Boxing is facing the most serious crisis in its 100-year history after two fighters died while a third remains in a coma from the same fight card.
The Japanese tragedies have rocked the sport to its foundations, with the Japan Boxing Commission (JBC) admitting the very future of boxing in the country is at stake unless they implement urgent safety reforms.
On August 2 at Tokyo’s Korakuen Hall, two 28-year-old fighters, super featherweight Shigetoshi Kotari and lightweight Hiromasa Urakawa, suffered brain injuries during separate bouts. Both underwent surgery but died days later.
In addition, Yamato Hata, who also competed on the same event, is fighting for his life in a coma, raising the prospect of an unprecedented third death from a single card.
‘A crucial moment’ for boxing
JBC Secretary-General Tsuyoshi Yasukochi did not mince words as he addressed the crisis to the Japan Times.
“If we don’t improve things, this sport won’t be able to continue. If the people involved in the sport can’t improve things, we will have to quit.
“I understand that we are at a crucial moment where a sport that has been around for 100 years could potentially disappear. I think everyone is working every day with that mindset.”
Yasukochi stressed that the commission could not brush off these tragedies as a coincidence.
“When a person dies, it has a huge impact. If you don’t feel that, you are not qualified to be involved in boxing.
Some people might say that this is a sport where such accidents can happen, but we can’t afford to think that way. These things keep happening, and we can’t brush them off. We need to investigate the causes and manage the aftermath.”

The sport’s survival is on the line
The deaths of Kotari and Urakawa, coupled with Hata’s critical condition, have sparked an emergency review into medical procedures, matchmaking standards, and regulatory oversight in Japanese boxing.
While the country has produced icons such as Naoya Inoue, Kazuto Ioka, and Shinsuke Yamanaka, the shocking events of August 2 have left the sport on the brink.
Authorities now face a stark choice: deliver radical safety improvements or face the very real possibility of shutting down boxing, one of its most important markets.
The warning from Japan echoes growing global concerns over fighter safety, with brain injuries and post-fight fatalities increasingly under scrutiny.
For Japan, however, the crisis is immediate, and unless it takes decisive action, the sport could vanish altogether from a nation that has been one of boxing’s great strongholds.
If Japan gives the go-ahead to outlaw pugilism, other countries could follow and produce a domino effect that could spell the end as boxing fans know it.
About the Author
Phil Jay is a veteran boxing journalist with over 15 years of experience covering the global fight scene. As Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News since 2010, Jay has interviewed dozens of world champions and reported ringside on boxing’s biggest nights. [View all articles by Phil Jay] and learn more about his work in combat sports journalism.