Toshiaki Nishioka Explained

Toshiaki Nishioka
Nickname:
Weight:
Height:5 ft 6+1/2 in[5]
Reach:68+1/2 in
Birth Date:25 July 1976
Birth Place:Kakogawa, Hyōgo, Japan
Style:Southpaw
Total:47
Wins:39
Ko:24
Losses:5
Draws:3

is a Japanese former professional boxer who competed from 1994 to 2012. He held the WBC super-bantamweight title from 2008 to 2012, and challenged for the WBO and The Ring super-bantamweight titles in his final-fight. Nishioka is known for his series of fights against Veeraphol Nakonluang-Promotion, with two of their four encounters ending in draws. Unlike many of Japan's other world champions, Nishioka willingly fought outside of his own country.[6]

Early life and career

Nishioka was born in Kakogawa, Hyōgo, Japan, in July 1976, and has one younger sister.[7] He started boxing at age ten when he was in the fifth grade of elementary school on the recommendation of his father who runs a tavern.[8] He compiled an amateur record of 10–2. Since before his professional debut, Nishioka had served as a sparring partner of the reigning WBC bantamweight champion Yasuei Yakushiji.

Nicknamed "Speed King", Nishioka won his professional debut by a first-round knockout in Himeji, Hyōgo, on December 11, 1994. But he was knocked out in the fourth round of the next fight at the Korakuen Hall, and was carried out on a stretcher. Nishioka won the annual Japanese boxing series, West Japan Rookie King Tournament in the super bantamweight division at the Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium in September 1995. Winning over the Central Japan rookie king in the next fight at the Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall, he fought against the rookie king of the Western part of Japan in Fukuoka in December of the same year.[9] Though Nishioka was convinced of his victory, the judges were in favor of his opponent.[10]

During his early career, Nishioka was expected to be Joichiro Tatsuyoshi's successor,[11] and served as his sparring partner for two years since 1996.[12] Nishioka went down a weight division to capture the Japanese bantamweight title at the Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium on December 29, 1998, the last day when Tatsuyoshi was a world champion.[13] Although Nishioka was knocked down once when away from the clinch in the first round, he twice floored his opponent while wearing a confident and defiant smile in the second round to be crowned, and defended the title twice before returning it.

Rivalry with Sahaprom, injuries

In June 2000, Nishioka challenged the WBC bantamweight champion Veeraphol Nakonluang-Promotion in Takasago, Hyōgo, and lost via a unanimous decision. He had belonged to the JM Kakogawa Gym until that fight, and has been managed by the Teiken Boxing Gym in Tokyo under Akihiko Honda's supervision[14] and Yūichi Kasai's guidance[15] since September 2000.

The second world title shot was watched by 12,000 spectators at the Yokohama Arena in September 2001, and was a very close fight in which the scores were 115–113 for Nishioka, 116–113 for Veeraphol, and 114–114 even.[16] Nishioka suffered an Achilles tendon rupture twice[17] during that year.[18] In December 2002, he returned to the ring for the first time in fifteen months to gain a first-round knockout victory at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. However his style was totally different from the previous one. He challenged Veeraphol for the third time at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan in October 2003, but the result was a draw[19] by a hometown decision. In his fourth world title shot against Veeraphol in March 2004, he lost via a unanimous decision by a wide margin of points at the Saitama Super Arena.[20]

After that defeat in 2004, Nishioka received a greeting card, with the Japanese message written by painter Atsumu Yamamoto; the phrase can be interpreted as: "No way to live other than this way", which encouraged him.[21] While Honda advised him to retire, and set subsequent matches to convince him,[22] Nishioka, who had remained aloof and proud as a boxer and had not trained with gym mates, decided to run with younger fellow boxers to strengthen his mind.[23] He also attended Marco Antonio Barrera's training camp on the West Coast of the United States.

