VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 627: The Door Finally Opens

Chapter 627: The Door Finally Opens
September 29, 2017
The Grand Prince Hotel New Takanawa, Tokyo
The decisions made at the WBO convention have not even had time to settle, and already they are being carried into the open.
In a media room just down the same corridor, the doors are now open to the press. The atmosphere is calmer than the closed session before it, but not by much; there is a quiet awareness in the room that what will be said here is not routine, but the direct outcome of what was argued only hours ago.
Kanemura sits at the center of the table with a document in hand. Whatever disagreements were raised behind closed doors have already been resolved, or buried, and what remains now is a unified front.
He leans slightly toward the microphone, giving only the briefest glance at the page before speaking.
“Furthermore… in light of Trevor Langley vacating the WBO Lightweight title to pursue a challenge against WBO Super Lightweight Champion Alejandro Vargas, and following the conclusions reached at this year’s convention, the committee has finalized the updated contender rankings.”
The room settles into attentive silence, pens moving almost in unison as Kanemura begins to read.
“Ranked number one, Liam O’Connell. Ranked number two, Miguel Cabello.”
There is a subtle shift among the reporters as the implication becomes clear, but Kanemura does not pause long enough for it to grow into noise.
“Ranked number three, Troy Palmer. Number four, Arturo Salazar. And ranked number five, Dante Villanueva…”
A faint stir passes through the room as the name settles, brief glances exchanged among reporters who are quick to recognize its implications.
Pens continue moving, cameras remain trained on the front, and Kanemura’s voice carries on with the same steady cadence, the rest of the announcement unfolding as the room absorbs each detail in quiet concentration.
By the time the session draws to a close, the shape of the division has already begun to shift in the minds of everyone present, the consequences extending far beyond the confines of the hall.
***
By the time the announcement concludes in Tokyo, the updated rankings are already circulating beyond the conference room, passing through media outlets, private channels, and the networks that move faster than any official release.
Across the ocean, in Coral Gables, Miami, the same list has already reached its next destination.
Night has settled over the estate, the city lights faint in the distance beyond the glass. Inside, warm lighting spreads across the polished floor, drawing attention toward the center of the room where a printed copy of the rankings rests on a low table, waiting to be examined.
Hugo Ramirez stands beside the table, his hand resting lightly against its edge as he studies the document.
Across from him, his manager, Esteban Cruz scrolls through the same list on his tablet, the glow of the screen reflecting faintly against his glasses.
“They didn’t waste time,” he says. “Vacant title forces everything forward.”
Ramirez gives a faint nod, his eyes never leaving the paper. “It always does.”
Near the back of the room, Cabello’s trainer, Jorge Rivera leans against the arm of a sofa, watching them both with quiet attention. He doesn’t interrupt, but there is a sharpness in the way he listens, as if already anticipating where the conversation will turn.
“The fight between Liam O’Connell and Miguel Cabello,” Cruz continues, “we should move quickly on the hosting rights. If we control the venue, we control everything around it.”
A slight shift crosses Ramirez’s expression, something closer to satisfaction than surprise. “That was always the plan.”
Cruz glances up. “The timing works in our favor. With the title vacant, everyone’s looking for direction. We give them one.”
Ramirez’s fingers tap once against the edge of the paper. “WBO isn’t crowded. Not like WBC or WBA. Less interference.”
Rivera exhales softly. “Or less attention.”
Ramirez finally looks up, meeting his gaze with calm certainty. “Attention can be created. And when it finally builds, we make sure we’re the ones who control it.”
The room settles again after that, the kind of pause that doesn’t break momentum, but sharpens it. Ramirez’s eyes return to the list, moving down past the names at the top, past the expected structure of the division, until something stops him.
His hand stills. “…What is this?”
Cruz leans closer, following his line of sight, and it takes only a moment for him to find it.
“Ryoma Takeda,” Ramirez murmurs, eyes sharp. “Ranked sixth?!”
Cruz studies it briefly, then gives a small, knowing breath. “Two names ahead of him were removed. Inactive for too long. More focused on IBF.”
His thumb moves across the tablet screen as he checks the details. “And with what that kid’s been doing in OPBF lately, it’s not surprising. They want him here. Especially with how things are going for him in WBC.”
Ramirez doesn’t respond. His gaze remains fixed on the name, as though the rest of the page has lost its relevance.
