VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 611: Crossroads in the Corridor
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- Chapter 611: Crossroads in the Corridor

Chapter 611: Crossroads in the Corridor
The bell rings for the fifth round, and Satoru steps forward with the same lazy pendulum rhythm, his sway deceptively calm. Four rounds in, he has controlled the tempo completely, forcing Uesaka to follow rather than lead.
But now, spurred by his corner, Uesaka pushes back, forcing himself into aggression again, trying to revert to the offensive style his trainer demands.
From the blue corner, Uesaka’s coach shouts with urgent energy, clapping and screaming,
“Come on, Uesaka! Push!”
“Break his rhythm! Don’t let him breathe!”
The crowd catches the surge, rising to their feet, the clamor swelling around the ring.
But Satoru remains composed, every movement measured, his eyes cool. Body hooks hit his ribs, glancing shots from the flurry, but he keeps the pendulum swaying steady, letting none of the power reach his head.
After more than a minute Satoru endures Uesaka’s assault, Ryoma leans forward in the red corner, eyes sharp.
“Half, Satoru. Half!”
Satoru acknowledges the cues, lowering his guard just enough to expose the head.
“Whoa! Look at that… Satoru lowers his guard!”
Uesaka, all frustration from the previous rounds and his obsession with landing a clean headshot, bites instantly. He overcommits, swinging a savage cross.
“He’s swinging for the head, desperate to land it!”
“If he lands that… oh, wait!”
Satoru steps back a half-step, narrowly avoiding the punch, then pivots his lead foot slightly and drives a compact right hook straight into Uesaka’s left ear.
“Perfect timing! Uesaka didn’t see that coming!
“That’s why they call Satoru deceptive. Lazy looks, but every move calculated!”
Uesaka staggers but does not fall. His balance wavers, guard drops, his body shifts to absorb the shock, but he stays on his feet.
Satoru doesn’t hesitate. He launches a rapid four-hook combination: three body hooks, left-right-left, followed by a right hook upstairs.
Bugh! Bugh! Bugh!
BAM!!!
The impact lands cleanly, and finally, Uesaka crumples to the canvas.
“And there it is! Four hooks in rapid succession. Three to the body, one upstairs! And Uesaka is down! The crowd is on their feet!”
“Unbelievable! Satoru stays perfectly composed, but that combination. Precision, timing, power! He’s making a statement tonight!”
The arena erupts. The crowd, initially drawn to the fight for Ryoma’s presence, now roars for Satoru himself.
“SA-TO-RU! SA-TO-RU! SA-TO-RU!”
The referee steps in, watching the fallen fighter carefully before signaling a TKO.
Satoru freezes for a heartbeat, chest heaving, then, joy breaking through his composure like a dam. He leaps on the spot and runs toward Ryoma, Coach Nakahara, Sera, and Hiroshi, who wait anxiously at the red corner.
The gym crew and friends in the stands cheer, laughing and clapping, swept up by his uncontainable excitement.
Okabe shakes his head, a bitter grin breaking through his usual tough-guy exterior. “Hmph… kid’s lucky he didn’t break anything in here,” he mutters, but the sparkle in his eyes betrays pride.
Aramaki, arms crossed, shakes his head with a teasing smirk. “Oh, are you crying now, Okabe? Come on! Get a hold of yourself.”
“Move it, move it!” Okabe calls, rising from his seat, pushing through the crowd. “Let’s give him his props before he starts thinking he’s invincible!”
He glances at Satoru and the team heading for the locker room, jogging to keep up.
In the VIP section, Hideo Kanemura rises as well, smoothing his jacket. “Come, Yoshida. Let’s meet them in the back before the press swarms.”
Yoshida nods, following him as they weave through the audience, making their way toward the isle, their attention clearly fixed on Ryoma and the fighter who just dominated the ring.
***
The hallway leading to the locker room is quiet, the crowd’s roar dimming behind the heavy doors. Only a few echoes linger.
There’s still a final in the Super Lightweight division to come, but for now, the air is thick with the aftermath of Satoru’s victory.
Even in this hallway, Kanemura can hear the sound of laughter and claps growing louder. Okabe’s voice carries first.
“See? Told you you’d pull it off, kid! That’s how you do it!”
Kanemura and Yoshida pause near the door, giving them a moment, letting the celebration carry on just long enough.
Satoru grins, wiping sweat from his brow, and throws a quick jab at Okabe’s shoulder. “Don’t start getting sentimental now,” Satoru says, chest heaving but eyes bright. “I’m not dead yet, you know.”
Okabe snorts. “Dead? You? Not in this lifetime. That right hook of yours… man, I almost thought I was watching a highlight reel instead of a live fight.”
Aramaki chuckles from the corner. “Watch it, Okabe. You’re going soft. Next thing you know, Satoru’s taking your spot as the gym’s resident heartbreaker.”
Satoru laughs along, but a pair of shadows moves quietly at the far end of the corridor.