Marriage and recovery

Nishioka got married in January 2005,[24] and they have a daughter born in 2006. Nishioka went back to the super bantamweight division, and continued fighting mainly in Japan, besides a second-round technical knockout victory at the Palais des Sports in Marseille, France, in April 2005,[25] and a fourth-round knockout victory (with a left-hand punch to the body) at The Joint in Las Vegas, Nevada, in November 2006.[26] Nishioka noticed that the former motion before the Achilles tendon injury came back in the pivot of his ankle from around the fight in November 2006. His trainer Kasai also felt that Nishioka's foot recovered to its original condition, and his thinking and fighting style progressed significantly from around the fight in December 2007 or in April 2008.[27]

After the fight in December 2007, Nishioka stayed at his wife's parents' home in Amagasaki, Hyōgo. With the consent of his wife and her father, he decided to live separate from his wife and daughter to focus on boxing alone. When he returned to Tokyo and told Honda about it, he was told that the possibility that his fifth world title was determined to be less than ten percent and that he should bring her back immediately. The discomfort in his foot completely disappeared in the beginning of 2008.[28] From that year, he is registered as a resident in Amagasaki where his own house has been completed in 2012.[29] Usually, Nishioka trains while living a solo life in Tokyo, and his wife and daughter live in Amagasaki. After each of Nishioka's fights, he spends time together with his family in Amagasaki.[30] Nishioka later recalled that transfer to the Teiken Boxing Gym and marriage have been his major turning points.

WBC super bantamweight champion

Nishioka captured the WBC super bantamweight interim title against Thai's Napapol Kiatisakchokchai at the Pacifico Yokohama on September 15, 2008. Just after the fight, Veeraphol whom he fought four times, and who served as Napapol's special coach, climbed into the ring to congratulate Nishioka.[31] Nishioka inherited the fullversion of the WBC super bantamweight title on December 18 of that year, when its previous holder, Israel Vázquez, was stripped for medical reasons. He defended that title by knocking out Mexico's Genaro García in the final round, again at the Pacifico Yokohama on January 3, 2009.[32]

On May 23, 2009, Nishioka successfully defended his title against Jhonny González in front of 12,000 spectators mostly cheering for González[33] at the Monterrey Arena in Mexico which had an outbreak of the H1N1 influenza.[34] [35] Nishioka recovered from a knockdown on the first round and went to knock out González in the third round.[36] Nishioka's left blows including his left crosses have often been called Monster Left from those days. He succeeded in the third defense via a third-round technical knockout (TKO) against Ivan Hernández at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium on October 10 of the same year.[37] Nishioka was presented with the 2009 WBC Knockout of the Year.[38] He defeated Filipino Balweg Bangoyan via a fifth-round technical knockout at the Nippon Budokan on April 30, 2010 to have four consecutive title defenses all by knockout.[39] The effects of trunk strengthening from the late 2009 have appeared, his balance has improved markedly.[40]

On October 24 of the same year, Nishioka fought a mandatory bout against Rendall Munroe at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan, and defeated him by a convincing unanimous decision to extend his defending streak to five matches.[41] Nishioka strongly desired a unification match with the other organizations' champion especially after that. When Nishioka was named Japan's Fighter of the Year in 2010, he received a video message from Fernando Montiel demanding a fight at the awards ceremony in January 2011. Nishioka said he was willing to fight anytime soon afterward[42] and his camp intended to arrange a match, but the contract was not finalized as Montiel lost to Nonito Donaire in February.[43] On April 8, 2011, he knocked out Argentina's Mauricio Javier Muñoz in the ninth round in his sixth defense which was moved from the Ryōgoku Kokugikan in Tokyo to the World Memorial Hall in Kobe due to the Tōhoku earthquake.[44]

