THE disappointment of the last 48 hours in boxing vanished faster than a Las Vegas buffet after three rounds of Naoya Inoue versus Ramon Cardenas.
Friday nightโs Times Square dazzled the eyes, but the ring action in New York was a snooze-fest worthy of a lullaby. On Saturday night in Riyadh Canelo Alvarez, the grizzled maestro of the squared circle, carried the baton from Messrs. Lopez, Haney, and Garcia, and shared it with William Scull, who ranโor rather, shuffledโhis way to a forgettable loss. Was Scullโs grin during his undisputed super middleweight challenge a sign of confidence or just glee at the life-changing paycheque? Fans, meanwhile, wanted to erase that performance from their memory.
While New York and Riyadh flopped on boxingโs grand stages, Japanโs hitman, undisputed super bantamweight champion Naoya Inoue, reminded us why this sport reigns supreme. Facing Ramon Cardenas, a man whose left hook had a reputation but not a spotlight, Inoue stepped into Las Vegasโ T-Mobile Arena eager to dazzle an expectant crowd. Cardenas, however, didnโt come to play tourist. This wasnโt just a step up from his San Antonio slugfest against underdog Bryan Acostaโit was a cannonball dive into shark-infested waters.
Round two flipped the script when Cardenasโ left hookโa surprise party Inoue didnโt RSVP forโsent โThe Monsterโ to the canvas, echoing Luis Neryโs shock knockdown in May 2024 at the Tokyo Dome. Inoue, unshaken, rose with a mean streak, his crosses and hooks eventually dismantling Nery. Cardenas, unfazed by Inoueโs aura, unleashed his left hook, a thunderbolt blow that either connected or whizzed by like a warning shot. Great champions, though, thrive in chaos. Inoue, with resilience as fierce as his punches, dove back into the fire.
As I watched round four, goosebumps prickledโeither from the UKโs chilly Monday dawn or the sheer spectacle of high-stakes Vegas boxing. Cardenas landed body shots that pushed Inoue back, but โThe Monsterโ adapted, his combinations flowing with their trademark venom. The crowdโs gasps and gawking jaws became the fightโs soundtrack, amplifying the drama. Cardenas, trapped in corners, fought out like a man refusing to fold. His stock soared with every defiant swing, transforming him from underdog to super bantamweight contender.
In the seventh, Cardenasโ tank began to sputter under Inoueโs relentless assaults. Sensing blood, Inoue floored him with body shots and crisp right hands. Cardenas, ever the gambler, rolled the dice for one last stand, but Inoue, boxingโs ruthless closer, ended it in the eighth at 0:45. A jolting right hand and a final uppercut prompted referee Thomas Taylor to wave off the contest, closing the curtain on a 72-hour boxing marathon that saved its best act for last.

Another scare for Inoue, then, but another masterclass in why heโs a multi-weight champion, two-time undisputed, and pound-for-pound elite. Heโs edge-of-your-seat entertainment, proving boxingโs unmatched theatrical flair. Cardenas, meanwhile, showed what fighting for an undisputed title demands. His skill and power wonโt be forgottenโLuis Nery, youโve got mail.
Inoue had the last word in a post-fight interview, reflecting on his fight-week claim when heโs happiest in the ring: โI think watching the fight tonight everybodyโs very much aware I like to brawl.โ Boxing, still the king of sporting drama, is thrilled he does.