VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 466: The Price of Comfort

Chapter 466: The Price of Comfort
Round four begins without any visible change, and that’s exactly what unsettles Nakahara.
Takata resumes his rhythm as if nothing could touch it. Jab. Step out, reset, the same calm geometry, the same measured pace.
Nakahara’s eyes narrow, observing more intently now.
Takata pivots again, clockwise, clean and practiced. Sonoda follows a half-step later than before. Still nothing lands, but the distance shrinks just a little.
“…Hope you see it,” Nakahara mutters under his breath.
Aramaki blinks. “See what?”
Aki glances sideways. “Oh, did Coach Nakahara already find something? A flaw in Takata’s rhythm?”
Sato shakes his head, eyes still on the ring. “Honestly? This fight looks decided. Takata’s too comfortable. Sonoda can’t get close.”
Nakahara doesn’t look at them. His gaze stays locked on Takata’s feet, his shoulders, the way he exits exchanges.
“When things go smoothly,” he says, “you stop exploring and start repeating.”
Takata jabs again, same angle, with same pivot.
“That’s comfort,” Nakahara continues. “And comfort creates patterns.”
On the ring, Sonoda steps not forward, but sideways, edging into the space Takata is about to claim. Takata still gets out, but it takes him a breath longer.
Tanaka’s brow furrows. “You’re saying… that’s a problem?”
“It becomes one,” Nakahara replies. “If Takata doesn’t notice it before his opponent does.”
He finally leans back slightly. “Patterns are only safe when you own them. Once the other guy reads them… they turn into weaknesses.”
He turns slightly toward the journalists. “Most of the time,” he says, voice low, “it’s comfort that does the most damage. It’s what stops you before you ever realize you’ve stalled.”
***
Round five opens with Takata moving the same way he has all night. Same glide, same jab, same economical rhythm that’s carried him this far.
Nakahara leans forward, fingers interlaced. “Careful, Takata.” he mutters. “That Sonoda… he’s noticed it.”
Aramaki’s shoulders tense, and he subtly leans forward without realizing it. Around him, the others shift in their seats too, pulled closer by the weight in Nakahara’s words.
Watching alone, it would’ve just been a clean exchange. Watching beside an expert like the old man, the fight stops being entertainment and turns into a lesson.
Takata flicks the jab again, and Sonoda answers with a half-step counter.
It’s subtle. Sonoda doesn’t slip all the way inside. He pulls his lead foot back just half a step as Takata’s jab extends, letting it skim air, then snaps a short counter straight into Takata’s body.
Thud!
Not loud, not dramatic, but real.
“Oh?” the commentator reacts. “Sonoda finally getting something back.”
Takata resets, circling out, expression unchanged, but his feet land a fraction heavier.
The jab comes again. And this time Sonoda is ready. Half-step back, shoulders tight, then…
Bang!
…a compact hook to the body, followed by a brief crowding of space before Takata pivots away.
The crowd stirs, sensing the shift.
Nakahara exhales through his nose. “There it is,” he says quietly. “That half-step.”
Takata’s rhythm sharpens, jab snapping faster now, less exploratory and more insistent. But Sonoda isn’t chasing anymore. He’s waiting, reading, setting traps in that same moment; jab, half-step, counter.
Nakahara tilts his chin slightly toward Aramaki, eyes never leaving the canvas.
“Watch that,” he says. “Half-step counter. Once you see it, you will understand.”
Aramaki stiffens, nodding.
But Sato leans forward suddenly. “Hey… that’s familiar.”
Aki glances at him. “Familiar how?”
Tanaka keeps his eyes on the ring. “Didn’t Aramaki do something like that against Hanazawa? Remember the spear jab to the body. He kept using it. Over and over.”
Sato nods. “Right. Hanazawa tried to counter it. And that’s when Aramaki pulled back half a step, and countered that.”
Nakahara gives a short grunt. “Mm. Yeah, same move.”
Aramaki looks up, surprised. “Same how? I don’t think so.”
“The movement is,” Nakahara says. “Not the idea.”
Tanaka blinks. “What do you mean?”
Nakahara finally turns his head slightly.” It’s like an anti-thesis,” he says flatly. “Sonoda’s doing this by reading Takata. Takata gets comfortable, repeats, creates pattern. Sonoda notices, and punishes the pattern.”
Then Nakahara taps Aramaki’s knee once. “What this guy did was the opposite.”
The three journalists ignore the fight entirely, turning their attention to Nakahara.
“He didn’t wait for a pattern,” Nakahara continues. “He created the pattern himself. He fed Hanazawa the same spear jab until he believed in it. When he tried to counter, Aramaki stepped back half-step, and countered the counter.”
