From flop to fireworks: Inoue and Cardenas reiginite boxing’s spark

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 nightโ€™s 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 ranโ€”or rather, shuffledโ€”his way to a forgettable loss. Was Scullโ€™s 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 boxingโ€™s grand stages, Japanโ€™s 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, didnโ€™t come to play tourist. This wasnโ€™t just a step up from his San Antonio slugfest against underdog Bryan Acostaโ€”it was a cannonball dive into shark-infested waters.

Round two flipped the script when Cardenasโ€™ left hookโ€”a surprise party Inoue didnโ€™t RSVP forโ€”sent โ€œThe Monsterโ€ to the canvas, echoing Luis Neryโ€™s 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 Inoueโ€™s 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 prickledโ€”either from the UKโ€™s chilly Monday dawn or the sheer spectacle of high-stakes Vegas boxing. Cardenas landed body shots that pushed Inoue back, but โ€œThe Monsterโ€ adapted, his combinations flowing with their trademark venom. The crowdโ€™s gasps and gawking jaws became the fightโ€™s 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 Inoueโ€™s 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, boxingโ€™s 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.

naoya inoue celebrates
Inoue wins another thriller.

Another scare for Inoue, then, but another masterclass in why heโ€™s a multi-weight champion, two-time undisputed, and pound-for-pound elite. Heโ€™s edge-of-your-seat entertainment, proving boxingโ€™s unmatched theatrical flair. Cardenas, meanwhile, showed what fighting for an undisputed title demands. His skill and power wonโ€™t be forgottenโ€”Luis Nery, youโ€™ve got mail.

Inoue had the last word in a post-fight interview, reflecting on his fight-week claim when heโ€™s happiest in the ring: โ€œI think watching the fight tonight everybodyโ€™s very much aware I like to brawl.โ€ Boxing, still the king of sporting drama, is thrilled he does.

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