VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 359: The Moment It Stops Being Your Fight
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- Chapter 359: The Moment It Stops Being Your Fight

Chapter 359: The Moment It Stops Being Your Fight
Masahiro feels it settle in his chest like a quiet weight. He has dealt with difficult fighters before, fighters with egos, impatience, and hunger. But this is different. This isn’t something he can shut down with authority or correct with instruction.
Liam isn’t challenging him emotionally. He’s asserting reality. And Masahiro knows exactly how thin that line is.
Liam has never signed long-term, always only two-year contracts, every time, since he walked into Raging Fox at nineteen with clean fundamentals and eyes that didn’t wander.
Nineteen to twenty-one. Twenty-one to twenty-three. Each renewal is short. Each one a reminder that this partnership continues only as long as it makes sense to Liam.
And the current contract has less than a year left. If he says the wrong thing here, dismiss the wrong warning, Liam could simply leave. Another gym would welcome him instantly. Not because Masahiro failed him, but because Liam has outgrown the need to tolerate blind spots.
Masahiro knows best not to corner him further.
He straightens his posture, smooths the edge from his expression, and lets the tension dissipate as if it never existed.
Then, evenly, he asks, “Is he really that good?”
The question is measured, neutral, as though the sharp exchange moments ago never happened.
Liam studies him for a beat, then nods. “Yes, better than we’ve been valuing him.”
Masahiro’s eyes tighten slightly.
“And that style,” Liam continues, voice calm, analytical. “You can’t read it naively and expect to beat it. If you skim the rhythm, you get hit. But if you try to read it too deeply…”
He pauses, fingers shifting unconsciously, echoing the pendulum motion he just faced.
“…it pulls you in. You start matching it. Breathing with it. Moving when it wants you to move.”
His gaze drifts briefly toward the blue corner. “That’s when you’re trapped inside his cadence. And once you’re there… it stops being your fight.”
Masahiro doesn’t reply right away. He looks toward Kenta sitting quietly across the ring. And for the first time tonight, Masahiro understands the problem clearly.
Not that Kenta is dangerous. But that underestimating him would be.
Masahiro exhales, slow and controlled. “Alright,” he says. “If you can’t read him too deeply…”
“Yes,” Liam cuts in calmly, finishing the thought without impatience. “I have to break the rhythm by force. And to do that, I’ll need to take risks.”
He pauses, eyes steady. “Maybe even ignore a few punches.”
Masahiro studies him for a brief moment, and then gives a small nod.
He doesn’t argue, because the conclusion matches his own. And that, more than anything, tells him what he needs to know. Liam isn’t like his senior Hanazawa.
He’s younger, but smarter, wiser, understands the cost of his choices, and accepts it without bravado. That alone marks the difference.
***
Moments later, the referee’s voice cuts through the tension.
“Seconds out.”
Trainers step down from the apron. Stools are pulled away. The ropes shudder softly as the ring empties, leaving only the two fighters behind.
Kenta remains where he is, posture loose, arms hanging at his sides as if at rest. But the stillness is deceptive. His focus has sharpened again, eyes clear, breath even, the subtle sway already returning to his head.
Across the ring, Liam looks different now. He rolls his shoulders once, then again. Shakes out his arms. Tilts his neck to one side, then the other, loosening tension.
Finally, he slaps his cheeks sharply, once, hard enough to echo faintly under the lights.
Up in the press row, Sato straightens in his seat. “…That’s rare,” he mutters. “You don’t see Kuroda like this in the second round.”
“What now?” Tanaka says, leaning forward. “Is he planning to go full throttle already?”
Sato exhales. “Looks like Kenta got to him… in just one round.”
The implication hangs heavy. Down below, the referee steps back, eyes moving between them.
The arena quiets, anticipation tightening like a drawn wire.
And then…
Ding!
Round Two.
“Here we go,” the commentator says, voice lifting with excitement. “This is where Liam Kuroda usually takes control… let’s see how he answers back.”
Kenta moves first, drifting toward center with that same lazy stride, the pendulum already visible in his upper body. His gloves float at chest height, loose, almost careless.
But this time, Liam doesn’t give him the room he took in the first round. Instead of angling out, he steps straight in to meet him.
A jab snaps out, sharp and purposeful, followed immediately by a tight lead hook.
Kenta lifts his right glove and absorbs the jab cleanly, sliding back as his heels kiss the canvas. He gives a light bounce on his toes, instinctively searching for the space where his rhythm lives.
