Those guys are too much for him... Inoue defense not tha best, & Rungsivai is just as big & more proven. Its a war but ge blasts out Inoue IMO Estrada to me is like a mini JM Marquez. He would outbox/counter Inoue. His defense is good so Inoue would struggle with that Good talent BUT these guys best him
Inoue comprehensively beats Srisaket, Estrada and Cuadras, and, I believe, breaks down and stops all three. Sure, Srisaket and Estrada look great going forward; but how well do they fight off the back foot? Because Naoya Inoue hits hard enough to not just keep them honest but to put them on the back foot and expose any and all defensive deficiencies those men have. Srisaket is rugged, but is far too basic for Inoue's footwork, angles and combos, and will just be trudging forward into Inoue's fast, heavy pinpoint counters. Inoue stops him after 11 rounds of one-sided punishment. Srisaket won't be in there with a blown-up Flyweight who can't keep Srikaset off him this time. Cuadras only has an 8 round gas tank at best, and gets brutally folded by Monster's body shots. Estrada, I believe, will also get taken out late (10th or 11th) by Inoue. One thing is for sure: should this fight happen, Estrada won't want to start as slowly as he did against Cuadras. Inuoe starts quickly, and I think the result of this will be Estrada taking more risks to try and get back into the fight, thus becoming overeager and walking into Inoue's precise bombs. Then, Monster Inoue will move up to 118 and ruthlessly dispose of Jamie McDonnell, decision a reticent and perpetually backpedalling Zolani Tete, before decisioning Luis Nery.
I think Inoue is too talented for Cuadras and probably too powerful. Estrada really knows how to fight though, not athletic, but a natural fighter. I'd say that's 50/50. I doubt Inoue's people would put him in with the Thai now, too much experience and hits just as hard. He showed great reflexes against a spent-bullet Gonzalez rolling with pretty much everything Choclatito threw. Inoue isn't in his prime yet, he's predictable and not that fast for the weight class. He is just unreally powerful. He kind of reminds me of Gerald McClellan, an unreally powerful guy who hit as hard as he did... A hard punching-counterpuncher like Rafael Marquez would have rung him up in three rounds.
I don't know, Inoue has one hell of a jab, can punch extremely hard, moves a lot, not easy to hit, he is young though, perhaps too young?
Inoue blasts both of them. He will put Estrada on the back foot. Estrada has great skills and will certainly scores some points but his tough chin also means he'll get punished a lot. The Monster has a monstrous hook to the liver. Nobody manage to stand up so far. A fight with Rungvisai will be a war but Inoue's jab and skill set is much better. With the Thai champ, it's more like he caught Gonzales at a perfect time. Inoue can pick him apart from the outside should he choose to.
I'm not too sure about that. Nieves decided to go into survival mode rather early and it was hard for Inoue to continually cut the ring off against a guy who was running for his life. I don't imagine Estrada or Rungvisai would fight in the same manner as Nieves did. Inoue looked great IMO. He has a terrific jab, excellent power and a terrific left hook to the body. He probably needs a bit more ring experience in general, but his talent and skills at this stage can't be ignored. I think he would actually beat both guys- I see him winning a unanimous decision against a well-rounded fighter in Estrada and I actually think he'd stop Rungvisai inside 8 or 9 rounds.
Inoue-Estrada is one of the best fights than can be made in boxing today. Estrada made a fan out of me with his performance Saturday night.
Na, inoue has the beating of em Bit lazy defensively , but if he wants too he has plenty of time to learn and tighten that up Hell of an ofensive fighter, hard nights work for anybody