Attack and never give up: Inside Japan’s deadly boxing scene

Attack and never give up: Inside Japan’s deadly boxing scene

The twin tragedies this month sent shockwaves through Japanese boxing, with authorities scrambling to investigate and under pressure to tighten safety.

Drastic weight loss, ferocious sparring and lax regulation have created a dangerous environment in Japanese boxing, as the sport battles for its future in the country after two fighters died.

Super featherweight Shigetoshi Kotari and lightweight Hiromasa Urakawa, both 28, fought separate bouts on the same card at Tokyo’s Korakuen Hall on August 2 and died days later following brain surgery.

Another Japanese boxer died after a bout in Tokyo in December 2023 and one more has been in a coma since May this year.

The twin tragedies this month sent shockwaves through Japanese boxing, with authorities scrambling to investigate and under pressure to tighten safety.

Although no clear causes for the deaths have been identified, several factors have emerged that paint a high-risk picture of Japan’s boxing scene.

“I believe it is safe but the results are everything,” Hideyuki Ohashi, manager and promoter of Japan’s undisputed super bantamweight world champion Naoya Inoue, told AFP.

“Three people have died (since December 2023) and that’s nothing to be proud of.”

Following the latest deaths, governing body the Japan Boxing Commission (JBC) held emergency meetings with the Japan Pro Boxing Association (JPBA), which represents boxing gym owners.

One issue under the microscope is the practice of boxers dehydrating to rapidly lose weight before a weigh-in, then putting it back on before a fight.

The practice is regarded as a factor in making the brain more susceptible to bleeding, the World Boxing Association says.

JBC secretary-general Tsuyoshi Yasukochi says the practice — which is also common in other countries — has only become widespread in Japan in recent years and its “safety is not fully understood”.

“We held classes on dehydration last year where the figure we presented was two to four per cent (of a boxer’s body weight) at the very most,” he told AFP.

“Japanese boxers nowadays lose 10 to 12pc in just a few days. I think that’s very dangerous.”

This file photo taken on September 3, 2024 shows the Japanese boxers Yoshiki Takei (R) and Daigo Higa in action. — AFP/File

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