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  • Writer's pictureJonathan Snowden

Live Results 6 Round Of Naoya Inoue Vs. Luis Nery Tonight

Round 6: IT’S OVER! Inoue had sent Neri down quite awkwardly. What a brutal finish! Inoue sends in a knockout punch, where Nery does not have a chance to get himself up again, with a lethal right uppercut followed by a straight right. This is a Straight up stunning success too. It keep appearing again and again, the monster named Inoue is once again on the stage with a glamorous display of the power.


Round 5: Inoue improvised 2 consecutive right hand and then use low-blow to hide his characters against Nery. He’s toying with him here. No, really, he’s boxing with him and the result is like he’s walking in a park. [Inoue doesn’t waste a moment however, as he lands a straight hand with the right only to have Nery surface again, courtesy of a killer left hook]. Nery regains his balance only to become more frustrated especially after a flurry of left hands from Inoue.


Round 4: In addition, I said some unbecoming things to his face when I connected with shots; I taunted him to come back at me. Inoue bonds, and does Nery also do the same thing?Laughs it off. His opponent, he notices he is not, is still punching and smiling at him; Inoue keeps throwing and exchanging laughs with Nery. Evidently, a punch from Inoue bewilders Halliday with some kickshots to his body. And, as we would expect, this one was also a real knocker.


Round 3: This time the speed was not high as it was before, but, yet, the intensity was present hardly. I squinned soon enough and whow I received a hard right hand. Then another one. Nery keeps changing the guard and coming in low with left side crosses, looking for the miracle, as the champion is now in charge.


Round 2: Control looks like Inoue consciously or unconsciously. In a sharp and unrelenting succession, from Japanese fighter, a crisp one-two combo was followed by a strong jab demonstrating a clear intent to win. The champion was decked with extra preparation for that last round as he envisaged his last slip up. Next, Inoue produced a two-right swing to the body then, connected with a sharp left hook followed by a crunching tumble on the canvas! Nery back up again. WE HAVE A WAR!


Round 1: It had hardly been a minute and Inoue was at it again, flaing his fist hard, his intention was to end the match at that point. It should indicate the importance and purpose of every sentence in the introduction. Punches went from the two fighters but not land perfectly. Within seconds, however, in some sort of heavenly thunder, Nery’s monstrous left hand strikes a jackpot, and Inoue falls to the ground like a bag of potatoes. It was not okay at all. He was in serious problem, and most of the time was in back, being hurt, and was unsure in going forward, next. It seemed unbelievable, since he did not only come up with it, but he eventually splashed into the water!


Jason Moloney (116-111, 116-111, 117-110) was bitten to the outs for this title by Yoshiki Takei who annihilated him.


Yoshiki Takei took the upper hand in the first stanza with his left shift jab operating range and having Jason splash without calmness in a water without shores. Takei got three flags for edging but Spakman has just missed his chances.


In the second minutes, however, Takei was punished a point, while also maintaining the blow which tore through Moloney's poor defence. This time a beautiful left to the body pulled Moloney off his feet. It was a match of power between unorthodox styles, underscored by Takei’s southpaw turn of hand. A pea-sized head shot felled "the so called champ" in the third round, and a heavyweight one-two combo dug into his ribs and left him coursing.


But now, with a point deduction, Goesly isn't all that ahead, counting five rounds of a hell-like match. He wasn’t even breaking a sweat yet Moloney could swear that him playing him like a violin, balancing his distance and catching him with hard shots whenever he tried to dribble in. The only hope for the Aussies was to go down on one knee for divine intervention, to be in their right place and state of mind to perform at their best.


Moloney, at last, revealed a few signs of life in the sixth after repeatedly bringing the fight in close. Takei, too, became unsettled. The one thing Tracy hadn't counted on was a right hook at the bell. It sent him stumbling back to his corner. It was as if he was performing like a headless chicken run amok – only movement, whitened out the brain.


In the eighth take, Moloney landed a clear right hand on the jaw (of Takei) and was leading the opponent. This they need to move forward. The KO came shockingly fast, and the Aussie was punished despite being still behind on the scorecard and needing a miracle to win.


With the final round knocking at the door, it became apparent that Moloney require an knockout to win the match. He had tried to keep up a brave face but was no match for someone who was F.U.B.A.R since the start till the end. He was endowed with fists aid in the haymaker.


Moloney's redemption came in the final round, where he kept hitting until the last three minutes and the man who wouldn't accept a simple defeat. But in that moment, the tiny effort was all I had - and it may be too little, too late. Installing the drive was to be a nightmare, but he knew how to cope with it.


And the New… Final scores: 18-09, 15-07, and 15-07 for Takei. Moloney never had a.ri.v.i.n.g prospect. Consequently, experiencing a mental collapse,


Meaningless reference Please rewrite this sentence.


Letdown in the first time he had to find his strength and standing out to fight back, which noticed him again instantly and provoked an action. By the time the final buzzer rang, the current bantamweight world champion had displayed exemplary resilience, having dominated the scores and added to his victorious run.


Takuma who was pacing himself well picked up the pace from the round two till the Ishida fell behind not being able to connect anything significant. True, Ishida exposed some evidence of his talent in some situations. However, when the matter had become more complicated most of the results were to Inoue's benefit already.


Ishida’s jab accidently gave the fifth round an edge, but Inoue’s punches of heavier value made the judging to stay safely in his favor. In the second half of the fight Ishida went down as Inoue kept on jumping after him (he created distance in every of his boxing gaps). Shoenae did no kind of hunting for the pace of Takuma was dreadful to him resembling a rush bag which has nothing to do with a fighter thirsting for triumph.


By the last round Ishida had to either knock out or rely solely on his guard. But through all the fatigue Ishida had received he was unable to muster even that energy. The judges didn't put much effort, as expected from a no-brainer or even a clear triumph for Inoue.


Seigo, the younger, triumphs against an older gambler, Taku (117-111, 117-111, 118-110).


The first round had come and gone, as the remote area for the fight was set a stage for the male warriors. By then, Kuwahara was with his stride, but in a twinkle of an eye he felt the stare of Akui who lock his target in tune with precision. A perfect bamboozle accompanied by a rapid-succession of a left jab, weaving into arm-shattering hooks and enhanced with powerful straight rights. Kuwa's brave and skilled fighting skills tend to make him overconfident and reckless. In no time, he easily moved from being swift and bold to concised, just giving little resistance by softly punching Akui with his basic two-punch combinations while Akui ruthlessly attacked him with his lefts and right powerfists.


The third round was dominated by Akui just as if it was a war machine. He was doing continuous straight punches and it looked like he had an endless supply of energy. He worked on a close distance with Kuwahara’s head and body during the entire fight. The sharp right hook from Akui overwhelmed Kuwahara, and a sum of all rounds showed that by the end of Round 6, Akui who had renewed his focus took his straight right like a guided missile.


Kuwahara might rarely get a chance to counterattack and it almost would make no difference to Akui, so she could close off every exit and use the looping hooks and foot crashing rights to devastate the other fighter’s defense. As the bell rang for the final round, Akui threw a haymaker which prompted Kuwahara almost like an unconscious soldier to lose balance. By tormenting against his opponent Akui he allowed the triumph by a majority of notes 117-111, 117-111 and 118-114.


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