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Naoya Inoue

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Japanese boxer Naoya Inoue has been one of the most dominant boxers in the world over the last decades but he has only dominated in some of the lightest weight classes. He is a two-division undisputed champion of both the Banthamweight and Super Benthamweight divisions. Last Monday, he defeated Mexican Luis Nery after he got dropped early in the fight. Getting dropped by ‘Pantera’ was a wake up call for Inoue that got him to deliver one of the most dominating performances of his career. Such dominance invites anybody to speculate on Inoues chances against other great boxers from slightly heavier weight classes. We are specifically talking about Gervonta Davis, who is the current king of the Super Featherweight and Lightweight divisions.

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There is always a frowned upon aspect of fighters from lower weight classes moving up to heavier tend to have a much harder time to win fights against their opponents. Inoue moving up a weight lass or two means he will finally get to challenge himself after dominating his usual weight classes. A perfect example of this is Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez, who decided to risk it by moving up to Light Heavyweight to fight Dmitry Bivol and really struggled to keep himself composed. For Inoue, the challenge would be ultimate considering he is fighting Gervonta Davis, one of the scariest boxers in recent years. Boxing trainer Virgil Hunter is the on who speculated on Inoue’s next steps for his career.

Gervonta Davis knocks his sparring partner halfway out of the ring and gets  out himself to mock him

Speaking to Fight Hype, Hunter said: “I don’t think Gervonta [Davis] should go below 135. I’m sure Inoue walks around at ’40, ’45 – 145. [Inoue would] have to come up just like everybody else. Where is the value of [Davis] coming to a catchweight to fight you? You’re big in Japan, and I’m big in the States. So there should not be any weight concession. ‘If you want to fight, come and fight me.’ Let’s not make any excuses. Rigondeaux fought Lomachenko; there was no catchweight involved. He dared to take that opportunity. [Rigondeaux] came up short, but he dared to take it. Charlo dared to fight Canelo at 168, coming from 154. So it’s only a few pounds north. You’re getting a little older. I’m sure you could carry the weight comfortably. So I wouldn’t make any concessions for that fight.”

Saudi boxing chief Turki Alalshikh is reportedly hoping to stage Naoya Inoue’s next fight at Wembley Stadium in September.

According to Yahoo Japan, Inoue has received an offer to fight on the Saudi backed Riyadh Season card headlined by Anthony Joshua on September 20/21.

Inoue is set to defend his undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO super-bantamweight world titles against IBF mandatory challenger Sam Goodman in his next outing.

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‘The Monster’ welcomed Goodman into the ring after his sixth-round knockout win over Luis Nery on Monday and confirmed that the fight will take place in September.

Inoue is estimated to have earned $3.8million for his last bout while the Saudi’s are said to be willing to pay him up to $10m.

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The report goes on to add that Saudi Arabian government officials intend to visit Japan before the end of May to finalise the deal with alternative dates and venues also being considered.

A fight in Saudi Arabia or the Es Con Field Hokkaido, home of Japanese baseball side Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, have been floated around as other potential options.

Inoue hasn’t fought outside of Japan in three years.

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The last time he did, he knocked out Michael Dasmarinas at the Virgin Hotels in Las Vegas to retain his WBA and IBF bantamweight titles.

He has never boxed in England before but did face Emmanuel Rodriguez at Glasgow’s SSE Hydro in the World Boxing Super Series: bantamweight semi-final back in May 2019.

Naoya Inoue vs Luis Nery final press conference round-up - World Boxing News

That could all be about to change providing he signs on the dotted line to box on the same bill as AJ this summer.

Joshua’s opponent for the spectacular London event is yet to be confirmed.

However, he recently informed talkSPORT that whoever puts in the best performance out of Deontay Wilder vs Zhilei Zhang and Filip Hrgovic vs Daniel Dubois on the Matchroom vs Queensberry 5 vs 5 card on June 1 will be the frontrunner to box him next.

Discussing his next fight with talkSPORT last month, Joshua said: “You’ve got Filip Hrgovic vs Daniel Dubois, and you’ve got Zhilei Zhang vs Deontay Wilder.

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“So providing one of those looks good – the one who looks the best, His Excellency Turki Alalshikh said to me, ‘I want you to fight [him].’

Stephen Fulton vs Naoya Inoue: Date, time, channel, odds, & undercard for  2023 boxing fight | Sporting News

“I said, ‘Now you’re speaking my language.’ So out of that pool, I believe that’s who I’m gonna be fighting, one of those.

“We’re on the same page and he’s on the same page as the fans as well.

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“He’s trying to deliver what the fans want, I know they want that big fight with Tyson Fury and he’s working on it.

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