VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA

Chapter 579: No Lucky Punch Tonight



Chapter 579: No Lucky Punch Tonight

As the final checks are completed, the atmosphere inside Yoyogi tightens into something electric. The earlier chaos is gone, completely erased by anticipation. No one is thinking about Arman anymore. All attention narrows to the center of the ring.

The referee gestures both fighters forward. Hamakawa steps in first, gaze unwavering. Ryohei follows, rolling his shoulders once as he closes the distance.

They stop inches apart. But the referee places a hand on each of their forearms, subtly forcing their gloves to remain in contact.

“Listen to my commands at all times,” he says firmly. “Protect yourselves at all times. Obey my instructions. I want a clean fight. Break when I say break. No hitting on the break. Keep it above the belt. If I tell you to stop, you stop immediately. Do you both understand?”

Neither fighter answers, and neither shows anything concern.

Hamakawa doesn’t look at the referee. His eyes remain locked on Ryohei.

“I hear they’re still talking about your lucky punch,” he says quietly.

Ryohei’s lips twitch faintly. “Yeah. I hear them clearly.”

“But I’m not as stupid as they are,” Hamakawa continues. “I know what you did. Don’t think that trick works on me.”

Ryohei tilts his head slightly. “Keep thinking that,” he replies. “That’s exactly what I want.”

The referee exhales sharply, irritated. “Are you listening to me?”

But there’s still no response.

“For the last time,” the ref says, “protect yourselves at all times. Now, touch gloves.”

He nudges their gloves forward, but both men pull back at the same moment and turn away.

Finally, the referee’s patience snaps. “Hey! Ryohei! Hamakawa! Get the fuck back here! Touch gloves. I’m not starting this fight without it.”

The crowd laughs at the awkwardness. Both fighters pause, glance over their shoulders, then reluctantly step back to center. They tap gloves, quick and flat, emotionless, and then immediately turn away again.

“At least we got it done,” the commentator says with a chuckle. “A little tension before the bell.”

“It seems they’re already fighting in their heads,” the analyst adds.

Back in the ring, neither fighter really goes back to their corner. They are still near the center of the ring, impatient.

And the referee steps between them once more, arms stretched wide as if holding back two sprinters before a gunshot.

“Wait for the bell,” he warns.

And then…

Ding!

The first-round bell rings.

The referee steps back quickly. And both fighters move at the same time, striding toward center ring. But both slow just before entering punching range.

They stop a fraction short, neither willing to commit first.

Heads shift. Shoulders twitch. Small feints flash; quick level changes, subtle pivots, slight turns of the hips.

Their feet glide in tight circles, measuring distance. Each tries to draw a reaction, a bite, a mistake.

The crowd grows quieter, sensing the tension.

They circle, they probe. But neither throws, not yet.

“They mirror each other,” the commentator says as both men continue circling. “Out-box technicians. Smooth footwork, sharp left hands. Neither one wants to give the other the first read.”

The analyst nods. “This could take time. When two fighters rely on precision and control, the opening minutes are often a chess match. Someone has to blink first.”

Then a few voices cut through from the lower rows.

“Stop running, lucky boy!”

“Stop being a coward!”

“You’re the champ now! Fight!”

Ryohei hears it, and his shoulders twitch ever so slightly. He shifts his weight forward and snaps a quick jab, sharp and direct.

But Hamakawa is already half a step outside. The punch falls short by inches.

Ryohei pulls it back immediately and resets, circling out before Hamakawa can counter. The exchange is almost invisible, but Hamakawa notes it.

He recognizes the reach, the slight difference in height, the way Ryohei has to lean just a fraction more to close distance.

They drift closer again, until their lead feet nearly touch. For a brief moment, they are anchored in the same lane. From there, the contrast becomes clear.

Hamakawa’s stance is a touch wider, legs spread just a little farther apart, giving him a longer base. Ryohei’s posture rises to match his opponent’s eye level, but the alignment reveals the difference in leg length.

Sensing the subtle advantage in height and reach, Hamakawa decides he’s seen enough. He takes half a step forward, not reckless, but enough to claim the center of the ring.

His lead foot plants outside Ryohei’s, establishing angle first before offense. It’s a small adjustment, but it shifts the geometry.

“Hamakawa stepping in now.”

“He wants control.”

Hamakawa flicks a probing jab, not full power, just range-finding. It taps Ryohei’s guard and retracts quickly.

Another follows, this one aimed lower toward the chest instead of the head.

Bugh!

It doesn’t hurt, but it forces Ryohei to react. Ryohei gives ground, taking two short steps back.

Hamakawa mirrors him, maintaining the distance to his advantage. He widens his stance slightly, knees bent, weight distributed evenly.

From there, he begins to dictate rhythm; jab toward the forehead, jab toward the body, slight pivot left, and a sharp cross in the middle.

Dug. Dug. Dug.

No clean blow yet, but Ryohei’s busy in reacting. He tries to slip inside, but Hamakawa’s lead hand disrupts him before he can set his feet. The jab snaps again, grazing the glove, brushing the forearm. Still nothing is clean, but constant.

