Four days after that humiliating defeat...
Renji wakes to a room that still slls of alcohol and antiseptic. Late morning light leaks through the curtains and lands directly on his swollen face, forcing him to squint through an eye that does not fully open.
The skin around his right temple feels tight, the stitches pulling whenever he shifts. His cheek remains puffy, the bruising a dark gradient that has not yet decided whether it wants to fade. His head throbs with a stubborn rhythm that has nothing to do with punches anymore.
The phone begins to ring on the nightstand. But he does not bother to check the screen to know who it is.
"Argh, shit. My head..."
The vibration drills into his skull. He exhales slowly and reaches across the sheets, pressing reject without lifting his head from the pillow.
But the silence only last for three seconds before the phone rings again. He takes a look; a call from his fiancée.
This ti, Renji accepts the call without moving from his position. Before he gets the chance to greet her...
[What is wrong with you?]
...her voice bursts through imdiately.
[Four days, Renji. Four days you’ve been ignoring .]
Renji closes his eyes, his jaw tightening as irritation builds behind the hangover haze. His mind stays empty, not even bothering to search for an excuse.
And the girl doesn’t even stop the rambling.
[I know you lost. I know it was important. But I’m your fiancée. I should matter more than a fight with so random guy. It’s not even a title fight.]
But Renji still says nothing.
[You think shutting everyone out makes you strong? It makes you selfish. Do you know how humiliating it is? People asking what happened, and I don’t even know because you won’t even talk...]
Renji lifts the phone and knocks it lightly against the edge of the nightstand.
Crack!
Her voice distorts mid-sentence as the screen splinters.
Renji lets the broken phone slip from his hand and hit the floor with a dull sound. Then he presses his right forearm over his eyes again, as if darkness might erase the fight, the noise, and the humiliation.
But it cos back anyway.
"Renji Kuroiwa is too experienced to let this slip away."
"He just needs one opening."
"He’s always been a second-half fighter."
Yet Cabello’s punches slipped through, one after another, sharp and economical. The pivot, the angle, the clean impact.
The comntators had kept believing for him, their voices steady with manufactured certainty.
"Don’t blink, folks... Renji Kuroiwa is better than this."
"He won’t let it end without a fight."
But he had done nothing. His flicker jabs were neutralized, his counters cut through empty air, his power shots smothered at cruel angles.
Even when he tried to circle out, Cabello controlled the space without seeming to move at all.
Renji had tasted sothing like defeat once before, in a sparring session against Ryoma that he technically won on paper.
But this one is different.
Is this it?
Is this where it ends?
He feels hollow in a way bruises cannot explain. At twenty-seven, he had believed he was entering his pri, not exiting relevance.
Can he still improve at this stage?
Or has the world already asured him and found the ceiling?
Could he really rebuild and chase the title again?
Outside the gate, reporters gather in restless clusters, caras hanging from their shoulders, microphones already branded and ready.
They were there yesterday, and the day before that. And they return again today, trading rumors in low voices.
But they never catch a glimpse of Renji Kuroiwa. The curtains remain drawn, and the gate never opens.
Because Renji Kuroiwa—the pride of Japan, the forr symbol of dostic dominance—has not stepped outside since the night he returned ho with a swollen face and stitches along his temple.
***
Thankfully, the story of Renji’s loss does not burn for long.
Part of it is starvation, because Renji and Kirizu never appear. No statent, no apology, no promise of redemption.
Without footage, without quotes, without fresh wounds to examine, the headlines begin to thin.
RENJI KUROIWA REMAINS SILENT AFTER HUMBLING DEFEAT
FORR LIGHTWEIGHT KING UNREACHABLE
The speculation collapses into one hollow question repeated across forums and late-night panels:
IS RENJI STILL EVEN AROUND?
There is no answer. And the vacuum does what vacuums always do: it gets filled.
By the following week, the conversation shifts.
CHAMPION CARNIVAL FINALE SET
SINICHI YANAGIMOTO TO DEFEND TITLE AGAINST CLASS-A WINNER AYANO KOBAYASHI
Analysts begin drawing broader lines.
One column reads: "Renji’s era was built on dostic dominance, but the lightweight division has already moved forward. Sinichi Yanagimoto represents stability. He has proven himself repeatedly inside Japan, and consistency is what sustains a division."
Another offers a sharper contrast: "If Yanagimoto is the present, Ryoma Takeda is the disruption. Alienated at ho, he left Japan early and secured the OPBF title within nine professional fights. His ceiling appears significantly higher."
And the comparison becos unavoidable.