In his seventh defense on October 1, 2011, Nishioka fought against Rafael Márquez, who had been marked as one of his targets from around October 2003,[45] at the MGM Grand Marquee Ballroom in Las Vegas.[46] Márquez's long, well-extended jabs were effective in the early rounds.[47] At the end of four rounds, all three judges scored it identically at 39–37 in favor of Márquez.[48] Nishioka fully concentrated every second from the beginning of the fight. He landed well-timed left and right blows[49] while circling right to nullify Márquez's right cross, and although not in principle for a southpaw, often circling left to negate Márquez's left hook and to throw his quicker and sharper angled left, to win the bout by a unanimous decision.[50] Although Márquez did not admit his defeat and demanded a rematch, there was no disgust nor booing among the spectators.[51]

In March 2012, Nishioka competed with Yuriorkis Gamboa for The Ring pound for pound Top 10, and barely missed it.[52] The WBC granted Nishioka the Emeritus Champion status on March 15, 2012.[53]

Nishioka lost to Nonito Donaire by technical knockout in 1:54 in the ninth round at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California on October 13, 2012. He had been ranked the number one super bantamweight in the world by The Ring, but was dropped to number three after the fight.[54]

Retirement

About a month following his bout with Donaire, Nishioka announced his retirement from boxing.[55]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
47Loss39–5–3Nonito DonaireTKO9 (12), 2012-10-13
46Win39–4–3Rafael MárquezUD122011-10-01
45Win38–4–3Mauricio Javier MuñozKO9 (12), 2011-04-08
44Win37–4–3Rendall MunroeUD122010-10-24
43Win36–4–3Balweg BangoyanTKO5 (12), 2010-04-30
42Win35–4–3Ivan Hernández3 (12), 2009-10-10
41Win34–4–3Jhonny GonzálezTKO3 (12), 2009-05-23
40Win33–4–3Genaro GarcíaTKO12 (12), 2009-01-03
39Win32–4–3Napapol KiatisakchokchaiUD122008-09-15
38Win31–4–3Jesús GarcíaTKO3 (8), 2008-04-19
37Win30–4–3Pederito LaurenteKO9 (10), 2007-12-15
36Win29–4–3Jean Javier SoteloKO7 (10), 2007-08-11
35Win28–4–3José AlonsoKO4 (8), 2006-11-16
34Win27–4–3Hugo VargasUD102006-02-04
33Win26–4–3Pederito LaurenteUD102005-09-03
32Win25–4–3Mustapha AbahraouhiTKO2 (8), 2005-04-29
31Win24–4–3Yoshikane NakajimaUD102004-10-30
30Loss23–4–3Veeraphol SahapromUD122004-03-06
29Draw23–3–3Veeraphol SahapromSD122003-10-04
28Win23–3–2Evangelio PérezKO1 (6), 2002-12-07
27Draw22–3–2Veeraphol SahapromSD122001-09-01
26Win22–3–1Sammy VenturaKO1 (10), 2001-03-11
25Win21–3–1Gerardo MartínezUD102000-11-05
24Loss20–3–1Veeraphol SahapromUD122000-06-25
23Win20–2–1Rodel LlanitaKO2 (10), 2000-03-12
22Win19–2–1Taiji OkamotoUD101999-12-19
21Win18–2–1Yodsingh ChuwatanaTKO4 (10), 1999-08-07
20Win17–2–1Shigeru NakazatoTKO8 (10), 1999-04-24
19Win16–2–1Jun'ichi WatanabeKO2 (10), 1998-12-29
18Win15–2–1Joel AvilaKO2 (10), 1998-09-23
17Win14–2–1Jack SiahayaKO1 (10), 1998-06-29
16Win13–2–1Julio César Cardona5 (10), 1998-03-08
15Win12–2–1Dong-Soo Kim4 (10), 1997-11-22
14Draw11–2–1Fernando Montilla101997-08-30
13Win11–2Joel JunioKO2 (10), 1997-04-14
12Win10–2Fuzi ArmesKO6 (10), 1997-02-23
11Win9–2Ahmad FandiUD101996-10-19
10Win8–2Donaldo EstellaUD61996-08-25
9Win7–2Reynante RojoUD81996-05-19
8Loss6–2Momotarō Kitajima61995-12-16
7Win6–1Shin KashiramotoUD61995-10-29
6Win5–1Isao OhnoUD61995-09-18
5Win4–1Hiroyasu UchidaKO1 (4), 1995-08-15
4Win3–1Nobuyuki Kihara41995-06-17
3Win2–1Shigeaki NakamasaKO1 (4), 1995-03-25
2Loss1–1Masahiko NakamuraKO4 (4), 1995-02-04
1Win1–0Yūkō Shishido1 (4), 1994-12-11