“He’s fencing with that lead hand,” the analyst observes. “Making Yamada reset over and over.”

Hamakawa doubles the jab now, then adds a straight right that thuds against Ryohei’s guard. The sound is heavier. And the crowd responds with a rising murmur.

“That’s it… that’s the difference.”

“Hamakawa’s controlling him already.”

“See? No lucky punch this time.”

“He can’t even get inside.”

Ryohei dips slightly to his right, slipping under the incoming jab, and fires a compact counter from close range; short, efficient, almost invisible.

But Hamakawa is already reading the lane. He pulls his head just off the centerline, pivots on his lead foot…

Dsh!

…and snaps a sharp left jab across Ryohei’s cheek.

It isn’t heavy, isn’t dramatic. But it lands clean, and the reaction inside Yoyogi explodes as if it were a knockdown.

“Yesss!”

“That’s it!”

“Beautiful!”

“Good job, Hamakawa!”

The applause surges into full cheers now. Fans rise from their seats, pointing toward the ring, voices cracking with excitement.

“Too sharp!”

“He saw that!”

“Lucky punch won’t save you!”

Hamakawa resets calmly, gloves high, but the effect is clear. One clean jab, one crisp read, and the crowd is fully behind him.

The former champion barely changes expression. But the arena is already celebrating the narrative they came to see unfold.

And the surge of cheers feeds directly into him. Hamakawa’s feet grow lighter, sharper against the canvas. He begins to bounce in and out with renewed rhythm, no longer just measuring—now asserting.

The jab comes faster; one clean to the forehead, another one to the chest.

Dhs! Dsh!

Then a quick double followed by a straight right that whistles past Ryohei’s guard.

Dsh! Dsh!

The combinations begin to lengthen. Jab–jab–right hand. Jab to the body, left upstairs. A quick three-piece flurry from range before he pivots out to his left, denying any return fire.

“He’s opening up now,” the commentator notes. “The confidence is building.”

Ryohei shifts into a tighter shell, elbows tucked, making sure no more clean blows land free. He attempts a counter window, but Hamakawa has already stepped off-line, pivoting just enough to avoid being squared up.

***

Two minutes pass in the opening round, and on the surface, it belongs to Hamakawa. He controls the center, dictates range, keeps the jab busy. The crowd sees what it wants to see; order restored.

But Ryohei is not unraveling. He is watching, counting, measuring the exact margin of disadvantage. And so far, nothing feels overwhelming.

Hamakawa stands at the same height as Ryoma. The reach looks similar too. And for eight weeks straight, Ryohei has sparred a version of this silhouette, with Ryoma copying it perfectly, mirroring Hamakawa’s stance, footwork, and rhythm round after round in camp.

“And you know what?” A quiet, confident smile spreads across Ryohei’s face.

Hamakawa catches the expression, and the words. His eyes narrow for a fraction of a second, a flicker of confusion crossing his face before he forces it away.

“You’re not at his level,” Ryohei adds.

His pendulum step begins, slow at first, subtle. His upper body sways in that lazy, almost taunting rhythm, a tempo that looks harmless, almost disengaged.

But the air shifts. Hamakawa’s footwork tightens. The crowd, sensing something intangible, begins to quiet.

Then the cadence changes, not the loose sway, but the aggressive form of the Soviet beat.

Ryohei drives forward suddenly, deep step in; Jab-lead hook-cross.

Dug-dug! Dugh!

Then he half-steps back as if resetting, and suddenly plunges in again, even deeper, collapsing the distance into close range.

Hamakawa braces behind a tight double guard, expecting another long rhythm combination, searching for a gap to counter.

Instead, Ryohei plants his feet, infighter stance now, chest-to-chest.

Hamakawa blinks. “What is he going to do?”

And Ryohei unloads the flurry.

Dug. Dug.

Bugh! Dug. Thud! Dug.

Six compact hooks in violent succession. Four drum against forearms and upper arms. Two slip into the ribs and the narrow seam beneath the elbow.

The final cross detonates against the guard…

DUGH!

And it halts Hamakawa’s counter before it begins.

When a short hook finally comes out, Ryohei is already gone, stepping back out, and resumes the slow pendulum sway as if nothing happened.

Silence falls over Yoyogi. Hamakawa’s expression tightens, the earlier confidence draining from his face.

The commentator breaks first, voice rising. “There it is! That’s the shift!”

“That’s not luck,” the analyst fires back. “That’s preparation. He changed cadence completely… long rhythm to infighting in a blink!”

“He froze Hamakawa with the expectation of repetition,” the commentator continues. “And then rewrote it mid-exchange!”

The arena remains hushed, recalibrating. Because for the first time tonight, Hamakawa did not look in control.

And Ryohei appears entirely at ease. He rolls his left shoulder and gives his glove a loose shake, all while maintaining that steady pendulum sway.

“I don’t need any lucky punch tonight.”


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