Japanese boxing pushed from early- to mid-May

Boxing

Days after boxing regulators in Japan announced that professional fights would resume with a card May 2, they reversed course.

The Japan Boxing Commission and the Japan Professional Boxing Association met on Monday and decided to cancel all shows until mid-May due to the coronavirus pandemic, which has worsened in Japan.

Previously, the JBC and JPBA, which is the union of some 270 licensed boxing club owners in the country, shut boxing down until at least April 15. Then the deadline was extended until April 30, causing at least a dozen Japanese boxing cards to be called off. Then they announced that fights would resume in May and announced a series of events, with the first one scheduled for May 2 featuring a card headlined by a Japanese middleweight title bout between Kazuto Takesako and Riku Kunimoto at Korakuen Hall, Tokyo.

They also put in place policies that they said would help reduce the chance for the coronavirus to spread. They said that spectators would be required to have their temperature taken upon entrance to any event; that spectators must wear protective masks; that there needed to be space between spectators, so there would be empty seats or rows; and that no standing-room-only tickets would be sold. But now all of that is on hold.

The most notable fight that had been scheduled for May but is now postponed is Hiroto Kyoguchi, of Japan, making the third defense of his junior flyweight world title against Indonesia’s Andika D’Golden Boy. That bout was to take place in Sakai, Japan.

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