Prior Naoya Inoue, there was the gutsy Flyweight and Bantamweight champion Masahiko "Fighting" Harada in 1960-1970s who belongs in the International Hall Of Fame, who whenever he fought, 60% of the country's population tuned in. Something akin to Phillipines's have done with Pacquiao and Mexico has done so with Chavez Sr.

After watching a documentary by Rich The Fight Historian. I was highly impressed of what he has achieved before retiring at age 26. Beating the likes of champions like Pone Kingpetch, Jose Medel in the rematch, and Brazil's best proffesional boxer to date Eder Jofree X2. He also had a very controversial loss to Johnny Famechon in his opponent's hometown due to the only judge giving the scorecard though he won fairly in the rematch in Japan. The referee and only judge was the legendary former world featherweight champion Willie Pep. If he had won, he could have become a three division champion at featherweight.
Harada went to become the President of the Japanese Boxing Commission in 2002.
Here he is awarding Naoya Inoue a trophy, like a passing of the torch to the likely future all time great after he won the Bantamweight tournament in his difficult bout with Nonito Donaire.

Is likely that another current Japanese fighter can achieve the same amount that any of these two have done so far? Like perhaps Junto Nakatani?

After watching a documentary by Rich The Fight Historian. I was highly impressed of what he has achieved before retiring at age 26. Beating the likes of champions like Pone Kingpetch, Jose Medel in the rematch, and Brazil's best proffesional boxer to date Eder Jofree X2. He also had a very controversial loss to Johnny Famechon in his opponent's hometown due to the only judge giving the scorecard though he won fairly in the rematch in Japan. The referee and only judge was the legendary former world featherweight champion Willie Pep. If he had won, he could have become a three division champion at featherweight.
Harada went to become the President of the Japanese Boxing Commission in 2002.
Here he is awarding Naoya Inoue a trophy, like a passing of the torch to the likely future all time great after he won the Bantamweight tournament in his difficult bout with Nonito Donaire.

Is likely that another current Japanese fighter can achieve the same amount that any of these two have done so far? Like perhaps Junto Nakatani?
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