“Oh, right,” Ryohei says suddenly, tapping his cheek with a finger. “I did the same thing, didn’t I? My last fight in the Class A tournament. That counter that sealed it.”
Kenta nods. “Me too. The last punch I landed on Liam Kuroda.”
Nakahara answers without looking away from the ring. “That was still a half-step counter. Just a different vehicle. You two did it through pendulum rhythm, drawing the opponent in, letting them commit, stepping back half a beat, then firing.”
Ryohei frowns slightly. “But the idea’s the same as Aramaki’s.”
“It is,” Aramaki says quietly. “Because it came from the same place. It’s all Ryoma’s idea.”
Tanaka and Sato, who’s only spared the ring a few seconds, turn back toward them at once. This is the first time they’ve heard the source of those decisive moments, the ones that made Nakahara’s fighters look like they’d jumped several levels overnight.
“You’re saying…” Sato trails off. “Ryoma taught all of you?”
Tanaka glances at Aki. “Didn’t you mention something like this before? Aramaki’s ’secret weapons’?”
Aki grins and nods. “I told you. If you want to see interesting things, you should drop by Nakahara’s gym more often. You get to see Ryoma not only as a boxer, but also as a trainer.”
Ryohei leans toward them, smiling wryly. “I hate to admit it, but yeah, he told me how it’s done. The kid was in the corner that night, remember?”
Tanaka turns to Nakahara. “I thought it was you…”
Nakahara snorts. “There’s no way I’d come up with something that roundabout.”
Aramaki smiles faintly. “If you rewatch Ryoma’s fights, you’ll see it. He loves playing with people’s heads, setting them up, making them believe, and then breaking that belief.”
***
The tension that had weighed on Aramaki since the opening rounds slowly loosens, then slips away almost without him noticing. The ring is still there, the punches still landing, but his thoughts drift, away from Takata, away from rankings and gates and invisible walls.
They drift instead to someone who isn’t here tonight. To Ryoma Takeda. The new OPBF champion.
The man who built traps instead of avoiding them. The one who treated patterns like toys, and opponents like collaborators in their own defeat.
Tanaka glances at Aramaki, catching the shift in his expression. “You know,” he says, smiling lightly, “with Nakahara’s eyes and Ryoma’s ideas behind you, you really don’t need to look so worried about your future.”
Sato nods in agreement. “Yeah. Whoever you end up facing next, I get the feeling you guys won’t just find a solution. You’ll find something extra.”
Aramaki doesn’t answer, but the knot in his chest eases.
Back in the ring, the fight takes an unmistakable turn. The result of Sonoda’s half-step counter becomes irritating.
Each time Takata reaches with his jab, a hesitation creeps in, the memory of that same counter waiting for him. And for a boxer who lives in comfort, he never considers punishing the repetition of that half-step counter, choosing safety over risk.
By sixth, due to the repeated body blows, his footwork slows. His circling widens. The clean glide from earlier rounds turns into something heavier.
By the seventh, the fight is ugly, clinch-heavy, broken rhythm. Long stretches of nothing punctuated by short grinding exchanges.
And somehow, all of it belongs to Sonoda. He decides when to step in, when to stall, when to steal another breath from Takata’s legs.
In the ninth, a short exchange near the ropes ends with Takata dropping to a knee, not hurt badly, but unmistakably down. And the arena explodes.
“He’s down! Takata Eisaku is down in the ninth!” the commentator shouts, voice cracking with disbelief. “This is not the fight we thought we were watching!”
Takata rises at eight, eyes clear but breathing heavier now, the calm polish gone.
“That changes everything,” the second commentator adds. “Takata’s been controlling this bout on points, but now he has to win rounds decisively… or risk letting this slip away completely.”
Sonoda doesn’t rush. He stalks patiently, forcing Takata to move on tired legs, every step a reminder that the rhythm has flipped.
“This is the danger of a slow burn,” comes the call. “Once the out-boxer loses his legs, the ring starts to feel very small.”
And for the first time all night, Takata looks like a man chasing the fight instead of conducting it.
When the final bell rings, there’s no suspense left. The judges’ decision goes to Sonoda, clear and unanimous.
Around Nakahara, the group exhales almost in unison.
“…Damn,” Ryohei mutters.
“Didn’t expect that,” Okabe adds quietly.
Even Tanaka shakes his head. “Losing on points,” he says. “For an out-boxer like Takata…”
Nakahara doesn’t smile. He just watches Sonoda’s hand raised.
“That’s boxing,” he says. “That’s how comfort breaks your momentum.”


