Naoya Inoue v Junto Nakatani: undisputed super-bantamweight championship – live updates | Naoya Inoue

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Welcome to the Tokyo Dome for what’s sure to be an unforgettable occasion in the annals of Japanese sport. Naoya Inoue and Junto Nakatani, two multiple-weight boxing champions with identical 32-0 records, meet tonight at a sold-out stadium in a long-awaited showdown that has been accurately billed as the biggest fight in Japan’s rich boxing history. A crowd of 55,000 fans have packed the Big Egg during the Golden Week holiday with countless more watching in sold-out cinemas across the country.

For Inoue, this is familiar terrain. The 33-year-old undisputed 122lb champion has spent nearly his entire professional life carving through boxing’s weight divisions with a unique cocktail of speed, footwork and concussive power, winning titles at 108lb and 115lb before unifying all four major belts at bantamweight and super-bantamweight in a destructive ascent that has drawn comparisons to Manny Pacquiao. Known as the Monster, he enters tonight’s bout on a run of 28 straight wins in world championship fights and rarely been extended the distance, even if recent outings have offered flickers of vulnerability.

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But Nakatani is not just another challenger. Five years younger, naturally bigger and a rangy southpaw, the 28-year-old arrives as perhaps the most dangerous opponent of Inoue’s career. A three-division world champion who has honed his craft in Los Angeles, where he moved from Japan as a teenager to train under Rudy Hernandez, Nakatani brings in physical advantages in height (three inches) and reach (one inch) along with the kind of quiet confidence that has defined his rise.

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People gather in the ring before the world bantamweight title match between Takuma Inoue and Kazuto Ioka on Saturday night at the Tokyo Dome. Photograph: Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP/Getty Images

The stakes extend beyond belts and domestic bragging rights. Both fighters are fixtures in the pound-for-pound conversation, with Inoue at No 2 and Nakatani at No 6 on Ring Magazine’s most recent list. It is rare enough in boxing today for the best to meet at their peak. Rarer still for them to do so on a stage like this.

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The fight has been dubbed 「世紀の一戦」 – the “Fight of the Century” – by Japan’s big five sports dailies. Hyperbole is part of boxing’s fundamental grammar. But on nights like this, it can feel justified. Stay with us for live updates, round-by-round coverage and reaction as one of the most anticipated fights of the year unfolds in Tokyo.

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