Well it's Moreno next anyhow or no more hardware. Yamanaka vs. Moreno is a more fitting and competitive unification to my tastes. :good Only question is, who flies? :think
You may well be right unfortunately; as I believe Yamanaka and Kameda fight under two separate promotional banners.
That doesn't require the #1 in the division. :nono Clearly, guys in the back end of top forty have proven dangerous enough for him to scrape by with everything he can muster (plus, allegedly, some 'help'). When he runs out of those bubble-sitters and confronts someone in the fifteen-twenty range, he's going down...and it won't be the brief layover it was this morning. Honestly a King Kong would do the job. Or a Julio Ceja.
Here is the KD anyway, for anyone who missed out. [yt]BwcN13VWq2I[/yt] It was upon review less serious than it seemed live. Not the most jarring knockdown you can imagine, but legit. (not a 'whoops, slick canvas there :hey' moment like sly little Koki Haskel tried playing it...) That isn't even the hardest Sun nailed him, though, by a damn sight. The left hook was ancillary, if that. Sun did most of his damage with that RH for which Kameda is a sucker.
Official cards: Alfredo Polanco 115½-113 Sun Carla Caiz 114½-114 Kameda Silvestre Abainza 115-112 ... winner by split decision...and still...
Sorry! :desk That was meant to be "unlisted" (those with the link can view), not "private". Sorted now. :thumbsup