VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 501: A Small Win That Travels Far
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- Chapter 501: A Small Win That Travels Far

Chapter 501: A Small Win That Travels Far
The referee’s voice cuts through the haze.
“Two… three…”
Kaga is on one knee, glove pressed against the canvas, the other arm hanging uselessly at his side. His chest rises and falls too fast, too shallow. Air goes in, but it doesn’t seem to reach anywhere that matters.
Physically, the damage is not catastrophic, nothing feels broken, no single punch screams for attention.
Satoru has never been a boxer who ends things with one crushing blow. He does not carry that kind of violence in his fists.
But what he did just now with his punches; five punches, hitting five different points; the ribs on both sides, then the jaw, the solar plexus, the base of the chin.
It was clean, precise, and unforgiving. Each one lands without warning, without waste. And together, they do something heavier than pain. They dismantle certainty.
“He doesn’t look broken,” the lead commentator says. “But there’s no way those shots didn’t hurt.”
“Five clean blows, all to different places,” his partner replies. “That kind of damage adds up fast.”
“But he has to get up,” the first continues. “It’s still too early in the fight.”
“Yeah… and he’s always been the finisher,” the other says. “People put a lot of faith in him tonight.”
Kaga blinks, staring at the canvas as if it has betrayed him. Just moments ago, he felt that this was his fight. He had dragged Satoru into chaos, into the kind of fight he has always won.
But now, for the first time in his career, he experiences something he has never had to face before, being the one on the canvas. It’s the kind of weight he doesn’t know how to lift.
Something inside him folds, not really his body, but his resolve. The confidence that usually carries his gloves disappears.
The thought creeps in, quiet and poisonous.
Even if I get up… what can I do.
He’s way above my level.
That thought terrifies him more than the punches.
From the apron, Coach Arinori’s voice cuts in sharply, refusing to let the silence take hold.
“Kaga! Get up!” His voice cracks through the noise. “It’s too early for this! You hear me?”
Kaga’s eyes lift, unfocused at first, then finding him. Arinori leans forward, one hand gripping the rope, the other clenched tight.
“You’re not done!” he shouts. “You’re winning this fight if you stand up. This is still yours!”
“Six…”
“Seven…”
Kaga looks at his coach like a drowning man looks at shore, aware it’s there, unsure he can reach it.
His fingers curl, as he then glances toward Satoru, standing calmly in the neutral corner, breathing even. He looks so ready, so composed. And that calm feels unbearable.
“Eight…”
Arinori’s voice rises again, almost pleading now. “Kaga! Look at me! Get up! You still have time. It’s not over yet!”
Kaga hears him. But the doubts don’t leave his head. If he stands, the fight will no longer be the one he wants. And that knowledge shakes him more than any punch ever has.
Eventually, the referee makes the decision. He stops the count and waves his hands.
It is Kaga’s first time touching the canvas like this. And when the count reaches him, he simply does not have the resolve to answer it.
***
For a split second, Korakuen Hall seems unsure how to react. Then the realization hits all at once.
“That’s it! It’s over!” the lead commentator shouts. “He couldn’t beat the count! Shigetaka Kaga is out!”
A beat passes, then the voices rise again, sharper now, almost disbelieving.
“What an upset!”
“No one had this happening tonight!”
“And look at how Yoshitomo did it. Clean, controlled, devastating. That might be the most convincing finish we’ve seen in this tournament so far.”
In the blue corner, Satoru sinks back against the padding. He closes his eyes, fists clenched at his sides. It isn’t triumph that settles over his face. It’s relief.
A long breath escapes him, the tension finally loosening its grip.
When he opens his eyes again, Hiroshi is right there. He grabs Satoru around the waist and lifts him up without warning.
“You did it, Satoru!” Hiroshi laughs, voice breaking. “It’s your first win. You finally did it.”
The arena erupts at last. The hesitation disappears, replaced by cheers rolling down from every section. People rise to their feet, clapping, shouting his name. A standing ovation spreads through Korakuen Hall.
And with just this first win, Satoru earns something he didn’t have before.
Supporters.
As he makes his way along the ropes, voices reach him from the seats, no longer uncertain, no longer dismissive.
“Good job, kid!”