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Weekend TV Cheat Sheet Part One. Marty Mulcahey. September 30, 2011. Max Boxing. October 6, 2011.
  2. Web site: Ziggy Shah. October 25, 2010. Nishioka defeats Munroe. East Side Boxing.com. October 25, 2010.
  3. 10 Best junior featherweights of all time. 3. Lee Groves. January 11, 2012. January 20, 2012. The Ring.
  4. Web site: Alexey Sukachev. October 24, 2010. Toshiaki Nishioka Breaks Down a Brave Rendall Munroe. BoxingScene.com. October 25, 2010.
  5. Web site: Púgiles cumplen con exámenes en Japón. Hisao Adachi. April 6, 2011. NotiFight.com. Spanish. April 9, 2011.
  6. Web site: Martinez gets the job done – Toshiaki Nishioka W12 Rafael Marquez. Dan Rafael. October 3, 2011. ESPN. October 3, 2011.
  7. News: http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/tokushu/nisioka/sports15.html. ja:不安だけど…休養は必要. April 28, 1999. Kobe Shimbun. Japanese. February 28, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110722092939/http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/tokushu/nisioka/sports15.html. July 22, 2011.
  8. News: http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/tokushu/nisioka/sports11.html. ja:西岡先輩 頑張って. March 17, 1999. Kobe Shimbun. Japanese. February 28, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110722092944/http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/tokushu/nisioka/sports11.html. July 22, 2011.
  9. Web site: http://www.wowow.co.jp/sports/excite_sp/column35.html. ja:世界チャンピオン・西岡利晃の軌跡 (1) – 天才少年の挫折. Isao Hara. September 3, 2011. WOWOW. Japanese. September 3, 2011.
  10. Web site: WBC世界スーパーバンタム級王者 西岡利晃「20代の自分と戦ったら? 今の僕が勝つのは間違いない」. Isao Hara. November 10, 2011. Shueisha. May 20, 2012. Japanese.
  11. Web site: Mario Kumekawa. September 28, 2010. http://www.47news.jp/EN/201009/EN2010092801000615.html. ja:進化する西岡利晃 10月24日に防衛戦. Kyodo News – 47news.jp. Japanese. October 23, 2010.
  12. News: http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/tokushu/nisioka/sports1.html. ja:辰吉の練習相手で急成長/兵庫から目指せ世界. June 20, 1998. Kobe Shimbun. Japanese. February 28, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110722092948/http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/tokushu/nisioka/sports1.html. July 22, 2011.
  13. Web site: Boxing Records – Tuesday 29 December 1998; Central Gym, Osaka, Osaka, Japan. BoxRec. February 28, 2011.
  14. News: ja:西岡、「来年、日本で最初の統一王者になる」…2010報知プロスポーツ大賞. http://hochi.yomiuri.co.jp/sports/box/news/20101216-OHT1T00031.htm. Sports Hochi. December 16, 2010. January 6, 2012. Japanese. https://web.archive.org/web/20110722101618/http://hochi.yomiuri.co.jp/sports/box/news/20101216-OHT1T00031.htm. July 22, 2011.
  15. Web site: http://www.ninomiyasports.com/sc/modules/bulletin02/article.php?storyid=4324. ja:西岡の左はミットの上からでも骨を砕く 〜トレーナーが明かす世界王者の強さ〜. August 19, 2010. Sports Communications. Japanese.
  16. Web site: Associated Press. September 1, 2001. Veeraphol holds onto title. ESPN. December 16, 2010.
