logo
Two Japanese fighters on same card die from brain injuries

Two Japanese fighters on same card die from brain injuries

Reuters2 days ago
Aug 9 (Reuters) - Two Japanese boxers have died days after suffering brain injuries in separate fights on the same card, boxing associations and media reports said.
Shigetoshi Kotari died on Friday and Hiromasa Urakawa on Saturday after being injured in their fights at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo on August 2, Japanese media said. Both 28-year-old boxers underwent operations for subdural haematoma, or bleeding inside the skull, the reports said.
"We extend our deepest condolences to the families, friends, and the Japanese boxing community during this incredibly difficult time," the World Boxing Organization said in a statement on Saturday about Urakawa, who had lost to Yoji Saito in a knockout.
Kotari died as a result of the injury he sustained while fighting Yamato Hata to a draw in 12 rounds, the World Boxing Council said on Friday.
"The WBC and its President, Mauricio Sulaiman, deeply mourn this irreparable loss and wish his family and friends strength during this difficult time," the WBC said in a statement.
Another boxer, 28-year-old Irish super-featherweight fighter John Cooney, died of a brain injury this year after being stopped in his first Celtic title defence in February.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dillian Whyte still harbours world title hopes ahead of Moses Itauma clash
Dillian Whyte still harbours world title hopes ahead of Moses Itauma clash

BreakingNews.ie

time6 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Dillian Whyte still harbours world title hopes ahead of Moses Itauma clash

Dillian Whyte knows he is about to step into the ring with the 'next Mike Tyson' but still believes he can end his boxing story with a world title. After two years in the wilderness, British heavyweight Whyte, 37, was thrown a lifeline earlier in 2025 when he was matched with the division's hottest prospect in Moses Itauma (12-0, 10KOs) on Saturday night in Riyadh. Advertisement It is the latest hurdle in a life of ups and downs for Whyte, who was born in Jamaica and forced to 'eat from trash cans' before he was brought up in Brixton. Trouble was never far away but kick-boxing and then boxing helped him onto the straight and narrow. Dillian Whyte is still feeling himself 😎 #WhyteItauma | Aug 16th | @ringmagazine | #RiyadhSeason — Queensberry Promotions (@Queensberry) August 9, 2025 A career in professional sport has thrown up almighty challenges with Whyte forced to clear his name from drug accusations three times – the latest in 2023 after a rematch with Anthony Joshua collapsed due to a positive drugs test, which was later found to be as a result of a contaminated supplement. Nevertheless, it pushed Whyte (31-3, 21KOs) even further away from a much-craved second world title bout after his 2022 loss to Tyson Fury until being given a shot at redemption this weekend. 'I never thought I would be a heavyweight boxer or a heavyweight champion doing good. Obviously I got in trouble, started to do a little bit of training to stay out of trouble and then kick-boxing fell on my lap and saved my life,' Whyte reflected. Advertisement 'I was meant to be dead or in prison by my twenties but to overcome this, raise a family myself, it shows that anything is possible if you believe. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Ring Magazine (@ringmagazine) 'I would love to win a world title. If I can win a world title then I've had an amazing career. 'I had a version of it, but if I can win a full world title, then people that come from my background, where I have come, the way I got into boxing, for me that's an amazing story to inspire people.' Former WBC interim heavyweight champion Whyte is a huge outsider versus 20-year-old Itauma, who has earned comparisons to Mike Tyson with his knock-out power. Advertisement However, Whyte can lean on the experience of sharing the ring with Anthony Joshua, Fury, Derek Chisora and Joseph Parker during a 14-year professional career. 'These last few years have taught me that this is what I do, this is what I love doing and I need to take advantage of it, focus on it and appreciate it. Here today, gone tomorrow,' Whyte added. 'Today Moses is the next Mike Tyson. He is great, amazing and they talk about him fighting (Oleksandr) Usyk. I go in there, he does his thing, I catch him and blow him up. Then what? People say he's not good any more? Sport Michael Conlan eyes final push as he headlines 3Ar... Read More 'My mindset is no-one wants to fight Moses, he is a great fighter, young, sharp and full of beans. You have to believe in yourself and take risks. Advertisement 'That is what my life is all about. Showing people, my family and my kids, and people in general, you have to take risks to get to places. 'I ain't got nothing to lose. What have I got to lose? I'm a nobody. I'm being compared to a journeyman in the 90s and 80s, he is being compared to Mike Tyson.'

