VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA

Chapter 582: Champion-level Adaptation



Chapter 582: Champion-level Adaptation

Seeing Ryohei coming at him with that reckless intensity pulls a memory from deep in Hamakawa’s mind. For a split second, he sees Umemoto.

Sure, Ryohei’s body isn’t as thick as Umemoto’s. He doesn’t carry the same monstrous speed or brute strength.

But the willingness to stand in range and trade feels identical. That fearless acceptance of impact. That hunger inside the pocket. It isn’t something Hamakawa ever expected from Ryohei.

And as Ryohei stands in front of him now, posture rigid after the exchange, Hamakawa notices something else; the density in his neck, the way the muscles tighten and brace. It’s solid, and unyielding.

“So he really prepared for this,” Hamakawa thinks.

Hamakawa anchors himself at center ring, spreading his lead foot wider.

“Fine…”

“You want to eat my counter?”

“Then come.”

Across the ring, both Narisawa and Sera slam their palms against the apron.

“Ten seconds left in round two!” the commentator calls out over the rising noise. “And look at this… Hamakawa’s not circling anymore. He’s planting his feet.”

“He’s ready to trade again,” the analyst adds. “Let’s see how he tries to reclaim control before the bell.”

Hamakawa clenches his right fist tight. He flicks a probing jab from a lower angle than before, deliberately dropping his right hand just a fraction.

A bait.

“Come and get me…”

Ryohei catches the jab with his right glove. And Hamakawa waits.

Right on cue, a slapping lead hook comes whipping toward his face, light and fast.

“Here it comes…”

Hamakawa dips sharply under it, slipping inside the arc, and fires his counter from the shell.

“Beautiful slip from Hamakawa… there’s the counter!” the commentator bursts out.

But Ryohei tilts his head just enough, letting Hamakawa’s right glove glance past as his right palm meets it, redirecting the force.

Dp.

“He actually sees it,” the commentator adds. “He catches the right… “

In the same motion, Ryohei digs a lead hook into the body.

Thud!

Hamakawa’s brow tightens. The shot bites.

“Oh… That’s nasty work downstairs!”

He braces through it and answers with a sharp lead hook of his own.

But Ryohei is already stepping out of range, sliding back into that lazy pendulum sway as if nothing meaningful has just happened.

The analyst leans forward as Ryohei drifts back into his pendulum rhythm.

“And that’s the difference right now,” he says, voice measured but intense. “Hamakawa finally executes the right idea; slips inside, fires the counter from the shell. But Ryohei’s already anticipating the second layer. He’s not just reacting to the punch. He’s reacting to the sequence.”

Ryohei sways, keeps shifting his weight from left foot to the right at ease.

And then…

Ding!

The bell for the end of round two rings.

Ryohei stops swaying and turns casually toward his corner.

Hamakawa grits his teeth as he makes his own way to the blue corner, irritation etched plainly across his face.

He prepared to punish Ryohei the way he would punish Umemoto, expecting wild aggression. But now he understands. The man in front of him is not Umemoto.

The champion has the courage to absorb punishment like Umemoto. But he also carries something far more dangerous; sharper technique, cleaner footwork, and ring intelligence operating several levels above the former champion.

And that realization unsettles Hamakawa more than any punch.

***

Hamakawa’s supporters are still on their feet, cheering loudly and chanting his name. They clap and point toward the red corner, mocking Ryohei’s work as desperation.

“Run back to your sway, lucky boy!”

“Lucky body taps!”

“Try that again next round!”

Then the big screen lights up. And the commentators begin their analysis, as if gently reminding the roaring crowd that boxing is judged by precision and control, not just volume and emotion.

“Watch how he redirects the right with his palm,” the analyst begins. “That small touch kills the angle, and immediately he answers to the body. When Hamakawa tries to return fire with the lead hook, Ryohei doesn’t admire his work. He exits on rhythm.”

“He’s dictating when the exchange starts and when it ends,” the lead commentator adds. “That pendulum isn’t just movement. It’s control. Hamakawa is beginning to time the counters, yes. But Ryohei’s deciding how long he’s allowed to stay in range.”

But still, the cheers from Hamakawa’s supporters don’t disappear, despite what the footage clearly shows.

A few rows behind the commentary desk, three journalists sit together amid the noise; two seasoned veterans and a younger female reporter taking notes on her tablet.

“They’re loud,” Aki mutters under her breath, a faint crease forming between her brows. “And unbelievably stubborn. They’re acting like the body shots don’t count.”

“Forget about them and focus on our champion,” Sato says, eyes still on the red corner. “He’s improved again. The composure inside, the timing on the redirects. That’s not the same Ryohei from a year ago.”

Tanaka nods once. “He has to improve. The belt demands it. You don’t stay champion by standing still.”

Aki exhales through his nose, glancing briefly toward the loud blue section. “Those supporters better start giving him some respect. If only they saw what he had to go through to reach this level.”