  17. News: なお進化を遂げる西岡、30代世界王者の充実度。〜Sバンタム級6度目の防衛へ〜. Makoto Maeda. Bungeishunjū. January 11, 2011. February 26, 2011. Japanese.
  18. News: December 26, 2001. Nishioka pulls out of boxing doubleheader. The Japan Times. December 16, 2010.
  19. News: October 6, 2003. Holyfield downed, nearly out. The Age. December 16, 2010.
  20. Web site: March 6, 2004. Larios sees off Nakazato. BBC. December 16, 2010.
  21. News: ja:西岡恩人の画家山本集氏にベルト奪取誓う. Jun Taguchi. http://www.nikkansports.com/battle/news/p-bt-tp0-20080911-407134.html. Nikkan Sports. September 11, 2008. August 16, 2011. Japanese.
  22. News: ja:西岡5度目で世界の頂点. Jun Taguchi. http://www.nikkansports.com/battle/news/p-bt-tp0-20080916-409058.html?style=print. Nikkan Sports. September 16, 2008. February 26, 2011. Japanese.
  23. News: ja:西岡"5度目の正直"で世界獲った. http://www.sponichi.co.jp/battle/special/boxing/2008_boxing_09/KFullNormal20080916084.html. Sports Nippon. September 16, 2008. February 26, 2011. Japanese.
  24. Web site: http://www.boxing.jp/cgi/news/news.cgi?mode=view&no=145. ja:西岡が結婚. January 11, 2005. boxing.jp. Japanese. February 28, 2011.
  25. Web site: Noticias del boxeo japonés. Hisao Adachi. May 9, 2005. BoxeoMundial.net. Spanish. October 30, 2011.
  26. Web site: Bobby Pacquiao Loses by DQ Against Hector Velazquez in Las Vegas. David A. Avila. November 15, 2006. The Sweet Science. October 30, 2011.
  27. Ninomiya. Toshio. June 9, 2011. ja:3人の世界王者。帝拳ジム、最強の秘密. Sports Graphic Number. 32. 12. ナンバーノンフィクション99. 81. Tokyo, Japan. Bungeishunju. Japanese.
  28. News: ja:西岡5度目の挑戦で世界をつかむ. http://www.nikkansports.com/battle/news/p-bt-tp0-20080701-378306.html. Nikkan Sports. July 1, 2008. February 29, 2012. Japanese.
  29. News: 西岡快挙! ベガスでV7. Eiji Fujinaka. Nikkan Sports. October 3, 2011. October 12, 2011. Japanese.
  30. News: http://www.daily.co.jp/ring/2010/06/04/0003054035.shtml. ja:"尼崎の西岡"市役所訪問で猛烈アピール. June 3, 2010. Daily Sports. Japanese. August 16, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20100605083645/http://www.daily.co.jp/ring/2010/06/04/0003054035.shtml. June 5, 2010.
  31. Web site: Hisao Adachi. September 15, 2008. ¡Nishioka captura la diadema interina supergallo!. Notifight.com. Spanish. December 16, 2010.
  32. Web site: Nishioka keeps super bantamweight title. Associated Press. January 3, 2009. February 11, 2010. ESPN.
  33. News: Japanese fighter Nishioka looking to extend his popularity to the U.S.. Ray Brewer. September 30, 2011. Las Vegas Sun. October 3, 2011.
  34. Web site: Judah in champion Marquez's sights – Quick hits. Dan Rafael. April 2, 2011. ESPN. January 14, 2012.
  35. Web site: M. Sulaiman moves audience. Joe Koizumi. April 6, 2011a. Fightnews.com. January 14, 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120404145708/http://www.fightnews.com/Boxing/m-sulaiman-moves-audience-80727. April 4, 2012.
  36. Web site: Buenos Noches, Monterrey – Nishioka puts out Gonzalez in title defense; Marquez stages return. Chris Cozzone. May 24, 2009. February 11, 2010. Fightnews.com.