“That was a real fight!”
“You’re way better than last time!”
“Keep it up!” someone calls. “I’ll buy a ticket for your next one!”
“And there it is!” a commentator says, voice warm with excitement.
“Satoru Yoshitomo gets his first professional win!”
“And not just a win. A statement. He stops the tournament favorite in the second round.”
“Some people did whisper about an upset coming. Nakahara Gym has a history of this, doesn’t it?”
“Yeah… underestimated, then knocking down giants.”
“And tonight, that tradition lives on.”
In the blue corner, Ryoma and Sera remain where they are, standing on the apron outside the ropes. They simply smile, pride showing in the smallest ways, as if this outcome was never in doubt. To them, it almost looks routine.
And for those who came solely to watch Ryoma Takeda in the role of chief second, this fight settles something as well.
To them, it doesn’t look like luck, or coincidence. It looks like foresight, like a victory that had been mapped out long before the bell ever rang.
The prodigy champion, now standing outside the ropes, proves he carries the same composure there as he does inside the ring.
In the press section, journalists murmur among themselves.
“He never panicked,” one says quietly.
“Did you see that timing? That wasn’t improvised.”
“For a chief second debut… that’s frightening.”
“The kid didn’t just win. His corner out-thought everyone in the building.”
As the noise swells and the result sinks in, one thing becomes clear to everyone watching.
This wasn’t just Satoru’s first victory. It was the moment both fighter and corner announced themselves; calm, and entirely unafraid of the stage.
***
The morning papers do not usually linger on a single win in the opening round of a rookie tournament. Normally, it earns a column inch at best; a name, a result, and quickly forgotten.
But this time, it doesn’t pass so quietly. Because the story does not really begin with Satoru Yoshitomo. It bends, inevitably, toward Ryoma Takeda.
“TAKEDA’S SHADOW STRIKES: PROSPECT FROM NAKAHARA GYM STUNS FAVORITE”
“ONE FIGHT, ONE LOSS—THEN THIS. WHO IS SATORU YOSHITOMO?”
“THE TAKEDA EFFECT: ROOKIE DROPS KANAGAWA’S RISING STAR”
The articles keep circling back to the same point.
Ryoma Takeda, fresh off a half-million purse bid that still dominates boxing talk shows, now appears at ringside instead of center ring. And in his first outing as chief second, his fighter delivers the night’s most convincing finish.
One column phrases it carefully: It may be premature to call this a breakout. But it is impossible to ignore the timing. Wherever Takeda stands, attention follows—and now, results do too.
Another is less restrained: This was not a lucky punch. This was structure. Preparation. A finish that looked rehearsed.
By midmorning, the narrative has already shifted. Satoru is no longer just ’the rookie who scored an upset.’ He becomes Takeda’s fighter. And that alone keeps his name alive far longer than the win itself ever should have.
Then, before noon, the second headline drops. The OPBF finally releases its official statement.
***
OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation (OPBF)
The Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation hereby announces the approval and sanctioning of the following championship bout:
OPBF Lightweight Championship Bout
Champion: Ryoma Takeda (Japan)
Challenger: Thanid Kouthai (Thailand) — OPBF #1 Ranked Contender
Date: August 24
Venue: Yoyogi National Gymnasium, Tokyo, Japan
This bout will be contested over twelve (12) rounds under OPBF rules and regulations.
The Champion, Ryoma Takeda, will make his first defense following his successful acquisition of the OPBF title. The Challenger, Thanid Kouthai, enters the bout as the division’s top-ranked contender.
All medical examinations, weigh-ins, and official procedures shall be conducted in accordance with OPBF standards.
Further details regarding the undercard and event operations will be announced in due course.
Issued by:
Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation
Championship Committee
***
Two major stories, the same gym, the same day, and the effect is immediate.
Local companies, sensing momentum, begin holding emergency meetings; quick calculations about exposure, branding, and timing.
Is it too late to get involved?
Or too early to miss?
Some don’t wait. By the next day, Nakahara’s office starts receiving visitors who hadn’t been there before, all of them eager to cut themselves a piece of the suddenly sweet cake.
Outside, hot stories are still circling around. Inside the gym, the future begins to feel suddenly crowded.


