Ye Joon Kim.
The four -pass pound for a pound of the star delighted the audience at the Ariake Arena in Tokyo, when the Japanese puncher pressed on Pessible Clash from Junto Nakrekani.
Inoue easily kept his undisputed Crown Super Bantamweight when he moved the pretender to three rounds, and then softened him for the match. Kim looked marked in the middle of the third, when South Korean fought for the speed and strength of Inoue.
The end took place on the fourth, when Kim made a massive mistake, waving Inoue to throw arrows. When Kim was still mocking, Inoue found a solid blow to the head, which he only added to the excruciating bodies that have already landed.
Judge Michael Nelson counted up to ten when Kim tried to get off his knees. Inoue pushed his record to 29-0, which is a rival dug at the same reference point.
Non -board results:
In the co-main party, Jin Sasaki continued his growth to the top when the flashy welterweight defeated Sakai’s show. The former sparring partners got involved in the war for twelve rounds before Sasaki gained a unanimous decision.
The results were read on 118-110, 117-111 and 116-112 for a welterweight 19-1-1, which called on the owners of world titles in its long interview after the fight.
Toshiki Shimomachi defeated Misaki Hirano through the majority of his career’s career decision. For the fourth time defending his Japanese crown Super Bantam in weight, the 28-year-old approached the title of world champion, perhaps in Inoue.
Goki Kobayashi suffered a defeat with parting the shock in the opener to fall to 8-2 with a minimal limit. Three officials saw it on 114-113, 113-114 and 111-116, when Yuni Takada won the 16th victory in his career with eight losses and three draws to revive the future chances of the title.
Takaada raised the championship in Asia and the Pacific WBO and the world ranking with winning.
Also on the card in a lightweight Tsubasa, he was pushed by his CV to 15-2 with a divided decision against the former Japanese youth master Kai Watanabe. The results were read 96-94 twice for Narai, and the third judge saw it the other way with the same margin.
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Read all articles and exclusive interviews by Phil Jay. Learn more about the authorAn experienced boxing writer and World Boxing News editor since 2010. Herring on Twitter @Philjnn AND Quer.