Junto Nakatani has been turning the heads of hardcore boxing aficionados since he campaigned at flyweight, but bantamweight looks to be the best weight class yet for the 26-year-old three-division world titleholder.
Nakatani (28-0, 21 KOs) made the first defense of his WBC 118-pound title a quick outing by blasting battle-tested Vicente Astrolabio with a body shot in the opening round of their main event at the Kokugikan sumo arena in Tokyo on July 20.
The bout was streamed live on ESPN+ in the early morning hours in the U.S. The southpaw boxer-puncher is no stranger to the platform thanks to a close relationship between his Japanese promoter and Top Rank, which announced an official co-promotional agreement with Nakatani earlier this week.
The oldest promotional company in the U.S. and the sports network giant recognize a special talent when they see it. And Nakatani, who has trained in Southern California with veteran coach Rudy Hernandez since he was a teenager, is a talent that can build fan bases in his native Japan and in the U.S.
Nakatani’s impressive victories against Angel Acosta (in defense of his WBO flyweight belt in September 2021) and Andrew Moloney (the 2023 KO of the Year for the WBO 115-pound strap) took place in the U.S. and were televised on ESPN.
His last three bouts – a WBO 115-pound title defense against Argi Cortes, WBC bantamweight belt-winning KO of Alexandro Santiago, and the first-round blitz of Astrolabio – were all streamed on “The Plus” from Japan.
Going forward, U.S. fans can expect to see Nakatani fight in America at least once a year. Wherever he fights, he’ll be introduced as one of the best fighters, pound for pound, in the sport.
As a domestic-level prospect coming up on the Korakuen Hall circuit in Tokyo, Nakatani collected the scalps of two future world titleholders – Masamichi Yabuki (currently The Ring’s No. 6-rated junior flyweight) and Seigo Yuri Akui (the current WBA flyweight beltholder and The Ring’s No. 2 contender).
He scored back-to-back stoppages of seasoned Filipino veterans Milan Melindo and Giemel Magramo – both Ring-rated at the time – in 2019 and 2020. The Magramo victory earned Nakatani his first world title, the vacant WBO 112-pound belt, and he’s defeated six Ring-rated fighters in seven subsequent bouts. Astrolabio (19-5, 14 KOs) entered their bout as The Ring’s No. 7-rated bantamweight.
“Nakatani smashed his WBC mandatory challenger (Astrolabio) in the opening round,” said Anson Wainwright. “Nakatani threw down the gauntlet to the other bantamweights and also a nod to Naoya Inoue. I can’t wait.
“Move Nakatani above Errol Spence in the pound-for-pound rankings.”
The Ring Ratings Panel unanimously agreed with Wainwright’s suggestion.
RING RATINGS UPDATE (as of July 20):
POUND-FOR-POUND – Nakatani advances to No. 9.
WELTERWEIGHT – Alexis Rocha remains at No. 9 after outpointing previously unbeaten Santiago Dominguez over 10 rounds.
BANTAMWEIGHT – Nakatani remains at No. 1. Astrolabio exits. Seiya Tsutsumi (11-0-2, 8 KOs) enters at No. 10.
Wainwright suggested former flyweight beltholder Daigo Higa, who has campaigned at 118 pounds since 2020, to enter at No. 10.
Jake Donovan suggested Tsutsumi.
Added Wasim Mather: “I don’t mind Higa coming in at No. 10 at bantamweight, but recently he’s faced some Thai opponents who, while world-ranked, are past their primes – like Sirichai Thaiyen and Nawaphon (who lost to Astrolabio). He’s fighting for the WBO bantamweight title in September, so bringing him in at No. 10 seems fine to me. However, is there anyone else we can consider?”
“I also toyed with Tsutsumi,” said Wainwright. “He and Higa fought to a (10-round) draw (in October 2020). I know what Wasim means about the Thais being past their best but Higa took Nawaphon out in four, while Astrolabio went 11 and it wasn’t without controversy. So I thought that was a good tie-breaker.”
Added Daisuke Sugiura: “Tsutsumi or Higa is difficult. Higa is still a bigger name but I’m also OK with Tsutsumi, who beat two qualityJapanese fighters in (Kazuki) Anaguchi and (Riku) Masuda last year.”
Your favorite Editor-In-Chief agreed with Donovan’s suggestion.
JUNIOR BANTAMWEIGHT – Jonathan Rodriguez exits the rankings after failing to make weight for his title shot at Kosei Tanaka by more than six pounds (thus nixing the fight and leaving him inactive for more than a year). KJ Cataraja (17-0, 13 KOs) enters at No. 10.
“No obvious candidate,” admitted Wainwright, “so I’ll suggest Argi Cortes. He’s come up short but hung with (Juan Francisco) Estrada and Nakatani.”
Donovan suggested Cataraja (which was co-signed by Yours Truly).
“I like KJ Cataraja,” he said. “No real strong choice for 10 but I’m not a fan of ranking guys off of a competitive loss without qualifying wins.”
FLYWEIGHT – Anthony Olascuaga enters at No. 8 after blasting Riku Kano in three rounds for the vacant WBO belt.
Wainwright suggested No. 10. Adam Abramowitz suggested No. 9. Donovan suggested as high as No. 7.
JUNIOR FLYWEIGHT – Carlos Canizales remains at No. 5 following a 12-round majority decision over Ivan Balderas.
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The post Ring Ratings Update: Junto Nakatani moves to No. 9 in P4P rankings appeared first on The Ring.