Dillian Whyte on fighting Moses Itauma: ‘Everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die'
Dillian Whyte on fighting Moses Itauma: ‘Everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die'

The Independent

time10 hours ago

  • The Independent

Dillian Whyte on fighting Moses Itauma: ‘Everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die'

Wind up Dillian Whyte, and watch him go. 'In 1988, a hurricane blew the roof off my mum's house while she was giving birth to me,' he tells one publication on this Zoom call. 'I was eating food from trash cans,' he tells The Independent. And so on. 'I've got about 15 dogs altogether and they just had some puppies, so 16... 17... 18... 19... 20... 21... I've got 22 dogs now.' 'Sometimes I'm borderline obese.' Whyte, unintentionally, is full of quips. One, however, stands out as the most apt ahead of his upcoming fight with Moses Itauma, the most highly-touted heavyweight prospect in years. 'As a kid, my dad used to say random stuff and it didn't make sense to me, but now as I get older...' Whyte starts. 'He used to say: 'Everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die.' Long story short, I believe in myself.' You can take this as a metaphor, if you wish, for Whyte's final push towards an elusive world title, with 20-year-old Itauma standing stubbornly in his way in Riyadh. Despite Whyte's vast experience, and Itauma's lack thereof, the 37-year-old is the betting underdog for the bout on 16 August. Whyte genuinely does not seem to care. 'You guys are the experts, the professionals,' he says repeatedly, tongue pressed firmly against the inside of his cheek. 'Today, he's the next Mike Tyson, he's amazing, they're talking about him fighting [Oleksandr] Usyk. If I go in there and blow Moses out in one round, what are people gonna say? He's not good anymore? That's what the media will say. 'Moses Itauma was overhyped.' No, that doesn't mean that; it just means he fought a good fighter and got caught. He hasn't been tested, hasn't been hurt, everything's going great in his career. He's got that blissful ignorance. But [my] experience doesn't really matter unless I make it matter.' When Whyte discusses experience, you get the feeling he's not just talking about in-ring nous. In his own words from July: 'I'm a born sufferer, and I've been a lifetime sufferer.' 'Like I said, I was born in a hurricane,' he tells The Independent. 'My dad's from mixed heritage, Irish and Jamaican; back then, those were probably two of the worst races to be, volatile. My dad only knew one way of raising kids: the hard way. 'You ain't dead, so why are you complaining?' My mum left when I was a kid, went to England to build a better life for us. 'Sometimes I was left with no one to take care of me. I was out on the street, surviving – stealing and robbing to get by. Not robbing people, just robbing food, eating food from trash cans. Working as a kid, I remember selling the glass Fanta bottles. I've just been suffering. My whole life has kind of been like that. 'I never thought I'd be a heavyweight boxer, a heavyweight champion. I got in trouble, started doing a little bit of training to stay out of trouble. It fell in my lap, it saved my life. Then things [were] getting good, getting bad, getting good, getting bad. I was like: 'F*** me. Damn, man. I just want a f*****g break. I'm trying to do things the right way.' 'I just feel like I've been swimming against the wave forever. Some people have it a lot easier, but there's people that have it 10 times worse than me. I was meant to be dead or in prison when I was in my 20s, but I overcame that, raised a family myself, I'm teaching my kids stuff. There's more negatives in my whole life journey than positives, but I just try to focus on the positives.' At one point, Whyte is wound up the wrong way, when talk veers towards his failed drug test before a cancelled rematch with Anthony Joshua in 2023. Whyte was cleared, just as he was after a failed test in 2019, although he did serve a drug-related ban earlier in his career. 'Can we move on? It's a bit of a dumb question, but thank you for your time...' he tells one reporter. 'This guy's kind of p***ed me off, I'm a little bit irritated.' Clearly, it is a topic Whyte wants to avoid, and talk soon turns to Derek Chisora 'avoiding' a fight against Itauma. Whyte draws parallels between himself and the British veteran, whom he beat twice, but points to a difference. While he and Chisora, who recently admitted to opting against a bout with Itauma, have taken on many undesirable challenges throughout their careers, only Whyte has stuck by that approach until the end, he claims. He goes as far as to call Chisora, 41, a 'coward'. Then again, Whyte himself does not care to be judged by others. 'You can do everything great, donate to charity, save puppies from rescue centres, help old ladies cross the street and get things from the top shelf at Tesco, and someone's gonna have an opinion on you,' he says, 'because you have a different opinion to them.' Right now, most opinions suggest Whyte faces a hard, hard night on 16 August. He does not care: 'I'm a proper dog expert, so whether I'm an underdog, top dog, bottom dog, front dog, side dog... as long as there's a dog involved, I'm all in.' Whyte vs Itauma will air live exclusively on DAZN pay-per-view, at a cost of £19.99, on 16 August. A subscription to DAZN is available here.

