Thursday, September 19, 2024
Sports

Plans for Ryan Garcia, Teofimo Lopez? Naoya Inoue's biggest fight?

Naoya Inoue, one of the world’s best pound-for-pound boxers, returns Tuesday morning to defend the undisputed junior featherweight championship against TJ Doheny (ESPN+, 5:45 a.m. ET). And he will have plenty of opportunities for more big fights with a win against Doheny. The four-division champion is coming off an impressive victory over Luis Nery in front of more than 44,000 fans at the Tokyo Dome in May, and a future fight with bantamweight champion Junto Nakatani could surpass that number.

One week later, the sport’s top star, Canelo Alvarez, puts his unified super middleweight championship on the line vs. Edgar Berlanga, a fight that Terence Crawford will be watching with interest. The following week, another attraction steps through the ropes when Anthony Joshua attempts to become a three-time heavyweight titleholder against Daniel Dubois, with the winner looking at a variety of big fights in the near future.

With a star-studded September on the horizon, let’s dive into your boxing questions in this ESPN mailbag:


X user OttTalksBoxing asks: Bigger commercial event? Inoue vs. Junto in the Tokyo Dome, or Inoue vs. Tank at T-Mobile?

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Inoue knocked down for first time, comes back to win by KO

Naoya Inoue gets knocked down for the first time in his career, but he rallies for a big KO victory over Luis Nery.

There’s a good reason Inoue rarely fights in the U.S., and it’s the piles of money he generates as a mega star in Japan. And a matchup with Nakatani would represent his biggest fight yet in Japan. Not only is Nakatani also Japanese, but he would present Inoue’s most formidable challenge to date.

Nakatani has shown blistering power at 115 and 118 pounds, and he’s now just one weight class below Inoue. The fight could certainly materialize next year and would easily sell out the Tokyo Dome.

But Inoue is also now at the point he could probably sell out arenas around the world, including Madison Square Garden in New York. And if he fought Gervonta “Tank” Davis, that would be a marquee event in Las Vegas that would generate serious business, especially on U.S. PPV, pushing it past the money that could be generated in Japan with Nakatani.

The issue with a fight with “Tank,” of course, is the weight. Davis fights three weight classes above Inoue, so it’s likely nothing more than a fantasy fight. A matchup with Nakatani, though, appears on the horizon.


X user adam_fnc asks: Whats next for Ryan Garcia?

Garcia isn’t eligible to return to the ring until April 20 — one year after his upset victory over Devin Haney, which was later overturned to a no contest due to a Garcia’s positive test for the banned substance ostarine.

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