VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 587: The Space Inside

Chapter 587: The Space Inside
Ryoma settles into the red corner, resting his arms along the ropes as the arena remains suspended in expectation.
From the upper bowl, the trumpet girl carries her melody to its final sustained note, clear and unwavering, before letting it fade into the vastness of the hall.
In that very instant, Kenji Matsuda lifts his arm.
“Long live the Chameleon King! Crown of the cruel, rule of the ring!”
And the Cruel King Army answers with a sharp, unified war cry that strikes the arena like a blade drawn from its sheath.
“RAAAAAHHH! Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!”
It is not chaos but command, the sound of soldiers acknowledging their standard.
Just as swiftly as it erupts, it ends. More than two thousand members return to their seats in perfect unison.
The house lights rise to full strength. The commentators finally allow their voices to return to normal register.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” one begins, steady but resonant, “this is what we have all been waiting for.”
“Tonight’s main event,” his partner continues, “twelve rounds for the OPBF championship. The reigning titleholder, Ryoma Takeda, versus the challenger, Thanid Kouthai.”
“The pageantry is over,” the first commentator says. “Now we find out if the king can rule when the crown is tested.”
As the commentators fall silent, the ring announcer steps carefully through the ropes from the neutral corner. He adjusts his jacket once, accepts the microphone from a staff member at ringside, and walks to the exact center of the canvas. In his left hand, he holds a small cue card; in his right, the microphone gleams under the full arena lights.
He turns slowly, acknowledging all four sides of the crowd, waiting until even the faintest murmur dissolves.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” he begins, voice resonant and deliberate, “this is the main event of the evening — Clash of Iron: OPBF Championship, proudly presented by Aqualis Labs!”
A swell of anticipation ripples outward.
“This bout is sanctioned by the Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation.”
He pivots slightly toward the judges’ table, then back to the crowd.
“It is for the OPBF Lightweight Championship of the world… scheduled for twelve rounds!”
Then he gesture a hand to his left. “Introducing first, fighting out of the blue corner…”
The spotlight shifts across the ring.
“Wearing black trunks trimmed with gold… standing one hundred seventy-four centimeters tall… twenty-five years of age…”
Thanid Kouthai stands upright near his corner post, chin level, shoulders loose but coiled. His gloves rest lightly at chest height, not in salute, not in arrogance, simply ready.
“Fighting out of Bangkok, Thailand…”
A small but passionate wave of cheers erupts from the scattered Thai sections.
“He holds a professional boxing record of ten victories, no defeats — nine wins coming by way of knockout! A reigning world champion in ONE Championship kickboxing…”
Now the applause grows sharper from the Thai pocket. A few men in suits at ringside, visiting Thai promoters, nod with visible pride, clapping firmly but without theatrics.
“The undefeated challenger… THANID ’BLACK THUNDER’ KOUTHAI!”
Thanid lifts his right glove once, high and steady, turning slightly so every side of the arena sees him. His expression does not change, no grin, only acknowledgment.
The Thai supporters answer with sustained applause. It is not loud enough to dominate the building, but it is fierce and unwavering.
Across the ring, at the commentary position, Sato leans slightly toward his friend Tanaka.
“Ten fights,” he notes. “Nine knockouts. That’s a ninety percent finish rate.”
Tanaka adjusts his sitting position. “At twenty-five years old, that’s a surprisingly short boxing résumé for a title challenger.”
Aki, seated beside them, answers calmly. “He only transitioned to boxing at twenty-three,” she says. “And he didn’t leave kickboxing behind. He’s still defending his world title in ONE Championship.”
Sato nods slowly as the implication settles. “He was originally in line to face Jade McConnel last year,” he adds. “But he had a mandatory kickboxing defense scheduled. McConnel moved on rather than wait.”
“And that,” Aki continues, glancing toward the red corner, “opened the door for Ryoma to snatch the belt before him.”
The camera pulls back to capture both fighters in frame, the undefeated dual-sport striker in blue, and the ceremonially crowned champion in red.
The introductions are only half complete. But the temperature in the arena has already changed.
***
The ring announcer turns smoothly toward the red corner, allowing the anticipation to crest before he speaks again.
“And now… fighting out of the red corner.”
The spotlight settles over Ryoma. He is no longer leaning against the ropes. Instead, he begins to move, lightly bouncing on the balls of his feet, shoulders loose, knees relaxed.
His gloves hang low for a moment as he rolls them in small, lazy circles, wrists turning in a rhythm that feels almost absentminded.
It is subtle, but unmistakable, a faint echo of the old Soviet cadence that shaped his foundation, economical and balanced.
“Wearing white trunks with crimson trim… standing one hundred seventy-three point eight centimeters tall… twenty-one years of age…”
A murmur travels through the crowd at the number.
“Fighting out of Tokyo, Japan…”
This time the response rises deep and unified, not shrill but powerful, like something earned rather than demanded.
“He holds a perfect professional record of nine victories, no defeats… seven wins coming by way of knockout.”
Ryoma shifts his weight from left to right, testing the canvas. His breathing is even. His eyes remain forward, never straying from the blue corner.
“And tonight, he defends his OPBF Lightweight Championship!”
The announcer draws in a final breath.
“Ladies and gentlemen — the reigning champion… Ryoma ’The Chameleon’ Takeda!”
The arena swells with sound. The Cruel King Army stands again in disciplined formation, flags raised just high enough to be seen. Around them, thousands more rise to their feet.
