VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 414: Not a Replacement

Chapter 414: Not a Replacement
A ripple of silence tightens the gym as attention snaps toward the office. Somewhere near the ring, a weight plate slips from careless hands and crashes against the floor.
“Hey, watch it,” Kenta barks, sticking his head out from the locker room.
“Y… yes, sir!” the youngster blurts, bowing too deeply, palms flat against his thighs, eyes still fixed on Nakahara’s office.
Inside the office, the tension lingers a moment longer. Then Nakahara exhales, long and tired, leaning back against the sofa as if conceding to gravity itself.
“…Fine,” he says quietly. “Do as you see fit.”
Relief flickers across Fumihiro’s face. But Ryoma isn’t finished yet. He steps forward, posture straight, gaze sharp, the edge that’s earned him his reputation finally surfacing.
“Let’s be clear,” Ryoma says, voice level. “We don’t owe you anything.”
Fumihiro blinks.
“I already had an agreement with the champion’s camp,” Ryoma continues. “If Sagawa withdrew and the event collapsed, I would still get my title shot later. On proper terms, with full preparation.”
He doesn’t raise his voice. He doesn’t need to.
“By accepting this fight now, I give that up,” Ryoma says. “I take the risk. I take the rushed schedule. I step in so you don’t have to pay for the loss of a canceled event.”
Fumihiro’s mouth opens. “No, wait. I never meant to imply…”
“So understand this,” Ryoma cuts in. “Don’t walk away thinking you did us a favor, or that you can collect on it later. I’m the one saving you here, and I’m doing it because I choose to.”
He meets Fumihiro’s eyes directly. “And I’ll bring the belt back to Japan,” Ryoma adds. “And if I accept Sagawa’s challenge after that, it’ll be because he’s earned it. Not because you think this bought you anything. Are we clear?”
The room goes still. Fumihiro draws in a slow breath, and then rises from his seat. Nakahara lifts a hand instinctively, worried that Ryoma’s words might have gone too far.
But Fumihiro bows. “That’s more than enough,” he says calmly. “I’ll inform the champion’s camp. I’ll handle the rest. Nakahara-san… thank you for your time.”
Nakahara nods. “Ah, yes… Safe travels, Fumihiro-san.”
Fumihiro leaves the office, crossing the gym floor without another word. At the door, his hand pauses on the handle. He glances back once, toward the office.
He still doesn’t understand Ryoma. But he understands why people misunderstand him.
The boy speaks like he sees everything; business, politics, even another fighter’s pride, as if they’re obvious truths. And maybe they are.
Coming from someone so young, it sounds less like insight and more like arrogance. Even when he’s right, his words are bound to offend those who don’t grasp his position.
And it hits Fumihiro like a slap.
He came with a plan, to turn a favor into leverage. But Ryoma overturned it, dragging the focus back to the ring, to the fighters who actually risk their bodies and live with the consequences.
“What an interesting kid,” Fumihiro mutters, smiling as he leaves the gym.
***
The news breaks quietly at first.
The next day, late in the evening, a press release appears on Southern Cross Promotions’ official channels, timed to catch both Australia’s morning cycle and Asia’s afternoon scroll.
OFFICIAL STATEMENT
Due to a rib injury sustained during training camp, Hirobumi Sagawa has been medically withdrawn from his scheduled OPBF title bout on February 25th.
After consultation with medical professionals and the OPBF committee, the championship bout will proceed as planned.
Replacing Sagawa will be Ryoma Takeda (Japan), currently ranked #4 OPBF, who has agreed to step in as the official challenger against reigning champion Jade McConnel.
The event date and venue remain unchanged.
There are no apologies, no drama. But within minutes, the response explodes. Ryoma’s name carries weight far beyond Japan, even far heavier than Sagawa’s.
In the Pacific circuit, he’s already known. The knockout over the Philippine champion still circulates in highlight reels, six rounds of mounting pressure ending in a single, violent finish. Commentators replay it.
Fans argue over it. Analysts resurface old footage.
“This is a better fight.”
“Dangerous replacement.”
“McConnel doesn’t get an easy night anymore.”
Australian forums light up. Southeast Asian boxing pages spike in activity. Even Western pundits, previously lukewarm on the Sagawa matchup, recalibrate their expectations.
A replacement fight becomes a main event with teeth.
Within two days, the fever has already reached back the OPBF champion’s camp.
Jade McConnel slams his fist into the heavy bag, the chain snapping tight above him. Sweat runs down his broad shoulders, catching in the light against sun-browned skin.
His hair—naturally golden, cut short—sticks to his forehead as he exhales through clenched teeth. He’s built clean for a lightweight: long arms, compact waist, muscle balanced for speed as much as power.
Since the announcement, there’s an edge to him. The replacement isn’t a downgrade. It’s a challenge.
And it pulls more out of him. His punches come tighter, faster, driven by eagerness rather than obligation, like a man finally given a fight worth preparing for.
Thud!
Thud!
Thud!
Each punch lands with bad intent. The bag swings hard enough to scrape the mat before Jade cuts it off with another shot, shoulders rolling, feet planted like he’s striking into the ground itself.
Above the gym floor, along the mezzanine built into one side of the high ceiling, Mark Holloway stands at the fence, observing in silence.
Beside him stands Isaiah Newman, tablet tucked under one arm, eyes flicking between the screen and the fighter below.
“Numbers are up,” Isaiah says. “Way up.”
Holloway doesn’t look away from his champion. “Define up.”
“Engagement doubled in forty-eight hours,” Isaiah scrolls his phone. “Japan’s buzzing. Southeast Asia’s eating it up. Even the Europeans are talking now. Takeda’s name travels better than Sagawa’s. Even before his fight with Paulo Ramos, the kid had already built massive global attention.”
Below them, Jade shifts his stance and unloads a short combination. The bag jerks violently, then settles into a slower uneven sway.
“So it worked,” Mark finally says.
Isaiah nods, leaning against the railing. “Better than expected. This isn’t a downgrade. People aren’t talking about replacement anymore.”
Holloway glances toward the gym floor, where the rhythm of training continues out of frame.
“We’ll need to adjust,” Holloway says. “Takeda isn’t Sagawa. Different tempo. Different instincts. Different pressure. And he’s known to switch styles mid-fight.”
Isaiah exhales, some of the tension leaving his shoulders. “Yeah. People keep calling Jade a rare breed because he can switch-hit, forgetting there’s a guy who changes his whole approach while the fight’s still moving.”
He taps the railing once. “But we saw this coming. We’d already mapped him out. Even before Sagawa got hurt, Ryoma was on the board.”
Holloway’s mouth curves faintly. “Good.”
Isaiah allows himself a small smile. “Lucky, too. Not many camps get a warning before the storm hits.”
Holloway glances at him, eyes sharp. “Luck doesn’t last long in this sport. Don’t get comfortable.”
Isaiah scoffs lightly. “Don’t tell me you’re worried about the kid.”
“I don’t want this fight,” Holloway says, eyes returning to his champion below. “But when his camp sent the request, Jade insisted. And I’m not going to look like a coward in front of my fighters.”