***

The third round does not begin with chaos. It begins with clarity, as every pair of eyes in Yoyogi sharpens to see who truly controls the fight.

Hamakawa steps out determined to solve the problem properly this time. His eyes are sharper, his feet lighter, his jab more disciplined. He wants structure, wants data. He wants to study that rhythm once more.

But Ryohei denies him that immediately. Gone is the reckless pressure from earlier. The pendulum also disappears. And his mood becomes suddenly livelier.

Ryohei slides into his older skin, the pragmatic outboxer. His footwork becomes smooth and economical, circling just outside the edge of Hamakawa’s reach, touching with jabs, then stepping off before anything meaningful can return.

He is leading on the cards now. So he doesn’t need to gamble anymore.

Hamakawa advances carefully, trying to map the distance again. He throws probing jabs, feints, small shoulder twitches to test reactions. But Ryohei simply isn’t there.

“The champion’s managing the geography now,” the commentator notes. “Very different look from round two.”

“And smart,” the analyst replies. “When you’re ahead, you don’t force chaos. You make the other man uncomfortable.”

Hamakawa grows impatient. He increases tempo, trying to chase with speed; quick entries, sharp one-twos meant to trap Ryohei near the ropes.

But then, the pendulum returns. Ryohei begins that lazy sway, and the tempo drops like a metronome being dialed down.

The result? Hamakawa slows. He has to, because you can’t simply rush a rhythm you don’t understand.

The arena quiets slightly, sensing the tension shift.

“He’s dragging him into a slower read,” the analyst murmurs. “Forcing Hamakawa to think instead of fire.”

And the moment Hamakawa’s cadence dulls, Ryohei explodes inside, without warning. One step, shoulder bump, and suddenly they are chest to chest again.

The pocket turns ugly. Hooks slam against elbows. Short uppercuts scrape through narrow lanes. Foreheads press together.

“It is not pretty boxing! It is survival boxing!”

“And Hamakawa never likes it!”

Hamakawa tries to answer back. His coiling right snaps free in tight arcs. He clips shoulder, cheek, and glove, scoring enough to demand respect.

But he never regains the control. He keeps chasing, keeps studying, keeps responding.

***

The fourth round follows the same cruel pattern; distance and then switch, pressure and then switch, pendulum and suddenly collapses, and then turns into an ugly slugfest.

By the fifth, it becomes psychological warfare. Every time Hamakawa begins to sync with one rhythm, Ryohei discards it. Every time Hamakawa anticipates the sway, Ryohei circles. When Hamakawa prepares for outside fencing, Ryohei barrels into his chest.

He is forced to solve puzzles that are being rewritten mid-solution. After securing the lead, Ryohei is back to hit and run, making the blue-corner supporters grow restless.

“He’s running again!”

“Enough running, coward. Stand and fight!”

But when Hamakawa lunges to force that fight, Ryohei gives it to him. He stops running and turns it brutal.

Midway through the sixth, Hamakawa finally believes he has the pendulum timed. He steps in confidently, slips left, and fires a sharp counter hook.

Ryohei plants, answers heavier. And the pocket ignites again; leather cracks in rapid succession; body, head, shoulder, ribs.

The commentator nearly loses composure. “They’re unloading! This is no longer tactical. It’s violent!”

“Watch the positioning!” the analyst fires back quickly. “Ryohei’s left foot is outside… he’s stealing the angle even inside the chaos!”

Hamakawa rips a right uppercut that snaps Ryohei’s head slightly upward.

“Oh! That landed!”

“But look at the response!” the analyst shouts over him.

Ryohei answers with a vicious hook to the liver, then a compact right to the ear, smothering Hamakawa’s attempt to pivot out.

“He’s not just trading… he’s layering!” the analyst continues rapidly. “Body first to anchor him, then upstairs before the exit!”

Hamakawa tries to roll into a counter sequence; shoulder dip, right hand chambered. But Ryohei bumps him off balance with his lead shoulder and fires again.

Those annoying supporters become so wild during exchange, but then quiet when the balance tilts. The ropes shudder behind Hamakawa, and the crowd is fully unhinged now.

“This is championship composure!” the commentator roars. “Ryohei’s dictating the violence!”

“And notice,” the analyst adds, voice cutting sharply through the noise, “every time Hamakawa thinks he’s solved the rhythm, Ryohei breaks it. He won’t let him settle. He won’t let him box his fight!”

Hamakawa swings back defiantly; hook, cross, hook. Some land, but most of them don’t land clean.

Ryohei absorbs what he must, rolls what he can, and keeps punching through the seams. He welcomes the danger, utterly reckless. But he still fights with controlled recklessness.

When the exchange finally breaks, Hamakawa is the one taking the backward step, enduring more beating.

The reality becomes harder to ignore. This isn’t luck, isn’t chaos without direction. This is a champion rewriting the fight in real time.


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