But Liam denies it. He follows, closing the gap again before Kenta can settle.
The pressure comes fast now, four punches at mid-range, thrown compact and disciplined. Two jabs to occupy the guard, a straight cross splitting the line, then a short lead hook to finish.
Kenta is forced to work. Gloves rise, forearms turn, shoulders roll. He blocks one, deflects another with his upper arm, slips just enough to keep the shots from landing clean.
But there’s no sway yet, no pendulum. He’s busy reacting, not flowing.
And Liam feels it, and keeps the pressure. He lowers his level, steps in deeper, tightening the screws.
One–two at jaw height.
Dug. Dug.
Then a sharp body shot, compact and fast, digging in with a dull sting.
Thud!
Kenta braces, widens his stance, absorbs it, and fires back with two sharp hooks, snapping them from close range.
Liam catches the first on his forearm, ducks under the second, and starts to load an uppercut. But he sees the twitch in Kenta’s right glove and thinks better of it, stepping back instead.
“That’s high-level boxing right there,” one commentator says quickly. “Both men throwing fast and tight, and still making reads in the middle of it.”
“Exactly,” the other adds. “Nothing wasted, nothing reckless. Even when it’s explosive, they’re seeing everything.”
Kenta doesn’t chase the retreat. Instead, he uses the space.
The rhythm starts quietly, just a slide of the lead foot first, forward and back. Another slide, and then sway returns, subtle but alive.
Then both feet glide forward together, and the cadence comes with him.
Jab. Jab. Lead hook.
Liam blocks the first two without concern.
Dug. Dug.
He ignores the hook to the ribs entirely…
Thud!
…and clenches his right knuckle instead.
As Kenta begins to add the cross, Liam fires first, a compact punch, short and fast.
Dsh!
The right hand lands clean across Kenta’s face, snapping his momentum short. Kenta’s own right stalls mid-throw.
He pulls both arms back instinctively as his guard reforms. And Liam is already inside, letting his hands go at close range.
Kenta blocks and deflects, angling his guard, rolling his shoulders. But…
Dug. Dug.
Thud. Dug. Dug. Dsh!
…three shots still find their way through. Two thud hard into his ribs and gut, and the last cracks against his left cheek.
Kenta stumbles. His rear foot slides back as he fights for balance, head snapping to the side.
Liam bends left, already committing to a hook to the body.
Kenta sees it. His eyes drop for an instant, sharp, almost feral. He doesn’t lower his guard. Instead, he clenches his right fist.
Liam swings.
But Kenta fires first.
Dhuack!
The punch detonates across Liam’s face, snapping his head back violently. The hook still comes, but at a ruined angle, hitting the ribs just slightly, skimming uselessly across Kenta’s chest.
The arena sucks in a breath all at once. To their eyes, both punches still land, looking sharp and dangerous.
Liam retreats immediately, creating space, guard high. Kenta doesn’t pursue. He steadies where he stands, feet set, chest rising, eyes locked forward.
“What a collision!” one of the commentators shouts. “This fight just caught fire… both men willing to stand their ground and trade!”
“The first round was intense,” the other adds, “but this… this is another gear entirely. Neither fighter backing down, and both landing shots that matter!”
The crowd roars now, fully alive.
But somehow, after that exchange, the tone shifts. The rhythm breaks.
Both fighters circle with more caution, hands high, respect freshly earned. Whatever this fight was before, it isn’t that anymore.
Liam had said he was prepared to ignore a few punches. But that last one landed with enough weight to force a rethink.
Barely two minutes have passed in the second round, and already they’ve traded more danger than most fights see in an entire frame.
Across from him, Kenta isn’t solving anything tonight. He isn’t planning, isn’t calculating. His mind has gone quiet, attention fixed on chasing that strange pull he felt back in the locker room.
He knows a few of Liam’s punches have landed, knows they sting. But pain doesn’t register as a reason to stop.
Kenta steps forward, not straight in, but sideways, cutting Liam’s escape with a subtle left–right sway, hips and shoulders moving together.
Each step narrows the ring, herding Liam toward the ropes. And for the first time tonight, there’s hesitation on Liam Kuroda’s face.
“Is Kuroda feeling it now?” a commentator asks, voice rising.
“He’s usually the one controlling space… but Moriyama’s starting to pressure him.”