Ryoma lifts a single glove in acknowledgment, and then lets it fall. He’s no longer bouncing now, just standing there loosening his arms. Across the ring, the undefeated challenger watches closely.
***
The ring announcer steps back through the ropes and down to the apron, carefully handing off the microphone as the noise in the building swells and then steadies.
At the broadcast position, the lead commentator leans slightly toward his microphone. “There has been a long road to this moment. Not just tonight, but in the months leading here.”
Beside him, the analyst nods. “Ryoma Takeda was originally scheduled for a mandatory defense earlier this year. A hand injury delayed that bout, and the OPBF granted him an extension. It wasn’t without criticism.”
“Some felt a twenty-one-year-old champion hadn’t earned that kind of latitude,” the commentator adds. “Others believed the injury was legitimate and the division would be better served by waiting.”
“Then came the purse bid,” the analyst continues. “Half a million dollars to secure this fight. And Nakahara Boxing Gym didn’t just commit financially. They tied their reputation to this event. Four of their boxers have already fought tonight. Four wins. Now everything rests on their champion.”
The lead commentator folds his hands. “So the question becomes simple. Does Ryoma continue the momentum and justify the gamble? Or does Thanid Kouthai, undefeated and carrying a ninety percent knockout rate, leave the first stain on his record?”
The camera widens to capture both fighters stepping toward center ring as the referee calls them in.
In the ring, Ryoma steps out of the red corner with measured strides, shoulders loose, eyes attentive. Thanid leaves the blue corner without hurry, posture upright, chin slightly tucked.
They meet at center ring. And the referee looks from one to the other.
“Protect yourselves at all times. Obey my commands at all times. If I say break, you break clean. No punches after the bell. Touch gloves and return to your corners.”
Ryoma raises his left glove first. Thanid meets it without hesitation. The tap is firm, neither lingering nor dismissive.
They turn away at the same time. Back in their corners, Nakahara leans in with final words too quiet to carry. Across the ring, Kiet Anurak’s hands rest briefly on Thanid’s shoulders before he steps down from the apron.
***
The referee walks to the neutral side and signals to the timekeeper.
The arena tightens into silence.
And then…
Ding!
“There’s the bell,” the lead commentator says as both fighters step forward. “The opening round of tonight’s main event. Ladies and gentlemen, Ryoma Takeda vs Thanid Kouthai.”
Thanid advances before settling on the center ring. His stance is compact and slightly bladed, weight evenly distributed, elbows drawn tight along his ribs.
It is unmistakably rooted in his kickboxing foundation; stable, balanced, designed to absorb impact without giving ground. His lead leg plants firmly, rear heel barely lifting as he tests range with small, economical movements.
Ryoma circles to his left almost immediately with Philly influence. But instead of settling into a bladed defensive shell, he squares himself more openly in front of Thanid.
His left arm hangs low and loose, elbow resting near his side, forearm draped lightly across his midsection. The right glove hovers beneath his chin; not tight, not coiled, simply present. His shoulders are relaxed, posture upright, almost casual.
“He’s studying,” the lead commentator notes. “Squared stance, reading distance.”
Thanid does not wait long. He steps in first, and fires a sharp one-two down the center. The punches are fast, direct, thrown without flourish. Before the distance fully resets, he strikes again, this time one-one-two, testing not just range, but rhythm.
Ryoma does not flinch. As the first combination slices forward, he drags his rear foot back just enough to slide beyond the end of Thanid’s reach. It is a minimal adjustment, almost lazy to the untrained eye, but precise.
His gaze sharpens, already cataloging; angle, speed, commitment on the rear hand, and how far Thanid must step to close distance.
Thanid advances again, stepping in deeper this time, compressing the space. The pressure is steady, not reckless.
Ryoma understands he cannot keep giving ground without surrendering territory. His torso begins to move instead. A subtle roll under the line of fire. A tilt of the shoulders. A small dip that makes the next jab skim air.
Then he flicks out two jabs, light, snapping but not heavy.
Thanid catches both on his right forearm with little effort, absorbing them cleanly, measuring the weight behind the punches.
“So light,” he thinks.
There is speed, but no threat yet. And when Ryoma jabs, his head lingers in the same vertical line a fraction longer than expected.
Kiet’s voice echoes in Thanid’s memory. Forget the head. Aim for the body.
But the target tempts him. The right glove resting low near the chest, the chin faintly exposed in that squared stance.
“Okay, let’s see how good he is…”
Thanid plants his lead foot deeper into range and fires a sharp left toward the head, right hand already coiled to follow.
He is certain he will catch him.
Instead, Ryoma slips inside the line as if drawn by gravity. The left sails past his cheek.
In the same motion, he digs a tight rear hook into the body, the impact folding slightly into Thanid’s ribs.
“Damn… he got me.”
Before he can react, a quick lead uppercut snaps upward, followed instantly by a straight cross driven through the center.
Three punches in less than two seconds. And Thanid’s guard snaps back into position on instinct, elbows clamping down, gloves rising.
Thud! Dug. Dug.
The arena inhales as one organism. A violent collective gasp rips through more than twelve thousand throats, sharp and startled.
The commentators burst out, voice cracking through the stunned air.
“Oh! What a counter from the champion!”
“That was clinical! He slipped inside and punished him!”
Before Thanid can fire back, Ryoma is already half a step away, shoulders loose, eyes calm.
A flicker of irritation tightens Thanid’s jaw. He had seen the opening. He had committed with conviction. And still, he had been beaten to the space inside.
“Maan… this is going to be a long night.”