When the laughter dies down a little, Kanemura finally approaches. His presence commands a subtle shift in the atmosphere; the casual energy of the corner tightens just slightly.
“Congratulations, Satoru,” Kanemura says, voice smooth, almost formal, but carrying genuine respect.
He then nods once at Ryoma. “And to you as well, Takeda-kun. You’ve proven yourself even as a trainer, despite your age.”
Ryoma blinks, caught slightly off guard. “Ah… thank you. I’m… sorry, may I ask? Do we know each other?”
Kanemura offers a faint smile and holds out a card. “Hideo Kanemura. I’m a representative from WBO headquarters.”
Ryoma blinks again, taking the card, then glances at Coach Nakahara, sharing a quiet, unspoken curiosity.
Kanemura shifts his gaze, finally resting on Nakahara, before offering a small bow of the head.
“Nakahara-san,” he greets. “I’ve wanted to meet you for some time. If you don’t mind, I’d like a word with you outside, briefly.”
Nakahara raises an eyebrow, gestures toward Ryoma. “Is this… about the boxer’s career? Just to let you know, Ryoma’s not a mere boxer in my gym.”
Kanemura’s expression flickers, a hint of remembered detail. “Ah, yes. That’s right. I heard Ryoma previously acted as co-promoter for the Yoyogi event.”
“Not just that one event,” Nakahara corrects, stepping closer. “Ryoma is co-owner in my gym, and also involved with our promotion firms.”
“Good to hear,” Kanemura says, a subtle approval in his tone. “I’d greatly appreciate it if you and Takeda-kun could spare a few moments for me.”
Nakahara nods, then gestures for Ryoma to follow him outside. He leads Kanemura down the hallway. His stride is purposeful, eyes scanning for a spot where they won’t be disturbed.
Even without words, Nakahara senses this isn’t a simple conversation. The weight behind Kanemura’s calm presence speaks volumes.
As the corridor stretches ahead, quiet but charged, Nakahara can’t help but think: whatever’s coming, it’s bigger than tonight’s fight.
***
Nakahara stops in a narrow corner of the hallway, where shadows stretch across the walls and the sound of distant applause fades into muffled echoes.
“This will do,” he says, surveying the small space. “So… what is it that you want to discuss with us?”
Kanemura loosens his tie slightly, the subtle gesture punctuating a moment of pause before he speaks.
“Before I explain my purpose,” he begins, voice measured, “may I ask, what’s the status of Ryoma’s fight with Elliot Graves?”
“Elliot Graves?” Ryoma repeats, eyebrows lifting.
“I was at Yoyogi,” Kanemura says. “I saw your conversation with him. I followed your post-fight interview as well.”
“Unfortunately, that match isn’t going to happen,” Nakahara says, arms crossed.
“I suspected as much,” Kanemura replies, unflinching. “So, do you have any plans for Ryoma’s next fight in the near future?”
Nakahara doesn’t answer immediately. His attention is caught more by Kanemura’s knowledge of the Graves situation than the question itself. But he expects, as a WBO representative, this man knows things most outsiders shouldn’t.
He glances at Ryoma for a fraction of a second before responding, no longer intending to hide anything of the gym’s internal maneuvers.
“We’ve tried contacting Miguel Carbello,” Nakahara begins, voice steady. “No response. Completely ignored. We tried Bobby Gibbs, he’s already booked for other fights. We’ve also tried our luck with WBA, and…”
“You were ignored again,” Kanemura interrupts, sharp, almost cutting through Nakahara’s measured tone.
Ryoma’s eyes narrow slightly, a flicker of both curiosity and wariness crossing his face. “It seems like you’re very familiar with our situation.”
“This isn’t new,” Kanemura says, eyes scanning the corner with quiet precision. “Whenever exceptional fighters emerge, ’the Guardians of the Throne’ always make their move.”
Nakahara murmurs under his breath, recalling past whispers and rumors.
“The Guardians of the Throne?” he echoes.
Ryoma tilts his head, recollection flickering. He remembers Sergei Volkov mentioning the term once before.
“You mean Jackson Rhodes and Dmitri Sergeyevich Erzhanov?” he asks, seeking confirmation.
Kanemura blinks in slight surprise. “You… you seem well-informed. Don’t tell me they’ve already approached you?”
“I don’t know about the Russian guy,” Ryoma says, “but Jackson Rhodes showed up for the purse negotiations for my previous OPBF title fight. And I’ll admit… it was enough to disrupt the market.”
“That’s… expected,” Kanemura says calmly. “They do this to new entrants like you. But the two names you mentioned… they aren’t the only ones. There are more. Yet those two carry the heaviest influence in WBC and WBA. And I’m concerned their reach will extend into WBO soon.”
A quiet tension settles over the hallway. The air feels heavier, the distant cheers of the arena now a faint ripple, barely reaching them through the thickening tension of the conversation.
Ryoma exchanges a brief glance with Nakahara, reading the unspoken implications: the boxing world just got a lot more complicated. And their next steps will be under scrutiny, whether they like it or not.