Dillian Whyte still harbours world title hopes ahead of Moses Itauma clash
Dillian Whyte still harbours world title hopes ahead of Moses Itauma clash

The Independent

time10 hours ago

  • The Independent

Dillian Whyte still harbours world title hopes ahead of Moses Itauma clash

Dillian Whyte knows he is about to step into the ring with the 'next Mike Tyson' but still believes he can end his boxing story with a world title. After two years in the wilderness, British heavyweight Whyte, 37, was thrown a lifeline earlier in 2025 when he was matched with the division's hottest prospect in Moses Itauma (12-0, 10KOs) on Saturday night in Riyadh. It is the latest hurdle in a life of ups and downs for Whyte, who was born in Jamaica and forced to 'eat from trash cans' before he was brought up in Brixton. Trouble was never far away but kick-boxing and then boxing helped him onto the straight and narrow. A career in professional sport has thrown up almighty challenges with Whyte forced to clear his name from drug accusations three times – the latest in 2023 after a rematch with Anthony Joshua collapsed due to a positive drugs test, which was later found to be as a result of a contaminated supplement. Nevertheless, it pushed Whyte (31-3, 21KOs) even further away from a much-craved second world title bout after his 2022 loss to Tyson Fury until being given a shot at redemption this weekend. 'I never thought I would be a heavyweight boxer or a heavyweight champion doing good. Obviously I got in trouble, started to do a little bit of training to stay out of trouble and then kick-boxing fell on my lap and saved my life,' Whyte reflected. 'I was meant to be dead or in prison by my twenties but to overcome this, raise a family myself, it shows that anything is possible if you believe. 'I would love to win a world title. If I can win a world title then I've had an amazing career. 'I had a version of it, but if I can win a full world title, then people that come from my background, where I have come, the way I got into boxing, for me that's an amazing story to inspire people.' Former WBC interim heavyweight champion Whyte is a huge outsider versus 20-year-old Itauma, who has earned comparisons to Mike Tyson with his knock-out power. However, Whyte can lean on the experience of sharing the ring with Anthony Joshua, Fury, Derek Chisora and Joseph Parker during a 14-year professional career. 'These last few years have taught me that this is what I do, this is what I love doing and I need to take advantage of it, focus on it and appreciate it. Here today, gone tomorrow,' Whyte added. 'Today Moses is the next Mike Tyson. He is great, amazing and they talk about him fighting (Oleksandr) Usyk. I go in there, he does his thing, I catch him and blow him up. Then what? People say he's not good any more? 'My mindset is no-one wants to fight Moses, he is a great fighter, young, sharp and full of beans. You have to believe in yourself and take risks. 'That is what my life is all about. Showing people, my family and my kids, and people in general, you have to take risks to get to places. 'I ain't got nothing to lose. What have I got to lose? I'm a nobody. I'm being compared to a journeyman in the 90s and 80s, he is being compared to Mike Tyson.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store