Ryoma’s OPBF title defense is scheduled for August at Yoyogi Arena, with a capacity exceeding twelve thousand seats. The purse bid alone sent regional and even international stakeholders into a frenzy, recalculating projections and scrambling to secure positioning around the event.
By the end of June, more than seven thousand tickets have already been sold, and the market curve continues to climb without artificial stimulus.
anwhile, Sinichi’s defense, positioned as the closing act of this year’s Champion Carnival, will take place at Nikkan Arena Tochigi, configured for five thousand spectators.
Historically, Sinichi’s fights have rarely filled even smaller halls to capacity. This ti, however, the numbers tell a different story.
In the vacuum left by Renji’s silence, the tone surrounding Sinichi changes from dependable champion to necessary standard-bearer.
One regional column fras it bluntly:
"When a symbol falls, the division looks for stability. Yanagimoto may not carry Renji’s aura, but he carries sothing equally valuable now—reliability. In uncertain tis, that may be exactly what Japanese lightweight boxing needs."
By the day before fight night, ticket sales surpass forty-five hundred, already exceeding expectations. As the hours tick toward the opening bell, late purchases continue to close the gap, pushing the event toward a near sellout.
***
And Sinichi answers the swelling expectation without hesitation.
From the opening bell, he boxes with a composure that feels newly sharpened. His jab lands like a asuring instrunt rather than a probe. His footwork carries him in and out of range with quiet precision.
He switches stance fluidly, southpaw to orthodox and back again, forcing Ayano to reset his guard over and over.
For three rounds straight, Ayano’s vaunted power never finds its footing. His swings cut through air. His pressure dissolves against angles that shift a fraction before impact.
Sinichi never rushes. He dissects each movent patiently and precisely, showcasing a mature, thodical style of boxing honed to perfection.
"Yanagimoto is in complete control here!" one comntator exclaims as another clean counter snaps Ayano’s head back. "This is a different level from the champion tonight!"
The crowd begins to rise with every exchange.
"Sinichi! Sinichi! Sinichi!"
"Sinichi! Sinichi! Sinichi!"
By the middle of round five, the rhythm changes.
Ayano attempts to step in behind a heavy right. Sinichi slips just outside the arc and plants his feet. The right hand buries itself into Ayano’s liver with a sickening thud that ripples through the arena.
Ayano’s posture folds for half a second, and it’s enough.
A straight left splits the guard.
Dsh!
In the sa motion, Sinichi switches to orthodox, pivots on his lead foot, and drives a sharp right uppercut up the center...
Bagh!
...and capped with a left hook crashing against the temple.
BAM!!!
The impact lands with clean, devastating force. Ayano’s mouthpiece falls free as he crumples onto the canvas.
"OH! THAT’S IT!"
"WHAT A FINISH FROM YANAGIMOTO!"
The referee steps in as the count becos a formality. The arena erupts, the chant returning louder than before.
"Sinichi! Sinichi! Sinichi!"
Under the bright lights, Sinichi Yanagimoto stands composed, gloves lowered slightly, as if this outco had been inevitable all along.
***
At the post-fight press conference, one reporter dares to ntion Ryoma Takeda, noting his upcoming OPBF defense.
"Yoshizawa-san, with Ryoma Takeda’s OPBF defense at Yoyogi, capacity over twelve thousand and almost eight thousand tickets sold, does tonight’s title fight feel overshadowed?"
Yoshizawa’s jaw tightens, and he doesn’t hold himself back. "Compare them as you like!" he snaps, his gaze sharp. "Whether Ryoma wins or loses his next title, we will send a formal challenge to his camp. It’s ti to decide who truly deserves to be the face of Japanese boxing. That’s if he doesn’t run away again this ti."
Another reporter presses, "Yanagimoto-san, do you welco a challenge from Takeda, given he already holds the OPBF gold?"
Sinichi leans forward, voice calm and unwavering. "I’m ready for anyone, anywhere. OPBF, world level, it doesn’t matter. If they want the challenge, I’ll take it head-on."
Caras click, notebooks scribble furiously, and the idea of a showdown between Japan’s champion and the OPBF titleholder ignites silent anticipation.
The story circles quickly, but doesn’t last long. When the dia later heads to Nakahara’s gym expecting a response, they find it empty. Nakahara has already departed for Ryoma’s training camp, a location that remains a tightly held secret even today.
Yet, despite the silence from Ryoma’s side, the buzz around the ga-event at Yoyogi only intensifies.
Ticket sales continue climbing, and speculation swirls about who will truly claim the spotlight in Japanese boxing this sumr, leaving reporters, fans, and promoters alike fixated on the upcoming August showdown.
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