  37. Web site: Shocker: Salgado destroys Linares – Nishioka successfully defends title. Joe Koizumi. October 10, 2009. February 11, 2010. Fightnews.com.
  38. Web site: Boxing Bob Newman. July 31, 2010. WBC awards banquet. Fightnews.com. August 2, 2010.
  39. Web site: Nishioka retains WBC title. Sapa-AFP. April 30, 2010. May 1, 2010. Times LIVE.
  40. News: 4戦連続KOだ! サウスポー西岡 "右でぶっ倒す". Sports Nippon. April 24, 2010. February 29, 2012. Japanese. https://web.archive.org/web/20100426205631/http://www.sponichi.co.jp/battle/news/2010/04/24/02.html. April 26, 2010.
  41. News: Gareth A Davies. October 24, 2010. Toshiaki Nishioka beats Rendall Munroe on points to retain WBC super-bantamweight title. https://web.archive.org/web/20101027090143/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/othersports/boxingandmma/8084177/Toshiaki-Nishioka-beats-Rendall-Munroe-on-points-to-retain-WBC-super-bantamweight-title.html. dead. October 27, 2010. The Daily Telegraph. October 24, 2010.
  42. News: 西岡利晃MVP モンティエルから挑戦状. Eiji Fujinaka. Nikkan Sports. January 27, 2011. May 20, 2012. Japanese.
  43. News: ja:西岡対戦予定のモンティエル敗れガックリ. http://www.nikkansports.com/battle/news/p-bt-tp0-20110221-739493.html. Nikkan Sports. February 21, 2011. May 20, 2012. Japanese.
  44. News: Nishioka retains WBC title. AFP. April 8, 2011. Independent Online. April 8, 2011.
  45. News: ja:西岡の狙う標的たち . http://www.t-nishioka.net/profile/champs.htm . Team Nishioka Official Homepage . February 2001 – September 2005 . January 6, 2012 . Japanese . https://web.archive.org/web/20050407115431/http://www.t-nishioka.net/profile/champs.htm . April 7, 2005 . unfit .
  46. Web site: German's Weekend Report. German Villasenor. October 4, 2011. Max Boxing. April 15, 2012.
  47. Web site: Toshiaki Nishioka vs. Rafael Marquez - CompuBox Stats. CompuBox. Compubox. October 2, 2011. BoxingScene.com. February 19, 2012.
  48. News: ja:ボクシング・西岡、自ら語るラスベガスで勝てた理由. Daisuke Yamaguchi. http://www.nikkei.com/sports/column/article/g=96958A88889DE1E4E1EAEBE5E6E2E3E2E3E3E0E2E3E3E2E2E2E2E2E2;df=2;p=9694E3E0E2E6E0E2E3E2EAE5EBEA. Nihon Keizai Shimbun. November 13, 2011. 2. November 13, 2011. Japanese.
  49. News: Nishioka retains WBC super-bantamweight title. AP. October 3, 2011. Asahi Shimbun. January 20, 2012.
  50. Web site: Nishioka impressive in victory over Marquez. Michael Rosenthal. October 2, 2011. The Ring. October 3, 2011.
  51. News: NO CONTROVERSY HERE Nishioka Beats Rafa Marquez. Michael Woods. The Sweet Science. October 3, 2011. October 3, 2011.
  52. Web site: Ring Ratings Update: Who replaces Wonjongkam on pound-for-pound list?. Michael Rosenthal. March 6, 2012. The Ring. March 6, 2012.
  53. Web site: WBC update in super bantamweight division. March 15, 2012. WBC. March 16, 2012.
  54. Web site: RING Ratings Update: Hoping for Donaire-Rigondeaux soon. Chuck Giampa. October 17, 2012. The Ring. October 19, 2012.
  55. Web site: DONAIRE EARNS DISTINCTION OF BEATING CHAMPIONS AND MAKING THEM RETIRE. November 14, 2012. 2012-11-14. Ronnie Nathanielsz. PhilBoxing.com.