Boxing Results: Nakatani destroys Nishida and takes another belt – and is now still


Chugokuni (31-0, 24 Kos) slaughtered Nishida in six brutal rounds before referee Fukuyama Yukuni stopped the fight. By then, the IBF strap was already him. The message was loud and clear. There is only one fight left.

Round 1 was chaotic – bombs from both sides. Yunt looped to the left and slid into Noapya’s uppercut, punishing his body as if he had been trying to steal Nishida’s career for years. The beatdown escalated rapidly.

By the fourth round, Nishida’s right eye was bulging. Fifth, his left joined. There was nothing left for him. Nakatani didn’t slow down – he doubled the power and continued to rip hooks on either side of his body as he wanted to stop now.

Round 6 was a finishing touch to mercy. Nishida’s eyes were closed and closed, unable to see his own gloves, so the document finally intervened. Nakatani stops, gets a big hoop. That’s how I haven’t come before the second round.

And course Inoue was there, sat cleanly and acted like him. I’m watching Don’t avoid questions. They asked Nakatani about the fight, and in surprise he gave the same deadpan “Yeah, maybe” nonsense. It’s a real thrilling thing.

The only remaining name: Inoue

After the battle, Nakatani settled it down. “I’m happy right now,” he said. But now, we all know well.

He is unified in the bantamweight class. He cleaned up the candidates. However, he still lives in the shadow of a man. And that shadow has been growing long in all sectors under 130 pounds.

He’s now 122 years old and sits on all his belts and does what he does. But the battle of Nakatani? That’s not true. It’s a heritage. It is Japan’s two best engineers, two southpaws, two undefeated murderers, and two undefeated murderers in the Tokyo Dome showdown that melts the country.

And it’s not a fantasy. The promoter wants that. Nakata’s resume is beautiful. He defeated world-class names in three divisions and humiliated the undefeated champion. The only question is whether Inoue is looking at the rewards or just looking at risk.

If Inoe wants to end the debate about who controls Japanese boxing? He intervenes.
What if he ducks it? China remains unified, everyone remains at 118.

Tenshin Nasuwawa wins, but that’s it

In her underwear, Naskawa Tin Singh remained undefeated, but she did not beat anyone. He cruised to the 100-90, 99-91 X2 decision over Victor Santilan in a flat and troublesome 10 rounds.

Santilan had a tricky southpaw style and Tenshin never really understood him. He landed late and cleanly, but hesitant for most of the night. This was not a highlight reel material. It was a survival mode with points.

The hype is still there, but is there a gap between people like nasukawa and Nakatani? It’s huge. One looks like a monster. The other still finds his footing.

Complete results

  • Nakatani stopped Nishida Ryosuke by TKO in the sixth round (3:00).

  • Tinsing Nagasawa introduced Victor Santiran, who made unanimous decisions over 10 rounds (99-91, 99-91, 100-90).

  • Tomoya Tsuboi defeated Van Tao Tran by unanimous decision after 10 rounds (98-92, 100-90, 100-90).

  • Riku Masuda knocked out Michell Banquez in the first round (1:27).

Last updated on 06/08/2025

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