RIYADH, Saudi Arabia – Japanese sensation
Junto Nakatani will stake his claim for a shot at undisputed junior featherweight champ
Naoya Inoue when debuting at 122-pounds against Mexico’s Sebastian Hernandez at the Mohammed Abdo Arena on Saturday. The 12-round bout serves as the co-main event of the
stacked Japan vs. Mexico Ring V card.
Nakatani (31-0, 24 KOs) has already captured world titles at flyweight, junior bantamweight and bantamweight, establishing himself as one of the sport's finest pound-for-pound fighters.
A hard-hitting southpaw with electrifying hand speed, "Big Bang" has long been viewed as the most significant threat to Inoue's supremacy, which further highlights the quality of Japanese fighters in the lower divisions.
"I'm very fit in the new weight class and confident," said Nakatani via a translator during Tuesday's Grand Arrivals. "This bout is very important, so I want to see if I'm fit to discuss a bout against Inoue. I don't feel any pressure; I'll just give 100 percent and do my best."
Hernandez, The Ring's No. 8-rated junior featherweight, has a perfect 20-0 (18 KOs) record. The Tijuana native enters after his most impressive career win, a 10-round unanimous decision victory over former world title challenger
Azat Hovhannisyan in May.
That result snapped a knockout streak at 17 for the Mexican fighter, who enters this fight in very good form.
"I was surprised [to get the Nakatani fight] and didn’t expect that," said Hernandez. "I was training for a fight in Mexico when my trainer came to the gym to tell me about this opportunity. I want to thank God. We're gonna give a great fight on Saturday."
The Ring provides some pre-fight analysis and makes a final pick on the outcome of Nakatani vs. Hernandez.
Junto Nakatani vs. Sebastian Hernandez fight prediction
As is the case with any elite-level fighter, Nakatani gives opponents different looks. Against Ryosuke Nishida, in June's
bantamweight unification clash, he took more chances and showcased a more ambitious – some would say reckless – offense.
He was caught by more punches than normal but still won handily, forcing a sixth-round stoppage. That performance was in sharp contrast to Nakatani's sixth-round TKO over then-bantamweight titleholder Alexandro Santiago, who struggled to land a meaningful blow on the elusive lefty in February 2024.
Hernandez is an aggressive slugger who will look to mix it up. Can he get inside? If he plans to win, that's the only approach that will work as he doesn't have the tools to compete with Nakatani at long range. Risking his chin to take away Nakatani's time and distance is the only option. In the limited amount of footage available on Hernandez, he looks to be an adept body puncher. The Mexican contender has dropped opponents with shots to the mid-section and is good at positioning himself and punching at the right times. If Nakatani holds his feet and trades with him, then Hernandez must seize those opportunities.
It all sounds good, but with an Inoue superfight on the horizon, Team Nakatani will exercise some level of caution. He's trained by acclaimed coach Rudy Hernandez, one of the sport's best boxing minds today. If he can have his charge box off the target and keep things simple, then that is probably the best option here.
This one could go all the way with Nakatani scoring a knockdown or two en route to a wide points decision. However, Big Bang will show enough class and finesse to have the boxing world salivating at the prospect of Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani for the undisputed junior featherweight championship of the world.
Prediction: Nakatani UD 12