Japan's Little Monster Has Too Much Firepower for Stephen Fulton

ArneK101

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Top Rank Promotions invited fight fans in North America to have breakfast with the Monster on Tuesday morning on ESPN+. The Monster, more formally Naoya Inoue, turned in a masterclass at Tokyo’s Ariake Arena, dominating defending WBC and WBO 122-pound champion Stephen Fulton en route to an eighth-round stoppage. In the process, the baby-faced Monster won a world title in a fourth weight division.

Philadelphia’s Fulton fought tentatively. Although he was the bigger man with a three-inch reach advantage, his jab was ineffective. The end came in round eight. Inoue hurt Fulton with a short right hand and then put him on the deck with an explosive left hook. Fulton got to his feet, but was greeted with a fusillade of punches that compelled the fereee to intervene. The official time was 1:14 of round eight.

In his previous fight, Inoue (25-0, 22 KOs) unified the 118-pound title with an 11th-round stoppage of overmatched Paul Butler. That made him the first fully unified bantamweight champion in the four-belt era and the first Asian to become a fully unified champion in any weight class. He will now attempt to unify the 122-pound class where Marlon Tapales owns the other pieces of the title. Tapales was in the building tonight and there is a tentative agreement in place for them to meet in the fall.

It was the first pro loss for Fulton (21-1, 8 KOs) who is expected to move up to 126 for a rematch with Brandon Figueroa.

Co-Feature

Cuban defector Robeisy Ramirez, who trains in Las Vegas under Ismael Salas, won his thirteenth straight fight, improving to 13-1 (8) while successfully defending his WBO world featherweight title with a fifth-round stoppage of Japan’s lanky, 37-year-old Satoshi Shimiza (12-2).

Both of these fighters were two-time Olympians with Ramirez winning gold medals in 2012 and 2016 and Shimiza capturing a bronze in 2012.

Ramirez was making the first defense of the title vacated by Emanuel Navarrete. He won the belt with a wide decision over Isaac Dogboe.

The end came at the 1:08 mark of round five. A left uppercut put Shimiza on the canvas. When he arose, blood was streaming from his nose and his mouth and after a few more punches, the referee waived it off.

Photo credit: Naoki Fukuda
 
I don't get into the pound for pound debate too much but do think it is clear right now that Inoue is the best fighter in the sport.

Also I don't think it was coincidental that Inoue and Ramirez fought on the same card in Japan. It seems that the marination has begun for this one, likely sometime later in 2024.
 
At Tokyo's Ariake Arena, Naoya Inoue put on a clinic, dominating Stephen Fulton, the WBC and WBO 122-pound champion, en way to an eighth-round stoppage.
 
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