Chapter 715 - 715: What Pressure Eventually Becomes
But unlike before, Satoru’s punches begin to tighten. The arcs shorten, the swings come in straighter, more compact.
Then, in the middle of that chaos, he shifts. He leans back slightly, slipping into that lazy sway, just for a moment, building a small pendulum step as he gives a fraction of space.
The commentators pick it up.
“There’s that sway again…”
“He’s backing off a little… first time we’ve seen him give space like this since the pressure started.”
Takasugi reads it the wrong way, taking it as a sign the pressure is finally breaking.
After everything he’s just pushed through, it feels like he’s shaken off that fear. Confidence floods back in, the hesitation disappears.
The surge carries him forward as he drives in with two heavy punches. And that’s the opening Satoru has been expecting.
Satoru dips his head while raising his right guard, catching the lead hook on the side of his head.
Dug.
Then he drops lower, letting the right hand sail past over his head, and fires at the same time.
A sharp overhead right comes crashing down the middle, carrying his full weight behind it.
BAM!!!
The glove lands clean on Takasugi’s head, snapping it in place as sweat bursts into the air from the impact.
For a split second, everything freezes in one simultaneous gasp.
And then, the arena erupts, a violent surge of sound crashing down from every side, voices colliding into one deafening roar.
“He got him! Clean shot right down the middle!”
“That’s a huge impact!”
Takasugi’s body gives in slowly, legs losing structure as he stumbles back, then sinks, his balance gone, collapsing down onto the canvas.
At ringside, his mother is already on her feet.
“Renjiro!! RENJIRO!!”
Her voice breaks as she rushes forward, reaching the apron, hands gripping the edge as she tries to climb up.
“My dear, Renjiro! Please, no…”
Her husband catches her from behind, holding her back.
“No, Misako! You can’t…”
Inside, the referee is already stepping in, eyes on Takasugi, considering whether to start the count or stopping it for good.
But the noise, the panic at ringside, the raw fear spilling from his mother, it all rushes into the moment.
The referee doesn’t wait long. He looks once more, and then waves his hands.
“That’s it! He’s stopping it!”
“It’s over! Yoshitomo takes it!”
“What a turnaround! What a finish!”
The roar surges again, louder this time, breaking into full celebration.
Satoru jumps in place once, twice, a burst of release more than celebration, before settling on both knees, his shoulders dropping as the tension finally leaves his body.
Across the ring, the red corner team is already climbing through the ropes, rushing in toward their fighter.
Takasugi forces himself up anyway, dragging his body upright, then settling on both knees in a seated position. His head lifts, eyes locking onto the referee.
There’s the confusion, disbelief, and desperation.
“No… why you stop it?”
“I can still fight…”
But the decision has already been made. The referee turns away, still shaking his head, firm in the call.
A moment later, Takasugi’s mother reaches him, pulling him into an embrace, her voice breaking with fear as she holds him. His father follows a step behind, close but quieter.
She cups his face, wiping at the sweat and tears, her hands trembling. “It’s okay, son. You’ve done your best. Mom’s proud of you. That’s enough. You’ve done your best.”
The words don’t settle. They don’t reach Takasugi the way she hopes. If anything, they grate against something raw inside.
He begins to hate this kind of support. But he says nothing, keeping it in, letting her hold him without pushing her away.
Up on the mezzanine, Nakahara and Kenta watch the aftermath with a quiet sense of relief as Satoru pulls off the comeback and forces the upset.
Nakahara lets out a soft chuckle, shaking his head. “Didn’t think he’d find a way to pull that counter. Had to drag the opponent into that wild exchange first… but he got there.”
For a moment, Kenta lets that settle, but it doesn’t last. His attention drifts from the blue corner to Takasugi, still on his knees near the ropes, surrounded and held, his mother’s presence never leaving him.
Watching that, something becomes clear to him in a way it hadn’t before. Too much support can turn into protection, and protection can dull the kind of edge a fighter needs to grow.
His thoughts shift inward without him meaning to. His own path had been nothing like that. His father was never easy to satisfy, never the kind to praise small wins or let him settle. Every step forward only led to another demand, another expectation, another push that felt excessive at the time.
But standing here now, he understands what it built in him. That pressure forced him to adapt, to endure, to reach beyond what he thought he was capable of, until he found himself in places he never believed he could stand in the first place.
***
Down in the lower stands, Ryohei and Aramaki move first, cutting through the aisle and leading the rest of the group toward the ring.
The younger members follow in a rush, more than a dozen of them pouring in at once, climbing through the ropes until the space fills up fast.
They swarm Satoru, voices overlapping, hands on his shoulders, his arms. And then they lift him up, throwing him into the air, once, twice, as the crowd roars again.
The commentators catch it immediately, their tone lifting with the moment.
“Look at that reaction from his gym! They’re flooding the ring!”
“And why not? This is huge for them!”
“One thing you have to remember… this gym wasn’t even on the map a couple of years ago. People used to write them off, call it a place for washed up fighters.”
“And now? Look at where they are.”
“They’ve got Ryoma Takeda, holding titles at the OPBF and WBO Asia Pacific level.”
“Ryohei Yamada, the current JBC Super Lightweight Champion.”
“And now Satoru Yoshitomo adds to that, winning the All Japan Rookie King Final!”
There’s a brief pause before the last line lands with a bit more weight.
“An achievement his own mentor couldn’t secure in his rookie days.”
Up on the mezzanine, Nakahara hears it all. A solemn smile forms on his face, just for a moment, before he exhales and lets it go.
He turns his head slightly toward Kenta. “Aren’t you going to join them…?”
But the words hang there, unanswered, as Kenta is already moving, his back turned, walking away from the railing, heading toward the exit instead of the aisle that leads down to the ring.
Nakahara’s smile fades completely. A sharper look replaces it as he pushes off the railing and follows.
“…Hey, Kenta. Wait!”
Below, the ring is overflowing with bodies, voices rising over one another as the celebration spills out of control. They crowd around Satoru, lifting him again, shouting, laughing, holding onto the moment like it might slip away if they don’t.
It should feel complete. But even in the middle of that triumph, there’s a gap. The one who built them isn’t there. And the leader they follow isn’t with them either.
The ring is full. And still, something is missing.
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