“They’re opening the door for him,” Cruz adds. “Maybe more than that.”
A brief silence settles in, heavier than before. Ramirez remains quiet, though the contempt shows plainly on his face.
“You don’t need to worry about him,” Cruz continues. “Once we secure the title here, we decide how this division moves. He won’t have room to operate.”
At last, Ramirez nods slowly, almost absent at first, then with more certainty as the thought settles into something solid.
“A twenty-one-year-old kid,” he murmurs, voice low, “holding a regional title… and already trying to act like a promoter.”
A faint smile forms, thin and without warmth. “He doesn’t understand the kind of world he’s stepping into.”
Rivera watches him carefully now, saying nothing.
“And by the time he does,” Ramirez says quietly, “he’ll be questioning every choice that brought him here.”
***
At the turn of the month, the JBC releases its updated domestic rankings, and while the announcement doesn’t carry the same noise as the WBO reshuffle, it settles just as firmly inside Nakahara’s gym.
The results from Yoyogi have been sitting untouched since August, as if waiting for the right moment to be acknowledged, and now that adjustment finally comes through.
Hiroshi stands in front of the whiteboard with a marker in hand, studying the names for a brief moment before making his first change.
Okabe watches from nearby, trying to maintain a composed expression, but the moment his name is moved upward, that restraint begins to slip.
Seeing himself placed at fourth in the JBC featherweight rankings, he exhales through his nose, a grin forming as he turns slightly toward Aramaki.
“Well, that’s about right,” he says, unable to hide the satisfaction in his voice. “Told you I wasn’t staying down there.”
Aramaki, who has been sitting off to the side, only gives a brief glance toward the board before responding.
“You beat number five. That’s where you’re supposed to go.”
Okabe shrugs, though the pride is still evident in the way he carries himself. “Still looks better when it’s written up there. And clearly better than you who’s still stuck at number five.”
Meanwhile, Hiroshi is still doing something else on the whiteboard. When the marker lifts, Aramaki’s name now sits at number two.
“Ups, sorry Okabe-senpai,” Aramaki teases. “I beat you again.”
Okabe clicks his tongue, the earlier confidence in his expression dimming just enough to show the difference between their positions.
“Yeah, yeah,” Okabe mutters, trying to brush it off. “Don’t get ahead of yourself.”
Aramaki turns his head toward him, calm but clearly amused. “Says the guy who just started bragging at fourth.”
“That’s different.”
“How?”
Okabe opens his mouth, but nothing comes out, and the hesitation is enough for Ryohei to tilt his head with a faint, amused smile.
“Looks like he’s ahead of you now,” Ryohei says, voice light but edged. “Second place. That’s a lot closer to a title shot than fourth.”
Okabe turns sharply. “Stay out of it.”
“I’m just reading what’s on the board,” Ryohei replies, shrugging, the smugness barely concealed.
Aramaki lets out a quiet laugh, which only makes Okabe more irritated.
“Keep talking,” Okabe mutters. “We’ll see who gets there first.”
“Well, I’m already on the top,” Ryohei shoots back. “What are you going to say now.”
“Hold on, Ryohei,” Hiroshi interferes. “You’ve got time to argue, but you might want to think about something else first.”
Ryohei glances over. “What?”
Hiroshi sets the marker down. “Umemoto wants a rematch.”
The air shifts instantly. Aramaki straightens, Okabe’s attention snaps back, and for a brief moment, no one speaks.
“Honestly?” Okabe shrugs. “You got through that fight on luck. But sure, you can duck him if you want.”
Ryohei ignores him, eyes still on Hiroshi. “Where’d you hear that?”
“An article this morning. He’s saying your win didn’t prove anything. Calls it bad luck. Says he’s still better. And if you don’t like that, prove it through a rematch.”
Ryohei falls quiet, the memory of that fight flashing through his mind, the pressure, the damage, the narrow turn at the end. His expression tightens, just for a second.
Okabe catches it. “What’s wrong? Getting nervous?”
“Don’t be stupid,” Ryohei snaps.
Aramaki laughs, but it stops when the gym door opens. Two unfamiliar men step inside. Hiroshi turns toward them, eyes narrowing slightly.
“Sorry for the interruption,” one of them says, his English carrying a soft Filipino lilt. “We’re here on behalf of Dante Villanueva from Philippine. We’d like to meet Mr. Kenji Nakahara.”


